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Originally published May 17, 2011 at 10:10 PM | Page modified May 18, 2011 at 12:11 AM

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Chase's annual meeting draws protesters; CEO apologizes

Jamie Dimon, JPMorgan Chase's chairman and chief executive officer, said he was sorry for foreclosure mistakes as hundreds of protesters at the annual meeting demanded he do more to help homeowners and small businesses recover from the financial crisis.

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Jamie Dimon, JPMorgan Chase's chairman and chief executive officer, said he was sorry for foreclosure mistakes as hundreds of protesters at the annual meeting demanded he do more to help homeowners and small businesses recover from the financial crisis.

For any errors that were made, "We deeply apologize," Dimon, 55, said Tuesday at the shareholders' meeting in a 2 million-square-foot office building in Columbus, Ohio. "We are doing everything we can to keep people in their homes that should stay in their homes."

Dimon said he especially regretted the bank's mistakes in foreclosing on active-duty military personnel and for fumbling paperwork on other home seizures.

At least one person was handcuffed after a group of about 400 protesters marched up Chase's property and placed a sign on a raft floating in a pond in the bank's premises. The sign read: "Foreclosed: Chase sinks our economy."

Police had each entrance blocked ahead of the meeting, as protesters gathered in the rain and cold chanting slogans such as "Make Banks Pay" and carried signs that said: "Chase gets rich, we lose homes, jobs, services." At least 20 police cruisers circled the building.

Inside, several shareholders spoke out against the bank's handling of mortgage foreclosures.

"As a person of faith, my God believes you shouldn't take advantage of people when they are down," said Dawn Dannenbring, of the community group Illinois People's Action, addressing CEO Jamie Dimon. "Do you believe in the same God I believe in?"

Dimon answered: "That's a hard one to answer."

JPMorgan and other large U.S. banks are feeling the backlash from the housing bust, with mortgage losses and related litigation suppressing earnings and regulators investigating industry practices. The U.S. Justice Department is suing Deutsche Bank for more than $1 billion, and has said it may go after other lenders for filing false claims for federal mortgage insurance on faulty loans.

JPMorgan's record $5.56 billion in profit during the first quarter was tempered by "extraordinarily high losses we still are bearing on mortgage-related issues," Dimon said last month. JPMorgan's $17.4 billion in net income last year made it the most profitable bank in the U.S.

"Everyone is hurting, it seems like, except for Wall Street and its executives," said Jordan Estevao, who helped lead demonstrations outside the meeting for National People's Action, a nonprofit consumer advocacy group.

Protest organizers said about 850 attended, while the bank put the figure at 350. Attendees were screened at four security check points to get into the meeting.

Robin Acree, a 50-year-old community activist from Mexico, Mo., said police sprayed her with mace while she was protesting outside the facility.

"So many of our folks are getting screwed by these big banks," Acree said. "A lot of people are angry. I'm angry. We see economic stress on our families, no jobs and foreclosures."

Protesters shouted "No more diamonds for Dimon" and other slogans, and one was arrested, according to the advocacy group.

"They're not doing their part to aid a recovery," Estevao said Monday. "Instead they are lining their pockets. They're making massive profits, still giving themselves massive bonuses and doing too little to help spur recovery for the rest of America."

Fourteen of the largest mortgage servicers, including JPMorgan and Bank of America, the biggest U.S. bank by assets, signed an agreement in April with the Federal Reserve, Federal Deposit Insurance Corp. (FDIC) and Office of the Comptroller of the Currency to refund costs to homeowners for foreclosures that were mishandled and to overhaul procedures for seizing homes.

JPMorgan took a $1.1 billion charge in the first quarter and may add as many as 3,000 employees to comply with the consent decree. The Department of Housing and Urban Development, Federal Housing Finance Agency and state attorneys general also are investigating the industry's foreclosure practices.

General Counsel Stephen Cutler said at the meeting that the bank's litigation costs were higher than expected in "every area." He said expenses for outside legal advice last year were more than $700 million.

JPMorgan agreed in April to pay $56 million to settle claims that it overcharged military personnel on their mortgages. Dimon has previously apologized, saying the bank erred in handling certain mortgages covered by the Servicemembers Civil Relief Act.

Cutler said the bank mistakenly foreclosed on 27 active-duty military personnel who were protected by the law. JPMorgan is "making amends on every single one of those" by either paying off their mortgages or giving them their houses back for free, he said.

Dimon said the military foreclosures were the worst mistake the bank has ever made.

"We deeply apologize to the military, the veterans, anyone who's ever served this country and we're trying to go way beyond," he said. "We're sorry," he added, drawing a round of applause.

A shareholder proposal requiring the bank to adopt and disclose uniform foreclosure policies failed with 6.4 percent of the vote.

None of the other investor proposals were approved either, with one to allow shareholder action by written consent winning the most support with 48.99 percent of the vote.

Material from The Associated Press is included in this report.

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