Eminent Domain To The Rescue? [Audio]

Ellen Brown
Ellen Brown

A flood of foreclosures in neighborhoods, cities and towns can cause everyone’s real estate equity to plunge. Some towns would like to step-in to protect their communities, but they can’t get the mortgage notes written down to affordable levels for contractual reasons. The solution: use eminent domain  to claim the properties for the municipality, then renegotiate them on behalf of struggling homeowners.  

Ellen speaks with Cornell professor Robert Hockett, the pre-eminent legal mind behind the emerging eminent domain stratagem, whose idea has been catching on in towns across America, including some of the biggest.

SF Source PRN-FM  July 2 2014

Mortgage Servicers ~ Getting Away With the Perfect Crime?

Matt Stoller (New Deal 2.0) | RS_News
29 November 11

OPINION | Without prosecutions, there’s nothing keeping fraud from becoming a standard business practice.

In 2004, the FBI warned Congress of an “epidemic of mortgage fraud,” of unscrupulous operators taking advantage of a booming real estate market. Less than two years later, an accounting scandal at Fannie Mae tipped us off that something was very wrong at the highest levels of corporate America.

Of course, we all know what happened next. Crime invaded the center of our banking system. Wall Street CEOs were signing on to SEC documents knowing they contained material misstatements. The New York Fed, riddled with conflicts of interest, shoveled money to large banks and tried to hide it under the veil of central bank independence. Even Tim Geithner noted that Lehman had “air in the marks” in its valuations of asset-backed securities, as the bankruptcy examiner’s report showed that accounting manipulation to disguise the condition of the balance sheet was a routine management tool at the bank. There’s a reason Charles Ferguson got an Academy Award for his work on the documentary Inside Job.

And yet, no handcuffs. The big news on prosecutions in the traditionally high-powered Southern District of New York are convictions for relatively petty insider trading that are unrelated to the collapse of the economy. The criminal charges could have been filed in the 1980s. U.S. Attorney Preet Bharara has brought minor civil suits against banks, but nothing significant, and no criminal indictments for the Ponzi scheme of the last four years.

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Truth about the Federal Reserve Before And After World War I

from | July 11 2011

Prior to the formation of the Federal Reserve Bank (for the centralized fleecing of Americans) the then Bankers Association sent out the following memo to all US banks 3 years before the intended action was to take place.

“On Sept. 1st, 1894, we will not renew our loans under any consideration. On Sept. 1st we will demand our money.

We will foreclose and become mortgagees in possession. We can take two-thirds of the farms west of the Mississippi and thousands of them east of the Mississippi as well, at our own price . . .

1891 American Bankers Assn as printed
in the Congressional Record of April 29 1913.

 

View this 2-part video for the rest of the sordid tale of greed and chicanery. ~Gillian

Part 1

Part 2

http://youtu.be/DYVD9rb2Lxc

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