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In Addition to $25 Billion Settlement, Nevada’s AG Wins More

In addition to the $25 billion settlement between the five largest servicers and 49 states, Nevada's Attorney General Catherine Cortez Masto reaped more for Nevada homeowners through an additional settlement with Bank of America. Masto won Nevada $750 million in relief for lien principal payments and short sales from BofA and $30 million for consumer protection efforts. That's on top of the $1.5 billion that will go to the state from the nationwide settlement reached with all five servicers.

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Banks Respond to Robo-Signing Settlement

While the $25 billion settlement between five of the nation's largest servicers and 49 of the state attorneys general awaits approval from a judge, there is some relief in the industry that the 16 months of investigation and negotiation has come to a close. Mike Heid, president of Wells Fargo Home Mortgage, says the agreement represents ""a very important step toward restoring confidence in mortgage servicing and stability in the housing market.""

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California Secures $18B in Robo-Signing Settlement

Thursday's unprecedented $25 billion settlement between federal and state officials and the nation's top mortgage servicers was especially favorable to California. After leaving settlement negotiations in September, claiming the proposal at the time was inadequate for California homeowners, Attorney General Kamala Harris opted to sign on to the final settlement, which was revised to secure $18 billion for the state of California. At the time Harris left the settlement, California was expected to receive about $4 billion from the banks.

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Robo-Signing Settlement Finalized

Federal and state officials announced Thursday morning that the federal government and 49 state attorneys general - with Oklahoma as the lone exception - have reached a $25 billion agreement with the nation's five largest mortgage servicers to address what authorities describe as ""loan servicing and foreclosure abuses."" The settlement with the nation's top five servicers – Bank of America, JPMorgan Chase, Wells Fargo, Citigroup, and Ally Financial (formerly GMAC) - provides financial relief to homeowners and establishes new homeowner protections.

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Missouri AG Files Suit Against DocX for Robo-Signing

While the industry awaits the final details of the attorneys general settlement with the nation’s largest servicers, Missouri Attorney General Chris Koster announced Tuesday it is prosecuting DocX, LLC, and its founder, Lorraine Brown, for forgery and false declarations on mortgage documents. The announcement comes after a grand jury delivered 136-count criminal indictments against DocX and Brown, the result of several months of investigation.

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Mortgage Modifications Down 40%

An estimated 1.05 million homeowners received permanent loan modifications from mortgage servicers in 2011, according to year-end data released Tuesday by HOPE NOW. That tally includes both proprietary and government-program mods, and represents a 40 percent decline from the 1.76 million modifications granted in 2010. At the same time, HOPE NOW reports loan modifications outpaced foreclosure sales for the fourth consecutive year. In 2011, there were approximately 843,000 foreclosure sales completed, down from 1.07 million in 2010.

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Industry Waits with Bated Breath as States Consider Settlement

The deadline for the 50 state attorneys general to sign onto the settlement negotiated between the committee headed by Iowa Attorney General Tom Miller and five large servicers was extended from Friday to Monday. Late Monday evening, Miller's office issued a statement saying more than 40 states have agreed to participate. For the past few months, the number repeated from various sources is $25 billion. That's $25 billion that Bank of America, JPMorgan Chase, Wells Fargo, Citigroup, and Ally Financial would pay for a clean slate regarding robo-signing misdeeds of the past.

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New York AG Sues Three Largest Lenders Over MERS

New York Attorney General Eric Schneiderman has filed a lawsuit against the nation's top three mortgage lenders charging that their use of the electronic registry system MERS has resulted in deceptive and fraudulent foreclosure filings throughout New York's state and federal courts. The lawsuit alleges that employees of Bank of America, JP Morgan Chase, and Wells Fargo, acting as ""MERS certifying officers,"" submitted court documents containing false information. MERS is also named as a defendant.

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States’ Deadline for Decision on Robo-Signing Settlement Gets Pushed

It will be at least three more days before the industry learns how many and which states have agreed to the robo-signing settlement that was proposed last week. The deadline for state attorneys general to opt in has been pushed from February 3 to February 6. A spokesperson for Iowa Attorney General Tom Miller says at least one state requested an additional business day to come to a decision, so Miller, who is head of the states' negotiating committee, moved the cut-off date to Monday.

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Mortgage and Foreclosure Complaints Quadruple in Massachusetts

Massachusetts Attorney General Martha Coakley has seen mortgage and foreclosure-related complaints quadruple in her state over the past two years. In fact, the category now overshadows all other types of consumer complaints. Coakley's office counted 983 mortgage and foreclosure-related complaints last year, a 431 percent increase over 2009. Coakley says the data confirms that the subprime lending and foreclosure crisis is a top concern for homeowners who face losing their most valued possession.

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