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    Dead Person Signs Affidavits For Debt Collectors?

    December 31, 2010

    Martha Kunkle has come back to life.

    She died in 1995. Yet her signature later appeared on thousands of affidavits submitted by one of the nation's largest debt collectors, Portfolio Recovery Associates Inc., in lawsuits filed against borrowers.

    Some regulators complain that the use of Ms. Kunkle's name reflects an epidemic of mass-produced, sloppy and inaccurate documentation in the debt-collection industry. Lawsuits have surged as more borrowers fall behind on payments and collection firms turn to courts to get what they are owed.

    After being sued for fraud, Portfolio Recovery Associates decided in early 2008 that any documents bearing Ms. Kunkle's name had "defects" and shouldn't be used when trying to collect debts, a company spokeswoman said.

    Last July, though, lawyers for Portfolio Recovery Associates sought a court judgment in a lawsuit against a Seattle woman for $2,892.10 in credit-card debt and interest that she allegedly owed. It was a cookie-cutter case, except for one thing: To vouch for the debt's validity, the Norfolk, Va., company included an affidavit signed by Martha Kunkle.

    The spokeswoman said the document was "inadvertently used by our outside counsel" because of "human error," adding that the suit was dropped later "upon review of the case."

    The company said Ms. Kunkle's name isn't on any other affidavits submitted to judges since early 2008 by Portfolio Recovery Associates or outside lawyers who handle most of its debt-collection cases.

    "When you see corner-cutting like this, it's alarming," Minnesota Attorney General Lori Swanson said about the Kunkle case. Ms. Swanson is investigating numerous buyers and collectors of consumer debt for falsifying affidavits. A spokeswoman for the company, the second-largest debt buyer in the U.S. by revenue, said the company is unaware of the investigation and declined further comment.

    Missouri Attorney General Chris Koster said he wants to investigate whether Martha Kunkle's name appears on any affidavits used to collect debt in the state of Missouri.

    Some judges say robo-signing, in which affidavits are signed without fully reviewing underlying documentation, is more common in debt-collection cases than foreclosures. In July, the Federal Trade Commission recommended that state regulators require the disclosure of "more information" by debt collectors and buyers, concluding that they might be relying on erroneous or incomplete paperwork when suing to recover money.

    "I've watched and wanted to tell defendants in these suits to demand proof of the underlying debt because that proof is so often flimsy," said Jeffrey Lipman, a magistrate judge in Polk County, Iowa, which includes Des Moines, the state's capital. Court rules give him little leeway to instruct borrowers in court.

    Large debt collectors such as Portfolio Recovery Associates and publicly traded rivals Encore Capital Group Inc. and Asset Acceptance Capital Corp. frequently buy delinquent accounts in bulk. Information about each debt sometimes is little more than a line in a spreadsheet with the borrower's name and amount owed, according to lawyers who represent borrowers. As of Sept. 30, Portfolio Recovery Associates had $91.5 million in revenue from lawsuits it won, or 34% of its overall revenue.

    In 2008, Judy Montoya, an employee at Portfolio Recovery Associates, testified in a debt-collection suit filed by the company that its "legal specialists" sign as many as 200 affidavits a day. The company's spokeswoman said such employees sign an average of 100 affidavits a day and are guided by "a very rigorous set of policies and procedures." Ms. Montoya couldn't be reached to comment.

    Questions about Martha Kunkle first popped up in 2008 after her name appeared in thousands of affidavits generated by a unit of Providian National Corp. The credit-card issuer sold an undisclosed number of delinquent account balances to Portfolio Recovery Associates and other debt collectors, which then sued the borrowers to collect the debt.

    Most of the debt was racked up before 2004. Providian was acquired in 2005 by Washington Mutual Inc. The Seattle company's banking operations failed in 2008 and were sold to J.P. Morgan Chase & Co., which declined to comment.

    Concerns about Ms. Kunkle's affidavits were raised in 2008 by lawyers for Jeanie Cole, one of thousands of Montana residents sued by Portfolio Recovery Associates to collect debts. After failing to locate Ms. Kunkle, lawyers for Ms. Cole interviewed her daughter, who worked at Providian in a document-processing division.

