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		<title>Philadelphia Sheriff Refuses To Enforce The Law</title>
		<link>http://markjakubik.com/2008/06/05/philadelphia-sheriff-refuses-to-enforce-the-law/</link>
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		<pubDate>Fri, 06 Jun 2008 02:00:40 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Mark</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Philadelphia]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[foreclsosures]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[sheriff]]></category>

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		<description><![CDATA[Anyone who has had the experience of trying to get a judgment enforced in Philadelphia, or has had dealings with the Philadelphia County Sheriff&#8217;s Office for any reason, cannot possibly be surprised by the following article, which will appear in tomorrow&#8217;s Wall Street Journal, detailing Philadelphia Sheriff John Green&#8217;s refusal to perform his duty and...]]></description>
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<p>Anyone who has had the experience of trying to get a judgment enforced in Philadelphia, or has had dealings with the Philadelphia County Sheriff&#8217;s Office for any reason, cannot possibly be surprised by the following article, which will appear in tomorrow&#8217;s Wall Street Journal, detailing Philadelphia Sheriff John Green&#8217;s refusal to perform his duty and conduct auctions on foreclosed properties:</p>
<blockquote><p>Sheriff John Green has spent 37 years in law enforcement. But these days he&#8217;s best known around town for the law he won&#8217;t enforce.</p>
<p>With the economy soft and thousands of Philadelphians delinquent on their mortgages, Sheriff Green this spring refused to hold a court-ordered foreclosure auction. His move raised eyebrows on the bench and dropped jaws among lenders and their attorneys, who accuse him of shirking his duty to enforce legal contracts.</p>
<p>It also prompted a sweeping, court-endorsed deal, scheduled to go into effect next week, that aims to help homeowners avoid foreclosure. Even as Congress moves forward with a federal plan that could insure up to $300 billion in refinanced mortgages, Mr. Green&#8217;s unilateral approach has pushed Philadelphia to the leading edge of local responses to the national crisis.</p>
<p>&#8220;More of our neighbors, our families and our friends are falling behind on their mortgages and losing their homes&#8221; to foreclosure, the 60-year-old Mr. Green writes in a &#8220;Declaration of Neighborhood Stability&#8221; on his Web site, www.phillysheriff.com1. &#8220;My staff and I watch the suffering every day and witness the heart-wrenching scenes as families lose their primary means of wealth-building and face eviction.&#8221;</p>
<p>Mr. Green&#8217;s 241-person sheriff&#8217;s department is the armed wing of Philadelphia County courts, charged with transporting prisoners, securing courtrooms and auctioning off foreclosed properties at sheriff sales. In a city beset by poverty and crime, Mr. Green has emerged as an unlikely blend of lawman, politician, spiritual leader and social worker.</p>
<p><strong>Desperate Homeowners</strong></p>
<p>A dozen or more desperate homeowners appear in the sheriff&#8217;s lobby each day, seeking solace and counsel from Deputy Sheriff&#8217;s Officer Marquette Parsons, who sits at the front desk wearing blue and packing a sidearm. &#8220;This is the end of the line,&#8221; Mr. Parsons says. &#8220;They have to face reality now, because they&#8217;re facing a sheriff sale.&#8221; Mr. Parsons helps homeowners understand documents they&#8217;ve received from the court and advises them how to reach housing counselors. Sometimes he&#8217;ll contact the lender&#8217;s attorney to mediate a misunderstanding. The sheriff runs ads in local papers urging people to take &#8220;Sheriff Green&#8217;s Important Steps to Saving Your Home.&#8221;</p>
<p>Mr. Green, a police sergeant when he was elected sheriff in 1987, has a politico&#8217;s eye for his job. Last month, he presented a commendation for valor to an officer who was robbed at gunpoint while sitting in a barber&#8217;s chair and wounded one thief in the ensuing firefight. Standing next to the taller officer for the photo opportunity, Mr. Green hiked himself onto his toes. &#8220;Just one second,&#8221; he said. &#8220;I&#8217;m going to become a politician.&#8221; Everyone laughed. But he stayed on his tiptoes until the photographers finished their shots.</p>
<p>The sheriff says his political life merges with his religious calling. &#8220;Everything you do is part of your faith,&#8221; he says. For the past 20 years, Mr. Green, who is married and has six children, has hosted an annual prayer breakfast that has become a see-and-be-seen event for the city&#8217;s political elite.</p>
<p>The 80-page program from this year&#8217;s breakfast is jammed with paid congratulatory ads from businesses and unions, clergymen and subordinates, office holders and office seekers. &#8220;When the righteous are in authority, the people rejoice,&#8221; wrote one pastor, quoting the Book of Proverbs.</p>
<p><strong>&#8216;Stop the Bleeding&#8217;</strong></p>
<p>The sheriff first made his mark in the foreclosure issue in 2004, when he noticed a spike in the number of delinquent properties the court was ordering sold. He postponed one month&#8217;s auction and then went to Judge Annette Rizzo of the Court of Common Pleas seeking to legalize the move.</p>
