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TAF paid over 500K to the Law Firm trying to destroy Shane Lanham

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Good for Ohio, but that's not the case in quite a few States. Florida has also abided by the Law. The ASC is asking the States to circumvent their State laws, and they need to be held accountable. As does TAF for their Political pandering and self-preservation agenda, which is killing the industry.
Whatever. Regardless of the impediments a state adds it isn't going to alter the outcome. That states have no choice other than take it or leave it. Which is to say they have no choice whatsoever because "leave it" is effectively impossible.
 
AARO should be all over the second Baltimore appraisal. https://aaro.net/

They have access to cash

Another corrupt and useless organization that had over half a million dollars go “missing “
 
Still waiting for your suggestions as to the superior alternatives. We can't discuss any suggestions that you're holding as a secret.
 
I just checked Shane’s GoFundmepage, and still nothing from Dave or the gang on 15th. Can you at least sacrifice one of your trips to the Caribbean and make a significant donation?

 
So The Appraisal Foundation paid Relman Colfax, a shakedown down firm deeply embedded in the swamp, $570,000 to assist in working with the current USPAP. You can not make this stuff up. The lack of accountability and corruption at TAF and the ASC is astonishing. On a side note, Dave Bunton gave himself a raise for 2022.

*** FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE ***

GOFUNDME CAMPAIGN COULD RID HOME VALUATIONS OF DEI
INTIMIDATION

VENTURA, Calif. (Feb. 9, 2024) – Shane Lanham is an independent real estate
appraiser based in Parkville, Maryland. He’s being sued by two ethnic-studies
professors at Johns Hopkins University, backed by an opportunistic law firm, for
purportedly concluding a “low value” of the professors’ home due to the
couple’s race. Lanham is countersuing the pair for defamation after being
labeled a racist. He’s now seeking help from the public via a GoFundMe
campaign to keep the fight going.

In August 2022, the Washington, D.C.-based activist law firm Relman Colfax
filed a lawsuit in the U.S. District Court for the District of Maryland against
Lanham, the real estate appraisal company 20/20 Valuations, LLC, and
residential mortgage lender loanDepot.com, LLC, on behalf of college
professors
Nathan Connolly and Shani Mott, alleging racial discrimination in a
home appraisal. The appraiser is white, and the property owners are black.

The couple, who are both black-studies professors at Johns Hopkins University,
allege Lanham violated the federal Fair Housing Act, the Equal Credit
Opportunity Act, the Civil Rights Act of 1866, and Maryland fair housing laws.
They seek damages, injunctive relief and declaratory relief. Lanham says he
was just doing his job as an appraiser.

Sometimes appraisals result in value opinions that torpedo a sale or
refinancing, or force parties to renegotiate. It’s the system working. What’s at
issue, believe observers, is appraiser independence and the freedom of a
financial analyst to speak an opinion without the risk of being harassed in the
courts by a disgruntled borrower with big-money backing. The nation’s $12
trillion mortgage market depends on the nation’s 80,000 appraisers being able
to render independent value opinions of the collateral.

Johns Hopkins University has been a hotbed of divisive racial politics as of late.
It’s a surprise to few that the plaintiffs are affiliated with Hopkins. Last month, its
medical school’s Office of Diversity, Inclusion, and Health Equity (DEI) issued a
toxic “privilege” list that made sweeping and offensive generalities about people
based largely on their race. It caused a backlash that resulted in a retraction
and an apology by the medical school’s dean.

Relman Colfax, representing the Hopkins professors, touts itself as a national
civil rights law firm. It clearly prospects for promising veins of discrimination –
real and imagined – and works the coalface for payouts from bled-out mom-
and-pops and cowardly public agencies and corporations.

A murky Beltway nonprofit known as the Appraisal Foundation, according to its
2022 IRS Form 990, paid over $500,000 to Relman Colfax in the year covered
by the filing. The nonprofit has received tens of millions of dollars in grants from
an obscure federal entity known by the tortuous name the Appraisal
Subcommittee of the Federal Financial Institutions Examination Council. The
tiny federal entity, in turn, receives its budget, which has become all but a slush
fund, outside the congressional appropriations process. It commandeers state
appraiser licensing agencies for its annual spending money. The states simply
add the costs as pass-throughs to the licensees’ renewal fees. The lack of
accountability has been a recipe for corruption.


Attorney John Relman of the law firm was vocal in 2022 in perpetuating the
trope that a state-licensed appraiser would value a property based on the race
of the borrower. A flawed Brookings Institution study in 2018 served as the
basis for such accusations, but it has since been refuted by researchers
Edward Pinto and Tobias Peter at the AEI Housing Center. The discredited
Brookings findings were found to have ignored key socio-economic factors. No
case alleging appraiser discrimination has ever been adjudicated in a court of
law.