    The daughter testified in a deposition that other Providian employees used the name Martha Kunkle when signing affidavits. Along with other employees, the daughter was responsible for signing affidavits. After countersuing Portfolio Recovery Associates for alleged violations of the Fair Debt Collection Practices Act, Ms. Cole was the lead plaintiff in a 2008 federal-court suit in Montana alleging the company targeted 16,000 borrowers using "false and misleading" affidavits.

    Last year, Portfolio Recovery Associates agreed to settle the Montana suit. Terms of the deal weren't disclosed, but the company's spokeswoman said it admitted no wrongdoing. She wouldn't say how many borrowers were sued using documents signed by Martha Kunkle. Ms. Cole is prohibited from commenting under terms of the settlement.

    "I would like to reinforce that these were not Portfolio Recovery Associates affidavits," the spokeswoman said. The company said it moved quickly to alert its outside lawyers that Kunkle documents shouldn't be relied on when trying to collect debts.

    The lawsuit against the Seattle woman included an October 2006 affidavit in which "Martha Kunkle, Designated Agent" for Providian, swore "to the best of my knowledge" that the amount owed "reflects a true and correct accounting of the cardholder's credit card account."

    Robert Scanlon, the lawyer who filed the suit for Portfolio Recovery Associates, wouldn't comment on the case or how long he has sued borrowers on behalf of the company. The borrower also declined to comment.

    Filed Chapter 7 July 2010
    Attended 341 September 2010
    Discharged November 2010 Closed November 2010

    #2
    Criminals are criminals, regardless of what they do for a living. These type of people are employeed in all aspects of the business world, not just the collections industry.
    All information contained in this post is for informational and amusement purposes only.
    Bankruptcy is a process, not an event.......

    Comment


      #3
      Wow, I do believe this CA filed a claim in my Ch 13. I'll have to look at my papers and see who they are collecting for.
      Filed: 5/22/07; 341 Hearing: 6/27/07;
      Confirmed: 8/13/07; DISCHARGED 4/17/2012

      Comment


        #4
        Wow, now that's dedication! Some people work until the day they die, but Martha went above [hopefully] and beyond -- and kept right on working once she got there!

        That's what we need to get out of this recession: more employees with the dedication and drive of Martha Kunkle!

        -Rich
        Last edited by RichM; 12-31-2010, 09:15 AM. Reason: typo: hitting the punch a little early today...
        Filed Chapter 7: 8/24/2010. Discharged: 12/01/2010
        Member and Exalted Grand Master: American Sarcasm Society (A.S.S.).

        Comment


          #5
          Martha Kunkle for PRESIDENT!!!! i'm sure she's do a better job!!!

          great story!
          8/4/2008 MAKE SURE AND VISIT Tobee's Blogs! http://www.bkforum.com/blog.php?32727-tobee43 and all are welcome to bk forum's Florida State Questions and Answers on BK http://www.bkforum.com/group.php?groupid=9

          Comment


            #6
            There's no telling how many of us have been "Kunkled" in one form or another. Martha Lives!

            Comment


              #7
              I don't see why this isn't clear, out and out fraud for which each and every attorney submitting a fraudulent affidavit should be disbarred.

              I would suggest anyone who has a Martha Kunkle affidavit in a court proceeding file a formal complaint against the attorney handling the case with the State Bar, State Attorney General and FTC.
              Chapter 7 Filed 8/11/2009, Discharged 11/23/2009

              Comment


                #8
                Oh, and each and every Notary who notarized the affidavit should be stripped of Notary powers, especially if they notarized stating Martha "personally appeared".
                Chapter 7 Filed 8/11/2009, Discharged 11/23/2009

                Comment


                  #9
                  Originally posted by Charlie777 View Post
                  I don't see why this isn't clear, out and out fraud for which each and every attorney submitting a fraudulent affidavit should be disbarred.

