Tuesday, April 13, 2010

Baltimore, Memphis Fight Against Wells Fargo with New Lawsuits

A U.S. flag flies above Wells Fargo & Co headquarters in San 
Francisco, California, April 22, 2009. REUTERS/Robert Galbraith
photo: Reuters/Robert Galbraith

NEW YORK
Thu Apr 8, 2010 5:41pm EDT

(Reuters) - Baltimore and Memphis have filed new federal lawsuits accusing Wells Fargo & Co of steering black borrowers into expensive mortgages, only to later conduct many foreclosures that cost the cities property tax revenue and forced both to spend more on public safety.

U.S.

The cities filed complaints on Wednesday, the same day Wells Fargo agreed to settle a National Association for the Advancement of Colored People lawsuit accusing it of steering blacks into subprime mortgages while giving comparable white borrowers better loan terms. As part of the accord, Wells Fargo will let the civil rights group review its lending practices.

"We stand by our fair and responsible lending practices," Wells Fargo spokesman Oscar Suris said on Thursday. "We believe we can accomplish more for homeowners through working with communities than having to respond to litigation. It is our hope that Baltimore and Memphis make that same choice soon."

Fourteen other lenders are still being sued by the NAACP, including Citigroup Inc, HSBC Holdings Plc and JPMorgan Chase & Co. President Benjamin Todd Jealous in a statement said the NAACP litigation is designed to change mortgage lenders' behavior, rather than seek monetary damages.

Based in San Francisco, Wells Fargo is the largest U.S. mortgage lender and the fourth-largest U.S. bank by assets. regulatory filings show.

Baltimore and Memphis both have more than 600,000 people, nearly two-thirds of whom identify themselves as black or African-American, U.S. census data show.

FAIR HOUSING VIOLATIONS ALLEGED

When it sued Wells Fargo in 2008, Baltimore became the first major American city to accuse a mortgage lender of violating the federal Fair Housing Act with predatory lending practices that exacerbated the nation's housing slump.

"Wells Fargo's discriminatory practices, and the resulting unnecessary foreclosures in the city's minority neighborhoods, have inflicted significant, direct, and continuing financial harm on Baltimore," that city said in a 107-page complaint filed Wednesday in Baltimore federal court.

George Nilson, Baltimore's city solicitor, said in an interview the new complaint follows unsuccessful efforts to settle the case over the last month, in talks initiated by the bank.

"I don't doubt that the people we talk to at Wells believe they behave extraordinarily well these days," he said. "I have a sense they really want to do better, but we are just not prepared to say: 'Forget about what happened before.'"

Memphis' lawsuit filed in December also alleged FHA violations. The 83-page amended complaint adds a claim that Wells Fargo also violated Tennessee consumer protection law.

Bradley Blower, a lawyer representing Memphis, said the amended complaint introduces evidence from former loan officers and branch managers about the bank's alleged "unfair and deceptive" lending practices, and shows 50 specific properties that together illustrate how Memphis incurs more costs when the bank makes home loans and then forecloses.

"We're hoping that Wells Fargo will do the right thing," Blower said, "but right now we're on the litigation track."

NAACP EYES OTHER SETTLEMENTS

Baltimore's amended complaint came three months after U.S. District Judge J. Frederick Motz dismissed its earlier complaint as too broad. He gave the city permission to sue over specific houses and neighborhoods where it believed damages might be traceable to specific Wells Fargo lending practices.

In its amended complaint, Baltimore identified specific expenses it said it incurred because of Wells Fargo foreclosures, including costs for inspections, condemnations and boarding up homes, and increased police and fire costs.

Baltimore also said it has lost property tax revenue both from foreclosed homes and from homes whose values fell because of large concentrations of nearby Wells Fargo foreclosures.

The NAACP, whose U.S. headquarters are in Baltimore, said its agreement with Wells Fargo includes a pledge that the bank will offer the "highest quality credit vehicle" appropriate to borrowers, while guarding against racial bias in lending.

"We are going to collaborate in communities across the country that have been underserved and badly served," NAACP General Counsel Laura Blackburne said in an interview.

Referring to other lenders that the NAACP is suing, she added: "By Wells taking this big leap forward, it may very well move a couple of others a little more quickly."

Wells Fargo shares closed up 24 cents, or 0.8 percent, at $32.23 on the New York Stock Exchange.

