More stupid Chase tricks

Yet another example of a Chase mistake that caused havoc for a homeowner.  In this case, Chase incorrectly claimed that Bill Krieger had missed his September mortgage payment and wasted no time in informing all three credit agencies about the missed payment that wasn’t actually missed, which caused Krieger’s credit score to plummet.

After acknowledging the mistake, they sent him a paltry $53 to cover his trouble.

I once had an incorrect derogatory statement on my credit report for a payment applied to the wrong account.  It took me 18 months and about 50 hours of my time to get it resolved.

Gee thanks Chase.

Three years and Chase still can’t fix account holder’s address

This is classic Chase ineptness in action.

They will not let me change my address.  I’ve tried three times (meaning – with three new moves, but actually multiple attempts each move).

The address in my online account does not match the address they have on file.  So I can change that all day long, and it doesn’t matter one bit.  I was just in the branch office one more time today attempting to get them to change ALL of my addresses to the one current address.  Neither the regular employee nor the branch manager could do it.  She (the regular employee) was on the phone with tech support until I finally just had to leave because I had other things to do.

And I have a gazillion emails from tech support myself with them just saying things like, “Huh, I don’t know.”  Except they don’t use the word, “huh.”  And when I’d call them, I’d be told things like, “I can’t figure out what’s going on.  Why don’t you call back in three hours because that’s when the new shift is on and maybe someone there can figure it out.”  But they never can.

It’s finally coming to a head though because the bank has a freeze on my account because of the sheer number of returned mails they’ve gotten in the past 3 years.  I currently can’t use Bill Pay, I can’t make deposits, I can’t do anything.

When I left today, the woman said she’d email me before the end of today with an update, but I’m thinking that I’m just going to close my account there if it’s not figured out within the next day or two.  If they’ll let me do that!  They’ll probably tell me I can’t close a frozen account.  I am so annoyed by this.

Verbal vs written modification

This particular case, where Keith and Sharon Lilley accepted a verbal modification of their mortgage and then were foreclosed upon by Chase, was unfortunately dismissed by the court.

They “applied for modified terms on their mortgage loan with a 125 page fax on April 30, 2009.”4

In June 2009, the Lilleys accepted a verbal modification of the mortgage, and made payments as agreed under the modification through November 2009.

On November 20, 2009, JPMorgan sent an Acceleration Writing (Notice of Intent to Foreclose) to the Lilleys.

The lesson here is don’t trust what isn’t written and properly signed.

The latest foreclosure defense

In a blow to banks, a circuit court in Florida ruled that banks must provide evidence of ownership when foreclosing on a property.

While not net enough of a legal precedent to provide a solid defense nation-wide, this is a very promising path to pursue of you want to delay your foreclosure, especially in cases where Chase practices parallel foreclosure while not giving homeowners access to the government sponsored  HAMP opportunities they are entitled to.

WaMu examiner finds no smoking gun

Joshua Hochberg, the examiner tasked into reviewing the failure of Washington Mutual and its sale to JPMorgan Chase for signs of wrong doing released his report today and found that the current settlement before the bankruptcy court is reasonable.

While not surprising given the potential for instability of the nations second largest bank if JPMorgan Chase was found guilty of manipulating WaMu to get a better deal before WaMu failed, the finding is disappointing, especially considering the following statement made by in the report:

It also found that JPMorgan was able to make changes to the FDIC’s purchase and assumption agreement even though other bidders were told it was nonnegotiable.

“While the foregoing facts suggest that the sale process could have been better, they do not, in the examiner’s view, suggest an unfair process under the circumstances or that a different process would have changed the outcome,” the report said.

That deck definitely seemed stacked against WaMu and in favor of JPMorgan Chase.

Hints of a Chase class-action

I came across this ad recently:

Seeking former Washington mutual and Countrywide underwriters, management personel & pro

Great opportunity for the right individuals. We are currently seeking as many as several dozen temp/contract employees with imediate review for hire. great compensation program and flexible schedual gas allowance and many other benefit’s. please email rich at [email address removed] initially only applicants with prior work exp at either countrywide mortgage, countrywide financial or washington mutual

• Location: anywhere

• Post ID: 6410804

Doesn’t that sound like someone going after Chase or BofA for loans written by WaMu or Countrywide and looking for former employees to spill the beans?

How does Chase rate?

According to the poll over at my3cents.com, Chase gets 1.5 out of 4 stars with over 1,200 people voting.

That actually makes them sound better than the poll results indicate.  Take a look at the breakdown:

Yes, almost 90% of respondents gave Chase the lowest rating they could.

2-weeks late gets a harsh letter from Chase

Is this Chase’s new tactic to get people to stop defaulting on their mortgages, hit borrowers with the full nastiness as soon as they are even a little bit late and scare them into paying?  In case anyone is wondering, the average time from first default to foreclosure these days is almost two years, so if your bank sends you a letter warning you of the consequences of non-payment, consider that as well.

Wouldn’t it be something if they sent a letter nasty letter to someone who was late due to Chase applying their mortgage payment to someone else’s loan?

I’m 2 weeks behind on my mortgage payment, today I received a 4 page letter from Chase(my mortgage lender)stating that I have breached my contract and what action next they are going to take..can this be real ????? 2 weeks behind I’m reciving this type of letter??

I’m so confused and scared, this is not the first time I get a little behind on my mortgage payment but I’m up to date as I always have.  I feel like these people are waiting like wolves on homeowners to make any mistake so they can come and take their homes.

I’ve lived in my house for over 5 years now never had a problem paying my mortgage but just like anyone else can run a week or two behind waiting to get paid or whatever else it could be, how can we fight these heartless predators ??  JPMorgan Chase is their names.

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