File Your Complaint:

CFPB:
Consumer Financial Protection Bureau
(855)
411-CFPB (2372)
Español (855) 411-CFPB (2372)
TTY/TDD (855) 729-CFPB (2372)
8
a.m.–8 p.m. Eastern, Monday–Friday
The
consumer is given a tracking number and the banks HAVE to respond.
And don't forget whistle-blowers are protected and can remain anonymous.
OCC:
File a complaint against a bank
Phone:
800-613-6743, TDD Number: 713-658-0340
TTY: (800) 877-8339 (via a relay service)
"The CFPB has been a real game changer - they force the banks to respond to the QWR and produce the evidence which is why the banks want to get rid of it."
Grace Ross, MAAPL
IT APPEARS BANKS MAY OR MAY NOT LEGALLY FORECLOSE (DEPENDING ON CASE FACTS) WITH AN OPEN OCC COMPLAINT!
Get busy now, file that complaint.
CFPB CONSUMER BUREAU ACTION TRACKER
CFPB-Enforcement Tracker
Ask CFPB-What are errors that show up in credit reports?
CFPB-What are errors that show up in credit reports?
Living Lies National Attorney Network List - Lawyers Who Get It
MAAPL – The Massachusetts Alliance Against Predatory Lending
A coalition of local and state-wide organizations working together to reverse the foreclosure crisis.
MAAPL – The Massachusetts Alliance Against Predatory Lending
A collaborative effort of the NH Bar Association’s Legal Services Department, NH Legal Assistance, the Legal Advice and Referral Center (LARC), the NH Foreclosure Relief Project is funded by a portion of the state’s share of the national mortgage foreclosure settlement through the NH Department of Justice.
If you are a homeowner, help is available to New Hampshire residents of all income levels who are struggling to keep up with their mortgage payments, are having problems enforcing loan modifications or possibly facing foreclosure. Please see Help for Homeowner tab for more information on how to find help today.
We also provide opportunities for education, networking and support to attorneys participating in the project. If you are an attorney participating in the Project, please log-in to access resources.

NFHA
Discrimination Complaint against Wells Fargo



Legal Assistance Foundation
of Chicago

Texas
Department of Savings and Mortgage Lending

The Community Law Center, Inc.

Homeowners
whose primary residence was part of a foreclosure action between January
1, 2009 and December 31, 2010, and whose home loan was serviced by a
participating servicer, may be eligible for an Independent Foreclosure
Review.
The
Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System and the Office of the
Comptroller of the Currency (federal bank regulators) have required an
Independent Foreclosure Review by an independent consultant to identify
eligible customers who may have been financially injured due to errors,
misrepresentations, or other deficiencies in their foreclosure process.
If the review finds that financial injury occurred, the customer may
receive compensation or other remedy.
Also
see: Foreclosure Reviews: Exorbitant for Banks, Gold Mines for Consultants
This is from the November 1, 2012 American Banker: Excerpt:
Obscured in the feuding is an issue potentially even more troubling than the questions about the consultants' independence: the cost of running the reviews has spiraled out of all proportion to their potential benefits.
Designed to compensate wronged homeowners, the review programs are almost certain to deliver several times more cash to the consultants overseeing them. Bankruptcy filings by ResCap, the former GMAC mortgage servicer slated to be acquired by Ocwen, state that the company will pay consultant PricewaterhouseCoopers
$12,500 to review each of 20,000 loans for a total cost of a quarter-billion dollars. Yet ResCap expects to pay only $35 million to $60 million to harmed
homeowners |
For
this independent review, Homeowner
gets $860.00 - $2,000.00 as compensation for the intentional
destruction of your life, stolen equity, theft of your home, and
multiple civil and criminal wrongs committed against you; PricewaterhouseCoopers
get $12,500.00 to review your single file.
|