Your mortgage documents are fake!
http://www.salon.com/2013/08/12/your_mortgage_documents_are_fake/
Georgetown Law professor Adam Levitin spelled this out in testimony before Congress in 2010: If mortgages were not properly transferred in the securitization process, then mortgage-backed securities would in fact not be backed by any mortgages whatsoever.
The lawsuit alleges that these notes, as well as the mortgage assignments, were never delivered to the mortgage-backed securities trusts, and that the trustees lied to the SEC and investors about this. As a result, the trusts could not establish ownership of the loan when they went to foreclose, forcing the production of a stream of false documents, signed by robo-signers, employees using a bevy of corporate titles for companies that never employed them, to sign documents about which they had little or no knowledge.
Many documents were forged (the suit provides evidence of the signature of one robo-signer, Linda Green, written eight different ways), some were signed by officers of companies that went bankrupt years earlier, and dozens of assignments listed as the owner of the loan Bogus Assignee for Intervening Assignments, clearly a template that was never changed. One defendant in the case, Lender Processing Services, created masses of false documents on behalf of the banks, often using fake corporate officer titles and forged signatures. This was all done to establish standing to foreclose in courts, which the banks otherwise could not.
Szymoniak stated in her lawsuit that, Defendants used fraudulent mortgage assignments to conceal that over 1400 MBS trusts, each with mortgages valued at over $1 billion, are missing critical documents, meaning that at least $1.4 trillion in mortgage-backed securities are, in fact, non-mortgage-backed securities. Because of the strict laws governing of these kinds of securitizations, theres no way to make the assignments after the fact. Activists have a name for this: securitization FAIL.
(More at the link. Via Occupy Fights Foreclosures.)