<p>&#8220;We have to stop the bleeding,&#8221; the judge recalls the sheriff saying in a courtroom crowded with worried homeowners. The sheriff says he doesn&#8217;t remember making such a statement.</p>
<p>&#8220;Really what he did was not legal,&#8221; Judge Rizzo says of the sheriff&#8217;s decision to stop the auction.</p>
<p>During a recess, she summoned the lenders&#8217; lawyers, the sheriff, consumer advocates and the city solicitor into the back room. She asked them to form a committee to determine which individual homeowners deserved a delay, aid through existing government programs, or just a graceful exit from their house. But she declined to order a blanket moratorium on sales.</p>
<p>In 2007, the foreclosure wave began to swell again. Because Philadelphia didn&#8217;t experience a big run-up in home prices, it isn&#8217;t in as bad shape as hotter markets in Florida and Nevada. Nonetheless, foreclosure filings in the city rose to 6,237, from 5,288 the year before. Early this year, approximately 1,000 properties a month were going on the block at the sheriff sales, according to the sheriff&#8217;s office.</p>
<p>The trend caught the attention of Curtis Jones Jr., who had won a seat on the City Council a few months earlier and was eager to make a splash. He teamed up with consumer advocates and a senior colleague, Councilwoman Marian Tasco, to write a resolution calling on the sheriff and the Court of Common Pleas president judge, C. Darnell Jones II, to impose an indefinite moratorium on foreclosure sales.</p>
<p>On March 27, in its gilt-and-green chambers, the City Council unanimously voted its approval. It was a nonbinding resolution, more of a political statement than a practical one.</p>
<p>But as the council meeting moved to other matters, one of the sheriff&#8217;s senior aides phoned Mr. Green to tell him the resolution had passed. The sheriff decided on the spot to postpone the next sale and go to court seeking a longer moratorium. The aide relayed the decision to Councilwoman Tasco, who interrupted the meeting with the news. Housing advocates and their allies in the audience broke into applause.</p>
<p>&#8220;We knew [Sheriff Green] would do that,&#8221; Ms. Tasco told the council. &#8220;He cares about the citizens of Philadelphia.&#8221;</p>
<p>Mortgage lenders, servicers and their attorneys thought Mr. Green was acting more Robin Hood than sheriff. &#8220;It&#8217;s not his job to postpone things in favor of certain people,&#8221; says Michael VanBuskirk, a Philadelphia attorney, who describes the city as a &#8220;legal free-fire zone.&#8221; The city, he says, is &#8220;less attractive to business if you can&#8217;t be certain that the sheriff won&#8217;t invalidate a contract.&#8221;</p>
<p>Mr. Green and Judge Jones are casual golfing buddies. Still, Judge Jones warned the sheriff at a meeting soon after the announcement that a blanket moratorium on the sales was &#8220;unwise and more-likely-than-not illegal.&#8221;</p>
<p>Mr. Green says he never considered the legality of his decision to halt foreclosure sales. His aides say he is being cagey and that he saw himself as a catalyst to get the court to take action.</p>
<p><strong>People Are the Law</strong></p>
<p>&#8220;It&#8217;s not the sheriff&#8217;s job to sell houses,&#8221; says Deputy Sheriff&#8217;s Officer Paris Washington, a veteran of the department and its head of training. &#8220;It&#8217;s the sheriff&#8217;s job to serve the people who elected him. Because he was elected by the people, he has to listen to the people. Aren&#8217;t the people the law?&#8221;</p>
<p>In closed-door negotiations in April with lenders&#8217; attorneys and housing advocates, Judges Jones and Rizzo worked out a streamlined process intended to make loans more affordable for delinquent borrowers who live in their houses.</p>
<p>Such homeowners are entitled to a free lawyer at court-supervised conciliation sessions with their loan-servicing company. Housing counselors are lined up to help assemble financial information to enable servicers and their lawyers to assess borrowers&#8217; ability to pay. The lenders are under no legal obligation to reduce principal or interest, but they face strong pressure to make allowances.</p>
<p>Michael McKeever, a partner in Goldbeck, McCafferty &amp; McKeever, says that his clients &#8212; large loan servicers and investors &#8212; welcome the court initiative&#8217;s potential to help borrowers resolve their debt problems. This week Mayor Michael A. Nutter offered $1 million to finance borrowers&#8217; attorneys and counselors.</p>
<p>To give the plan a chance, Judge Jones ordered that sheriff sales on such owner-occupied properties be suspended at least through next month. The foreclosure wave &#8220;is a problem,&#8221; the judge says. &#8220;Is there a way we can do this in a way consistent with the law?&#8221;</p>
<p>Mr. Green downplays his own role. &#8220;All I did was provide enough time for a solution to develop, which was the easy part,&#8221; he says.</p></blockquote>
<p>Source: <a href="http://markjakubik.com/http://online.wsj.com/article/SB121271135166050537.html?mod=2_1563_topbox/">The Wall Street Journal</a></p>
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