The Minnesota attorney general is suing a Florida company that was a major buyer of overdraft debt from Minnesota banks, accusing it of churning out reams of fake bank affidavits to use in its collection from individuals and businesses.
United Credit Recovery LLC was allegedly churning out computer-generated affidavits with bank logos, cutting and pasting supposedly notarized signatures of bank officials onto the documents to make them look authentic.
The electronically robo-signed documents were used for years on a "mass scale," not only to persuade people that they owed the money but also to convince courts to award judgments and to hike the value of portfolios for resale, according to a complaint the state filed Wednesday in Hennepin County District Court.
United Credit Recovery buys the charged-off fees and balances from closed checking and savings accounts that some banks bundle and sell off. It bought billions of dollars in overdraft debt from the country's largest banks since it started in 2007, the lawsuit said.
The company acquired more than 2 million accounts nationally from Wells Fargo and U.S. Bank alone between 2007 and 2011, but it also bought from Bank of America, Fifth Third Bank and Huntington National Bank. Companies like United Credit buy debt at steep discounts and then try to collect as much as they can.
Attorney General Lori Swanson said her office doesn't know how many Minnesotans were affected, but it's at least several thousand. "The numbers are really astronomical," Swanson said in an interview.
The affidavits go beyond the traditional robo-signing that was a hallmark of the country's mortgage debacle, where employees physically signed stacks of paper without regard to the facts.
"Here it's a cut-and-paste job. It takes traditional robo-signing to a whole new level," Swanson said. "We have not seen this scale both in terms of the brazenness of it and the sheer numbers."