Jason Werner explains BAC's fraud to BAC collector 6/6/09 part 1 of 2
Uploader Comments (jwerner79)
All Comments (5)
-
HERE ARE SOME OTHER VIDEOS TO VALIDATE BANKS AND GOVERNMENT .... YOUTUBE: PATRICK1678
-
You do not know owhat legally binding is. Legally binding is a generic term, not Webster or wiki, that simply states a law is created between parties. You are correct that a court must get involved to remedy the situation., which is where we are now.
Out of curiosity, which of the court documents have you reviewed?
Thanks so much,
Jason
-
Please reread what I said. I did not say you were "battling" her. I said you were belittling her, which means to speak slightingly of, or to cause a person or thing to seem little or less. Webster's, my friend. Also, in law, a contract (i.e. mortgage) is a binding legal agreement that is enforceable in a court of law. That is to say, a contract is an exchange of promises for the breach of which the law will provide a remedy (i.e. foreclosure). Wikipedia, btw.
-
Correction: I began my business relationship with Countrywide in 2004, not BAC. Furthermore, I did not take anything out on a girl, but rather I simply explained fraud to a woman who, if you listen again, asked me to explain her employer's fraud.
Do you think BAC is involved in any fraud?
Thanks to Jesus,
Jason
-
You are a jerk. The poor girl is just doing her job, the call was probably in a dialer and have no prior knowledge of your account until it pops up. I understand you're upset at lawsuit (which instead was probably a foreclosure because you, for whatever reason either good or bad, are not paying your mortgage, breaking a legal contract that you signed). So you made an investment with a "fraudulent" company, and yet you take it out on a girl doing her job because you defaulted. Nice!!
Now, to address your other questions, because I only have a limited number of characters. The definition of default, if you once again check out Webster, especially definition #3, says a failure to pay financial debts. Now, when a payment that is due on a specific date goes past that date, the loan is in default, until it is brought back current. The bank gives you a grace period to make the payment before they assess a late charge, but that was all agreed upon when you signed the mortgage....
bigjay1264 2 years ago
Wrong again.
No defaulted loan can be remedied simply by "catching up," however I am aware banks have been MODIFYING contracts.
Regardless, you are making statements obviously without even reviewing documents.
jwerner79 2 years ago
You're missing the point. You're trying to portray her as an idiot for working for a company who may or may not be involved in a fraud, of which she had no part of if it turns out to be true, which would have to be decided by the courts anyway. I can't say for sure if they did commit fraud, but the point was you defaulted on a legally binding contract (the bank took a risk on you to lend to you and has a legal right to try to collect on that loan), and you belittled her for doing her job.
bigjay1264 2 years ago
1. You do not even know what legally binding is.
2. Is it true that you think BAC is flawless?
jwerner79 2 years ago