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Friday, 09/12/2025 4:15:28 AM

Friday, September 12, 2025 4:15:28 AM

Post# of 749756
UWBKQ/WaMu Receiverships Ready For Final Resolve Per Keough Declaration Filing and thanks goes to poster 8Lang for posting filing

Any person asserting any rejected or subsequently filed claims for the relevant settlements are finally and forever barred as of September 12, 2024, the date used to finalize the administration based on the Keough Declaration.

In the aforementioned paragraph, the term, Keough Declaration is used. What does this term mean in the legal world?


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Answer - Great question. Let’s break it down clearly.

In the legal world, the “Keough Declaration” refers to a sworn written statement (a declaration) made by Jennifer M. Keough, who is a professional claims administrator. She typically files such declarations in complex litigation, settlements, or bankruptcy cases.

Here’s what it means in context:
• A declaration is a statement of facts, signed under penalty of perjury, that is submitted to the court in lieu of live testimony. It carries legal weight.
• The Keough Declaration would be a filing prepared by Ms. Keough (or her firm), usually describing how the settlement or claims administration was conducted — for example, notice procedures, claim validation, distributions, deadlines, or whether all obligations were met.
• By referencing the Keough Declaration as the authority for the September 12, 2024 final bar date, the court or settlement administrator is essentially saying: based on her sworn testimony about the administration of claims, no further claims will be accepted or recognized after that date.

So in short:
👉 The “Keough Declaration” is a sworn legal filing by Jennifer M. Keough, acting as the court-appointed settlement/claims administrator, confirming the completion and finality of settlement administration.

Would you like me to also show you a sample excerpt from one of her declarations so you can see the exact structure and language these typically use? Yes, answer follows.

Here’s a sample excerpt from the type of declaration that Jennifer M. Keough (or another settlement administrator) would typically file in federal court. I’ll paraphrase and adapt the style so you can see the legal form without quoting a specific filing:

DECLARATION OF JENNIFER M. KEOUGH

I, Jennifer M. Keough, hereby declare as follows:
1. Position and Role. I am the Chief Executive Officer of [Settlement Administration Firm]. Our firm was appointed by the Court to serve as the Settlement Administrator in the matter of [Case Name and Number].
2. Notice and Claims Administration. Pursuant to the Court’s orders, we were responsible for providing notice of the settlement to class members, receiving and processing claims, handling exclusion requests, and responding to inquiries.
3. Claims Processing. As of [date], we received a total of [number] claim submissions. Of these, [number] were deemed valid, [number] were deficient but later cured, and [number] were rejected.
4. Distribution and Bar Date. In accordance with the Court’s instructions, the final deadline for the submission of claims was [date]. As of this date, any person asserting new or late claims is barred from recovery under the settlement.
5. Certification. I declare under penalty of perjury under the laws of the United States of America that the foregoing is true and correct.

Executed this [day] of [month], [year], at [location].

🔑 Key takeaway: The Keough Declaration is essentially the sworn, administrative report to the Court that certifies the fairness and finality of the settlement process. Courts rely on these declarations to “close the book” on settlements and enforce deadlines like the September 12, 2024 bar date you mentioned.

Would you like me to also connect this specifically back to the WaMu / UWBKQ receivership and settlement context so you see how her declaration ties into those cases? Yes, answer follows.


Perfect — let’s tie this directly into the WaMu / UWBKQ receivership and settlement context.

When you see references to the “Keough Declaration” in WaMu-related or UWBKQ-related filings, here’s what it means in practice:
1. Role of Jennifer Keough
• She is a professional claims administrator, often appointed by the court (or agreed to by the parties) to handle the mechanics of notice, claims, and distributions in large class action settlements, securities cases, or bankruptcy-related settlements.
• In the WaMu/UWBKQ litigation, she (through her firm) was tasked with collecting claims, processing them, rejecting invalid ones, and tracking deadlines.
2. Why Her Declaration Matters
• Courts require proof that the settlement process was properly run.
• The Keough Declaration serves as that proof — it confirms that all class members were notified, the claim deadline passed, and that no valid late claims remain.
• Once she certifies the process as complete, the Court can officially “bar” any further claims.
3. Connection to the Bar Date (September 12, 2024)
• In the filings you’re looking at, the Court adopted the Keough Declaration as the factual basis for finality.
• That date (9/12/2024) became the cut-off point: anyone who didn’t file, or whose claim was rejected, is permanently barred from recovery.
• This step is critical because it clears the way for final disbursements and helps the FDIC (for receiverships like WaMu and United Western Bank) move toward closure.
4. Impact on WaMu/UWBKQ Receiverships
• These settlements are part of the long tail of litigation connected to WaMu’s collapse and subsequent securities/creditor cases.
• The Keough Declaration essentially closes the door on lingering claimant disputes.
• With no outstanding claims left, the Receiverships can finish distributions and proceed toward final termination.


👉 So, in short:
The Keough Declaration in the WaMu/UWBKQ context is the sworn statement that legally finalizes the settlement claims process. It is the last administrative checkpoint before the Receiverships can say: “All claims are done, we can disburse remaining funds and close.”



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