From NECN.com
In the three years since the U.S. real-estate bubble burst, something  we've learned is what a mess investment banks and mega-banks made as  they took millions of shoddily documented mortgages and sliced and diced  them into arcane Wall Street mortgage-backed securities in the 2000s.
Among  the millions now apparently caught in the fallout: Republican icon  Sarah Palin, the former Alaska governor and 2008 vice-presidential  candidate turned media celebrity.
"The worst thing that could  happen to Sarah Palin is she has a cloud on her title. She's going to  have to go out, retain an attorney, and try to clean up the mess that  the banks caused,'' John L. O'Brien Jr., the Salem-based Register of  Deeds for Southern Essex County, sand in an interview with NECN  Thursday. In a worst-case scenario, a prior owner could challenge  whether Palin now legally holds title to the property -- or Palin could  be stuck with a legal headache trying to resell the house years down the  road.
Working with forensic investigator Marie McDonnell, president of McDonnell Property Analytics Inc. www.mcdonnellanalytics.com,  O'Brien has found abundant evidence that the home a Palin trust bought  in Scottsdale, Ariz., suffers from the same wretched Wall Street paper  trail as millions of other U.S. homes where mortgages were converted  into collateralized debt obligations and sold worldwide.
As Wells  Fargo and JPMorgan Chase processed the mortgages, foreclosed on a  previous lender, and resold the house to an investor who sold it to the  Palin family, McDonnell said, at least two critical documents didn't get  signed and three did get signed by "robo-signers" -- people apparently  using fake names who churned out thousands of purported affidavits every  day vouching for the bank that all the realty and mortgage paperwork  was in order. 
Two names that showed up on several documents  connected to the Palin Arizona home were "Linda Green" and "Deborah  Brignac," names used by multiple robo-signers purporting to be officials  at multiple bank subsidiaries or business partners at Wells and Chase,  O'Brien and McDonnell said. In the case of Brignac signatures on Chase  documents, "This is a shell game where Brignac purports to be vice  president of three different entities so that she can manufacture the  paperwork necessary for JPMorgan Chase Bank to hijack the mortgage and  then foreclose on the property,'' McDonnell said. 
"Linda Green,"  meanwhile, is a name O'Brien said he has found on over 6,000 documents  in his registry signed in what appear to be at least 22 different hands,  almost all of them easily recognizable by an average person as clearly  forgeries. 
O'Brien said, "If fundamental property principles  still matter in this country, Sarah Palin may have legal issues that  could affect the ownership of her home. Through no fault of her own,  Sarah Palin has become a victim like thousands of others across the  country that have the same problem with their chain of title.  I feel  bad for Governor Palin and all the homeowners who have been victimized  by this scheme, it just goes to show you that no one is immune from this  type of fraud and irresponsible behavior that these banks participated  in."
"These banks have participated in a national epidemic of  fraud that has clouded or damaged the chain of title of hundreds of  thousands of American homeowners all across the country. Sadly, Sarah  Palin's misfortune will however, hopefully shine the national spotlight  on this issue. Given her position in the country, I am sure that she  will use her influence to stand up for homeowners and their property  rights".
JPMorgan spokesman Mike Fusco said the bank would  decline to comment. Wells Fargo didn't respond to requests for comment.  Wells and several other banks have faced lawsuits from people facing  foreclosure who argue the banks can't solidly prove they held legal  possession to a mortgage when the bank moved to seize the home from  delinquent borrowers.
The big point O'Brien is trying to make is  that while Sarah Palin may be among the biggest-name victims of shoddy  bank paperwork, there are thousands -- if not tens of thousands -- of  other people around New England facing the exact same problem as the  former Alaska governor proving legal ownership of their homes. "She's  experiencing the same problem that thousands of homeowners in my  district are,'' O'Brien said of Palin.
Meanwhile, as of this week  O'Brien has begun refusing to record documents from banks with "the  names of notorious robo signers" like Linda Green. "When I see something  that I know is fraudulent, I am no longer recording it,'' O'Brien said,  and he hopes more deeds officials around the country will follow suit  and crank up pressure on banks -- and prosecutors -- to finally clean  out hundreds of thousands of bogus realty documents infecting the  nation's real-estate industry. 
Thursday afternoon, I couldn't  reach an aide to Palin to see if she wanted to comment on this  situation, or if she even knew about it. What's important to make  perfectly clear: She hasn't done anything wrong or been accused of doing  anything wrong with the Scottsdale home purchase. She's just bought a  house that -- like all too many U.S. homes in 2011 -- official say has a  very messed-up legal paper trail, thanks to a pair of the nation's very  biggest banks and their Wall Street partners.
Serves ya right you fucking bitch!
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