Lanham is confident in his opinion of the home’s value. He says he is
committed to fighting the allegation in court and going after his accusers for the
harm they have caused to his professional reputation. He said he has engaged
a consultant with significant experience in these types of cases.

“Through an insurance policy I carry,” said Lanham, “I have limited funds, only
$100,000, to cover the costs of the lawsuit through investigation, discovery,
motions, and trial. However, my understanding is that the $100,000 amount will
not be enough to take this case through trial both defending myself from the
false allegations and prosecuting the defamation case. My goal is to raise
$50,000 through [a] GoFundMe to cover the lawsuit costs that my insurance
policy will not pay, and that I cannot personally afford.”

Any money not used, said Lanham, will be donated to The National Association
of Appraisers to help fund scholarships for those trying to enter the field but
cannot afford the costs associated with doing so.

# # #

You can contribute to Lanham’s legal fund by going to his GoFundMe page
here.

# # #

Jeremy Bagott is a real estate appraiser and former newspaperman. His most
recent book, “The Ichthyologist’s Guide to the Subprime Meltdown,” is a
concise almanac that distills the cataclysmic financial crisis of 2007-2008 to its
essence. This pithy guide to the upheaval includes essays, chronologies,
roundups and key lists, weaving together the stories of the politics-infused
Freddie and Fannie; the doomed Wall Street investment banks Lehman and
Bear Stearns; the dereliction of duty by the Big Three credit-rating services; the
mayhem caused by the shadowy nonbank lenders; and the massive
government bailouts. It provides a rapid-fire succession of “ah-hah” moments
as it lays out the meltdown, convulsion by convulsion.

# # #
TAF NEEDS TO SUCK A BIG FAT ONE. God they suck
 
Good to have you back DFO.
 

Bernie Madoff is long gone. The lawyers are going strong​


(Reuters) - Long before cryptocurrency and Sam Bankman-Fried, the biggest name in corporate fraud was Bernie Madoff.

Fifteen years after the FBI arrested Madoff on Dec. 11, 2008 for running a massive Ponzi scheme — and two years after his death in a federal prison — lawyers are still sifting through the fallout of his nearly $65 billion fraud.

More than $14.6 billion has been recovered for Madoff's victims so far by Irving Picard, the court-appointed trustee overseeing the liquidation of Madoff's firm, and his legal team. Picard has estimated that Madoff's fraud cost his customers $17.5 billion.

Another recovery came Friday, when Picard announced he was poised to distribute $45 million more to Madoff investors.

The case has been a windfall for Picard, 82, and his law firm, 1,000-lawyer Baker & Hostetler. Since Picard's appointment 15 years ago, they have been awarded more than $1.5 billion in fees, court records show.

The fees through November 2022 have amounted to nearly 17% of Baker & Hostetler's revenues in that time,
according to a Reuters analysis of court records and law firm data from the American Lawyer — an unusually large proportion from one case for a firm its size.

Picard and Baker & Hostetler declined to comment. Their latest request for fees to the U.S. bankruptcy court in Manhattan seeks $37.9 million for more than 68,000 hours of work by 190 lawyers and professionals from April through July.

Picard decided early on to bring cases against "feeder funds" that funneled investor money to Madoff, and "net winners" — investors who took more money out of Madoff's firm than they put in.

About half of his recoveries came from a 2010 settlement with the estate of Madoff's longtime friend Jeremy Picower, which forfeited $7.2 billion. In recent years, Picard's attention has turned to recovering money that was transferred overseas.

o_O :rof: :rof: :rof:
 
the scum bag mortgage broker is going to estimate value via waiver...and the crooked lawyers are going to help write unconstitutional incorporated laws by reference...what could go wrong? :rof: :rof: :rof:
 

Combatting Appraisal Bias​

Real estate professionals can combat racial bias by identifying red flags and equipping buyers and sellers with knowledge about the appraisal process.

