Tag: robosigning settlement

News

Banks OK foreclosure settlement that could give state homeowners $8.4 billion - Palm Beach Post

Mar 13, 2012 10:38 EDT "I was most concerned that there would be some sneak releases for things that we think the banks should be held liable for," said Roy Oppenheim of Oppenheim Law in Weston. "But they are not being released from suits against MERS or securitization."

Florida to get at least $8 billion in settlement with mortgage lenders, officials say - Sun-Sentinel

Mar 13, 2012 10:29 EDT Foreclosure Defense Attorney Roy Oppenheim tells the Sun-Sentinel that nearly half of Florida's take could reach Palm Beach, Broward and Miami-Dade counties, mostly as loan modifications.

Roy Oppenheim on RadioIO's "The Shannon Burke Show"

Feb 28, 2012 10:30 EST Foreclosure Defense Attorney Roy Oppenheim appeared on "The Shannon Burke Show" on Monday February 27th, 2012 to talk about the housing crisis and what he expects to happen now that foreclosures are ramping back up in 2012.

Mortgage deal is broadest action taken in foreclosure crisis

Feb 10, 2012 14:12 EST "Everyone gets their comeuppance," says Roy Oppenheim in reaction to the robosigning settlement in today's USA Today.

Roy Oppenheim on 7News: Robosigning Settlement is Start of 'Cleansing Process'

Feb 10, 2012 06:00 EST Individual homeowners may be disappointed, Roy Oppenheim tells 7News in Miami that the settlement over robosigning, while far from perfect, is a step in the right direction.

Massive mortgage settlement has winners and losers

Feb 09, 2012 16:30 EST “The only people who lose are the people who leave [their houses] and don’t stand their ground,” Weston attorney Roy Oppenheim says in today's South Florida Business Journal

Oppenheim Tells Fox News – AG Settlement is Deal with Devil

Oct 14, 2011 16:17 EDT The foreclosure settlement deal is too sweet for the banks and not worth a “deal with the devil” South Florida Law blogger and foreclosure defense attorney Roy Oppenheim told Fox News national correspondent Phil Keating. The national story aired on FoxNews America’s Newsroom to more than 2 million households.