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Bank of America Halts All Foreclosures in All 50 States

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The banking industry is coming under further scrutiny for what many are labeling unfair practices in expediting the foreclosure process. In response to public outrage against the revelation of these practices, Bank of America, the largest mortgage servicer in the United States, is halting all foreclosures while its controversial process is reviewed.

Reuters reports:

Bank of America Corp is halting foreclosures and sales of foreclosed properties in all 50 states pending a review of its internal processes, the bank said on Friday.

BofA, the largest U.S. mortgage servicer, is the first U.S. bank to suspend foreclosures in all 50 states. The step comes amid a growing furor over how the largest U.S. mortgage lenders are repossessing the homes of delinquent borrowers.

Critics contend the banks' use of "robo-signers" and other automated processes is unfairly pushing residents out of their homes.



A spokesman for Charlotte, North Carolina-based BofA defended the bank's previous foreclosures.

"We will stop foreclosure sales until our assessment has been satisfactorily completed," the spokesman, Dan Frahm, said in a statement. "Our ongoing assessment shows the basis for our past foreclosure decisions is accurate."

Please read the rest at Reuters.com.


It's easy for a company as large and powerful as Bank of America to claim that all the people they forced out of their homes using a process that is now being questioned deserved their fate. The problem with this claim by the company is that it does not make any sense. If people previously being serviced by Bank of America were forced out of their homes using this same process, these people deserve to have the process that lead to their foreclosures specifically reviewed. If wrongdoing is found, they deserve to have their homes reinstated to them. The "ongoing assessment" referred to above sounds way too general to apply to each previous foreclosure, case by case.

Case by case reviews are the only thing that will show that Bank of America is taking responsibility. It's pitiful that a matter of timing would render some people essentially homeless, while others are getting a reprieve that might allow them to stay in the homes they own. The process that Bank of America is reviewing, if it is found to be as unfair as it sounds, should also be questioned in all the cases of those it has affected in the past.

If this does not occur, I smell a future class action law suit for previous victims of the Bank of America foreclosure process.

 

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