WASHINGTON – Lee Davenport became a real estate professional in 2008. Since then, she says, not a year has gone by when racial bias in an appraisal wasn’t suspected by one of her clients or one of the agents she coaches.
Multiple news stories have examined potential bias in appraisals, reporting cases in which Black homeowners’ valuation came in low, only to increase in a second appraisal after all personally identifiable photos and cultural items were removed.
In September 2021, a Freddie Mac report found that appraisal values are more likely to fall below the contracted sales price in Black and Latino neighborhoods than in predominantly White areas. An evaluation of 12 million appraisals found that 12.5% of properties in Black census tracts and 15.4% in predominantly Latino areas received appraisal values lower than the contract price, compared to 7.4% for those in White neighborhoods.
Then, in December 2021, the Federal Housing Finance Agency released a report(link is external), after examining millions of agency property valuations, that found thousands of potential bias cases related to neighborhood descriptions written by appraisers. The report cited examples where appraisers referenced the neighborhood’s racial makeup or the percentage of the local population who were immigrants. In February 2022, Congresswoman Maxine Waters (D-Calif.), chair of the House Financial Services Committee, sent a letter to the Department of Housing and Urban Development, the Appraisal Subcommittee, the Appraisal Foundation(link is external), and the Appraisal Institute calling for an investigation. Meanwhile, HUD Secretary Marcia Fudge chairs the Interagency Task Force on Property Appraisal and Valuation Equity (PAVE), created in June 2021 to address discrimination in the appraisal and homebuying process.

Industry response​


The Appraisal Foundation, which sets congressionally authorized standards and qualifications for real estate appraisers, has included a segment on fair housing laws and bias in its required seven-hour continuing education USPAP course. And the Appraisal Institute recently added a five-hour seminar focused on addressing unconscious bias, updated its code of ethics, and created a practice guide affirming that appraisers should ignore ethnographic and other personal characteristic in property appraisals.


“We’re trying to create a more equitable housing environment in the country ... and ensure unconscious bias doesn’t play a role in appraisals,” says Jody Bishop, 2022 president of the Appraisal Institute and senior managing partner of Valbridge Property Advisors in Mount Pleasant, S.C.


One way to combat bias is to foster diversity in the industry, says Corey Hammonds, founder and CEO of The Hammonds Group in Nashville, Tenn. In 2016, Hammonds became the youngest African American certified general appraiser in the state of Tennessee.


“It’s an unintended lack of access. Many don’t know what appraisals are and what they do,” says Hammonds. “The qualifications to become an appraiser are very expensive. And people tend to deal with who they know, and if you’re not well connected, it’s a hard industry to tap into.”


There are 78,000 appraisers in the U.S., of whom 85% identify as White and 77% as male, according to The Appraisal Institute. The institute is partnering with Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac, and the National Urban League in an appraiser diversity initiative, reaching out to more diverse candidates and educating them about the appraisal profession.
The National Association of Realtors® has its own diversity, equity, and inclusion initiative, including a mentoring program known as NAR Spire. NAR also worked with the Biden administration on the PAVE Action Plan, released in March, which provides 21 recommendations for both improving government oversight of the appraisal industry and working with federal agencies and stakeholders to educate consumers on how to recognize and report potential instances of appraisal bias. The action plan also suggests developing procedures to ensure automated valuation models do not incorporate bias in their estimations of value.

What salespeople can do​


Real estate professionals can play a major role in combating racial bias by identifying red flags and taking recourse on behalf of their clients. Hammonds says agents should equip their buyers and sellers with knowledge about the appraisal process. Often, marginalized borrowers, including those in the Black, Hispanic, and Indigenous communities, have not had models of homeownership.


“They might not know they can dispute an appraisal or steps they can take to request a second one,” says Tai Christensen, diversity, equity & inclusion officer at CBC Mortgage Agency, an FHA specialist whose mission is to help erase the racial disparity in real estate. “We lean into homeownership education, and our prospective buyers are taught about appraisals and appraisal bias and what that means.”


Davenport suggests asking lenders about their policies for handling racial bias in appraisals.


In another proactive move, agents can present comparable sales and facts about the house, including a list of recent updates and repairs. “I accept any information that a homeowner or agent gives me. It’s helpful,” Bishop says. “If an appraiser rejects it, that would be a red flag to me.”


If you still believe an appraiser has reached a conclusion that’s inaccurate or biased, the Appraisal Institute’s site outlines steps for reconsideration of value. Beyond that, agents who suspect bias can work with their client to file a report with their state housing authorities or a federal agency like HUD, says LendingTree Senior Economic Analyst Jacob Channel. “The Federal Trade Commission(link is external) provides a good resource for how to spot mortgage discrimination and what those impacted by it can do in response,” he adds.


“I believe overwhelmingly there are more people today committed to listening, learning, and changing,” Bishop says.


© 2024 National Association of Realtors® (NAR)


i wonder who pays for all the anti appraiser hit pieces... :unsure: :rof::rof::rof:
 
Was the potential for bias in the MORTGAGE loan process never brought up and discussed with you folks in the....
1980s, 1990s, 2000s, etc....
 
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