from Mother Jones:
It's all unraveling for David J. Stern, the South Florida foreclosure attorney who built a once-formidable foreclosure empire only to see it crumble in recent months. On Friday, DJSP Enterprises, Stern's publicly traded foreclosure processing company, announced his resignation as president and CEO. Replacing him is Stephen Bernstein, a prominent real estate executive in Florida. It's Bernstein's job now to turn around a company that's lost 96 percent of its initial market capitalization of $300 million in less than a year. The company has never recovered from an unexpected dip in business that caused DJSP's stock to plummet this spring. DJSP's stock value has hovered around $.50 a share for the past week.
The downfall of DJSP, which handles non-legal processing work for Stern's law firm, stems largely from David Stern's own fallout with some of his biggest clients, both in Washington and on Wall Street. After media reports, including MoJo's own eight-month investigation exposed the questionable, dubious practices at Stern's firm (one former employee called it a "legal sweatshop") and widespread evidence of rampant corner cutting and even alleged fraud, the scrutiny of Stern's multimillion-dollar operation increased. Soon after MoJo published its story on Stern in August, the Florida attorney general announced a probe into Stern's firm to see whether bogus paperwork had been cooked up to speed up the foreclosure proceed and churn out more profit.
Before long, facing pressure from members of Congress and the public, Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, the taxpayer-rescued government housing corporations who'd previously counted Stern among their retained attorneys, stopped doing business with him. It was a major blow to Stern; so important (and lucrative) to him were Fannie and Freddie that he referred to them as his "babies." Citigroup, GMAC, and Wells Fargo followed Fannie and Freddie's lead soon after. As a result, Stern's new business plummeted by more than 90 percent, he wrote to employees in a November letter. His operation has laid off more than 400 of its 1000-plus employees in recent weeks as a result of the slowdown in foreclosure referrals, and is expected to fire even more. .......(more)
The complete piece is at:
http://motherjones.com/mojo/2010/11/david-stern-resign-foreclosure-florida