Posts Tagged ‘the bank’

Banks open Pandora’s box by taking on federal judge

Friday, April 12th, 2013

Pandora's box

Pandora’s box

Seventeen of the nation’s “too big to fail” banks also apparently think they are “too big to lose in court.” They have joined forces to go up against a federal judge whose rulings they simply don’t like.

In doing so, the banks may have opened a Pandora’s box that ultimately could benefit the same group of people they have been going after – homeowners facing default on their mortgage.

First the back story:

A bunch of corporate attorneys representing JP Morgan Chase, Bank of America, Wells Fargo, Goldman Sachs, Morgan Stanley and Barclays, to name a few, recently took on U.S. District Court Judge Denise Cote by filing what is known in legal jargon as a “writ of mandamus” the purpose of which is to toss out a number of rulings she has made regarding the discovery process. Someone who believes they are denied a legal right generally files such a writ.

That’s a bold step to take against a member of the judiciary who holds your case in her hands. And, even bolder because of whom filed it. But if it works for them, what’s not to say it will not work for attorneys seeking to preserve the due process of homeowners who have been whisked through the courts like cattle off to slaughter?

Known as a no-nonsense judge who emphasizes efficiency in large, complex cases, Cote is handling one of the highest-stakes cases against the banks to date. The lawsuit, which was brought against the banks by the Federal Housing Finance Agency, alleges that the banks duped it into buying $200 billion in mortgage-backed securities without revealing the sloppy underwriting job. The agency, which oversees Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, wants the banks to repurchase the bad loans.
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Redefining Economic Homicide: How To Hold The Bankers Responsible

Friday, November 30th, 2012

Roy Oppenheim’s commentary was originally published on Yahoo! Homes and is being republished on South Florida Law Blog with their permission.

Money in HandcuffsActions have consequences. It is a simple notion, but in the broad sense of the economic meltdown here in the United States, it is one that has often failed to play out.

We have been led to believe that banks are not only ‘Too Big To Fail,’ but also ‘Too Big To Jail” and that their employees will not be held liable for the misdeeds performed in pursuit of the almighty dollar.

We have managed to jail the Bernie Madoffs and Allen Stanfords of the world but we are still grasping on how we can hold the vast Wall Street financial complex responsible for their institutional misdeeds.

And while Ponzi schemers and the like have affected many, many people, our government has failed to hold the larger corporations responsible for a housing and financial collapse that the banks should have seen coming.

But I believe it can be done, and if you take a long hard long across the globe, and even here in the US, you’ll find that governments are starting to redefine a corporation’s culpability, liability and responsibility to the public.

Why? I believe that the very definition of corporate crime is being looked at in a new light. No longer is it simply viewed as white-collar crime, but rather a form of economic homicide. This is no longer just a matter of money lost or bottom lines being padded, there are real victims whose lives have been devastated and in some cases, lost to a company’s culpability and wanton disregard of their reckless actions.
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