The Baltimore case is Mayor & City Council of Baltimore v. Wells Fargo Bank NA et al, U.S. District Court, District of Maryland, No. 08-00062. The Memphis case is City of Memphis et al v. Wells Fargo Bank NA et al, U.S. District Court, Western District of Tennessee, No. 09-02857.

(Reporting by Jonathan Stempel; editing by Dave Zimmerman, Gary Hill and Andre Grenon)
U.S.

Thursday, March 4, 2010

Make Wells Fargo Accountable

MEDIA RESPONSIBILITY

With Wells Fargo doling out millions of dollars in these hard stressed times for advertising, can we expect the embattled television stations and print media to cover the growing actions against Wells Fargo. See the links below in front of Wells Fargo in San Francisco in December 2009---not one major media was present although SEIU officials and volunteers led the protest. Also no media covered the CCISCO Led protest.

SEIU led Protest against Wells Fargo



CCISCO Led Protest




FACT SHEET ON WELLS FARGO DUPLICITY WITH HOMEOWNER IN ANTIOCH,CA

  • The house in which I live in Antioch, went into default and was about to be foreclosed on, but the owner began negotiations for a loan modification and ultimately worked out a deal for a short sale.
  • Well Fargo did not accept the first offer from a buyer in late fall '09. Finally, another offer came in and Wells Fargo accepted the offer by February 8, 2010.
  • As a tenant I was preparing myself to move out of the house with an expectation of having 60 days for the sale to go through.
  • On Valentine's Day I returned home to find a upsetting and embarrassing notice on the Door with blue broad tape that said Wells Fargo had foreclosed on the house and I had to move.
  • Without notice to the landlord, Wells Fargo although having a contract in hand, reneged on the contract to take the listing from the Real Estate Company employed by the landlord that had worked out the deal and immediately gave it to another company. The relationship with the new real estate company had to have been already established. 
  • In a cash for keys offer, the new real estate agent said she could offer me $500 to move out. In California that would barely pay for a Uhaul truck.

  • I immediately began writing our public servants such as Senator Dianne Feinstein,
  • California Attorney General Edmund Brown and the Department of Justice.
  • The questions I am raising are Is Wells Fargo Business Practices right given they were bailed out yet they reneged on a deal causing stress and additional financial hardship for the landlord and tenant?; Who is Wells Fargo doing business with as foreclosures disproportionately affect minorities? Are they doing business with minority real estate companies, brokers and services (clearing and cleaning houses etc.) on the level of the statistics of those foreclosed on?; Bottom line is Wells Fargo benefiting from the financial hardships of minorities coming and going? Is there collusion between Wells Fargo Bank executives and the businesses they choose to do business with in the aftermath of this financial downturn and high foreclosures among minorities. With the force of monies made with "ghetto loan" ( one executive making $700,00 a year in incentives and salary from such admitted practices), should not Wells Fargo be held accountable?
  • By Wells Fargo reneging on a deal that is on the table,without notice, one accepted by one of their agents, the landlord was not able to protect her property through the laws of the land such as bankruptcy, additionally the foreclosure will make it difficult for her to find a job.
  • Although a week prior to the foreclosure the landlord had received a good review from her employer, one week after the foreclosure, she was terminated from her job.

There is proof being examined in courts across this nation that Wells Fargo Bank is culpable. See links to articles below:

Prate & Brody file Suit Against Wells Fargo Alleging Wrongful Foreclosure (posted 1/28/10)
http://www.mdjonline.com/pages/full_story/push?article-American+nightmare%20&id=5580797&instance=home_news_left

http://www.georgia-trial-lawyers.com/2010/01/atlanta_lawyers_at_pate_brody_2.html

Illinois Attorney General Sues Wells Fargo Bank

http://money.cnn.com/2009/07/31/news/companies/illinois_wells_fargo.reut/

Class Action Suit Against Wells Fargo in Los Angeles
http://www.housingwire.com/2009/09/01/wells-fargo-discrimination-suit-goes-class-action-1/

Judge Throws Out Baltimore Suit Against Wells Fargo

http://www.nytimes.com/2010/01/09/business/economy/09baltimore.html

http://www.nytimes.com/2009/06/07/us/07baltimore.html



LETTER CALLING FOR THE JUSTICE DEPARTMENT TO INVESTIGATE WELLS FARGO BANK