Tronde,
Here in the US it emerged that several banks - big banks, were actively committing fraud so that more people would be foreclosed on so they could take the entire asset. They totally got away with it.
It was their word against the banks and the banks got away with it. Even when one very large US bank was forced to pay a settlement, it worked out to around $300 per family foreclosed on. They had paid off their mortgages or made the payments on time they were supposed to - but still lost their homes.
How much was their compensation?
This was in a case where the bank was officially declared "Guilty" and there was no debate that they had deliberately pretended families who had managed to get their payments in on time, often having gone to great trouble to get that money, had failed to.
the bank abused their power and the trust people had put in them to declare them in default and foreclose on the houses which often then went to ruin, not being occupied they became flooded or targets of metal thieves, etc,. often serving as a magnet for homeless people and destroying the value of other homes in their communities..
How much did the banks have to pay for this behavior? So little as to be almost less than nothing.
The bank was forced to pay a settlement that worked out to a very small sum, of which the lawyer who brought the class action lawsuit got around a third. The payment was a few hundred dollars per family.