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JPMorgan sued for $95 million over mortgage securities

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A flag hangs on the wall of the JP Morgan company stall on the floor of the New York Stock Exchange in New York July 15, 2010.

Credit: Reuters/Lucas Jackson

Tue Jan 3, 2012 2:40pm EST

(Reuters) - JPMorgan Chase & Co has been sued for $95 million by the trustee for securities marketed in 2005 by the former Bear Stearns Cos over alleged misrepresentations regarding the underlying mortgage loans.

US Bank NA wants to force JPMorgan to buy back the mortgage loans because of alleged breaches of representations and warranties regarding the Bear Stearns Asset Backed Securities Trust 2005-4, for which it serves as trustee.

It also accused the largest U.S. bank by assets of refusing to provide the underlying loan files, as the trust documents require, so it can investigate the extent of the alleged breaches.

The unit of US Bancorp said it made its request at the direction of a majority certificate holder in the trust. US Bank also sued Bear Stearns and its former EMC Mortgage Corp unit. JPMorgan bought Bear Stearns in 2008.

JPMorgan spokeswoman Jennifer Zuccarelli declined to comment.

The lawsuit was filed on Friday in the New York State Supreme Court in Manhattan, and publicly docketed on Tuesday.

It is one of many lawsuits seeking to hold banks responsible for investor losses over mortgages that may have been toxic, defective or improperly underwritten.

JPMorgan Chief Executive Jamie Dimon last month told investors that the bank has been sued over $54.9 billion of private-label securitizations, excluding the former Washington Mutual Inc, and expects that number to rise.

"We think the disclosures are clear, risks were plain and set forth," he said. "Investors, mostly sophisticated, they understood and accepted it."

The case is Bear Stearns Asset Backed Securities Trust 2005-4 v. EMC Mortgage Corp et al, New York State Supreme Court, New York County, No. 650003/2012.

(Reporting by Jonathan Stempel in New York; Additional reporting by David Henry; editing by Gerald E. McCormick)

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Comments (6)
tularockstar wrote:
Although $95 million is a lot of money, it’s probably a drop in the bucket for JP Morgan. This greedy bank made billions from the housing collapse in 2008. Every bank should be sued and their CEOs should go to jail for what they did. Of course, we all know that none of them had gone to court or to jail! As, Congress is protecting them.

Jan 03, 2012 2:10pm EST  --  Report as abuse
DJ60 wrote:
Everyone who had a mortgage with this “snake” should sue. They ripped me off so bad when I had my mortgage with them. HORRIBLE customer service…noone knows what the other one is doing or who they are talking to. NIGHTMARE of an experience. I refinanced TWICE just to get out from under this miserable company.

WATCH OUT credit card customers also. I paid off balances early, and got socked with over $100 interest charges from them.

AVOID at all costs.

Jan 03, 2012 2:43pm EST  --  Report as abuse
JamVee wrote:
Sounds like the plethora of “Ivy League” graduates, who populate the top floors at all the big banks, couldn’t figure out those damned mortgage backed securities either. So, they all just “took it on faith” that, at least, the sellers understood them . . . NOT!

Jan 03, 2012 4:01pm EST  --  Report as abuse
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