                  I would suggest anyone who has a Martha Kunkle affidavit in a court proceeding file a formal complaint against the attorney handling the case with the State Bar, State Attorney General and FTC.
                  me either...if it were YOU or I...we'd have our asses in JAIL...bet me!
                  8/4/2008 MAKE SURE AND VISIT Tobee's Blogs! http://www.bkforum.com/blog.php?32727-tobee43 and all are welcome to bk forum's Florida State Questions and Answers on BK http://www.bkforum.com/group.php?groupid=9

                  Comment


                    #10
                    Originally posted by Charlie777 View Post
                    Oh, and each and every Notary who notarized the affidavit should be stripped of Notary powers, especially if they notarized stating Martha "personally appeared".
                    You know, that is somewhat funny, in a morbid, sick kind of way. The mental image of poor, old Martha's skeletal hand reaching from the grave to sign the paperwork, as the notary stands by, stamp in hand, to make it official.

                    -Rich
                    Filed Chapter 7: 8/24/2010. Discharged: 12/01/2010
                    Member and Exalted Grand Master: American Sarcasm Society (A.S.S.).

                    Comment


                      #11
                      Originally posted by RichM View Post
                      You know, that is somewhat funny, in a morbid, sick kind of way. The mental image of poor, old Martha's skeletal hand reaching from the grave to sign the paperwork, as the notary stands by, stamp in hand, to make it official.

                      -Rich
                      ROFL!!!! rich...quite a thought! but i can see it!...it's really not much different than the faceless, nameless, awful employees the banks still have.
                      8/4/2008 MAKE SURE AND VISIT Tobee's Blogs! http://www.bkforum.com/blog.php?32727-tobee43 and all are welcome to bk forum's Florida State Questions and Answers on BK http://www.bkforum.com/group.php?groupid=9

                      Comment


                        #12
                        Originally posted by RichM View Post
                        Wow, now that's dedication! Some people work until the day they die, but Martha went above [hopefully] and beyond -- and kept right on working once she got there!

                        That's what we need to get out of this recession: more employees with the dedication and drive of Martha Kunkle!
                        -Rich
                        Martha Kunkle died in Texas 24 Oct 1995 at the age of 73, so she would not be employed by a national bank at that age. Court testimony confirmed that Martha Kunkle had never worked for Providian or Washington Mutual. Why her daughter chose to use her dead mother's name to sign affidavits 10 years later is unknown. That's one way to avoid a court subpoena to testify, I suppose. This case first showed up in the news in a 2008 Montana lawsuit:

                        The lawsuit, Heenan said, grew from a state case in which he represented Cole. Portfolio, through the Johnson firm, sued Cole, alleging that she owed a debt on a Providian National Bank credit card.

                        Portfolio tried to prove the debt by filing a notarized affidavit provided by a Martha Kunkle, who purported to be Providian's agent.

                        "We made an effort to meet Martha Kunkle and verify what she said. It all kind of snowballed from there. They never made her available,'' Heenan said.

                        The state judge ruled in Cole's favor and sanctioned Portfolio with a $6,000 penalty for disregarding his order to make Martha Kunkle and the notary public available for depositions.

                        Further investigation found that "Martha Kunkle'' was actually her daughter, Lorraine Kunkle, a Washington Mutual employee in Texas, court records said. Lorraine Kunkle authorized other employees to sign the name "Martha Kunkle'' on thousands of affidavits, the complaint said. Martha Kunkle died in 1995 and never worked for Washington Mutual or Providian, court records said.

                        The Cole case alleges that Portfolio and CACV bought charged-off debt from Washington Mutual and that the bank operated "a false affidavit factory.''

                        Any time one of the companies met resistance to their collection attempts, they would prepare "false and misleading affidavits like the Kunkle affidavit'' for Washington Mutual employees to sign and return for use in court cases, the complaint said. "(Portfolio) and CACV took the false and misleading affidavits and utilized them to secure judgments against hundreds, and perhaps thousands, of alleged debtors.''
                        http://billingsgazette.com/email/top...cc4c03286.html
                        “When fascism comes to America, it’ll be wrapped in a flag and carrying a cross” — Sinclair Lewis

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