Thursday, November 19, 2009

Nevada Law Firm Sues State Over Loan Modification Licensing & Bonding Requirements For Its Non-Attorney Employees

In Clark County, Nevada, the Las Vegas Sun reports:
  • A law firm active in Henderson and Las Vegas is suing the state over rules requiring licensing of non-attorney employees working on mortgage loan modifications.
    Cogburn Law Offices LLC filed suit last week in Clark County District Court against the Department of Business and Industry, Division of Mortgage Lending.

***

  • The suit says that attorneys were specifically excluded when the Nevada Legislature passed a bill this year regulating loan modification companies and firms assisting with short sales and deeds in lieu of foreclosures. But now, the Mortgage Lending Division has imposed rules requiring staff members associated with or employed by attorneys to be licensed, the suit charges. "Such regulation not only enlarges the scope of (the law), but attempts to govern and regulate the practice of law by forcing employees of an attorney to be licensed and governed by the Nevada Mortgage Lending Division," the lawsuit charges. [...] Cogburn is seeking a court declaration that its legal staff and employees are exempt from licensing, including provisions requiring they be bonded and take continuing education classes.

For more, see Law firm sues state over mortgage modification licensing.

Unwitting Renter In Home Hijacking, Rental Scam Dodges Immediate Boot; Proof Of Occupancy For 30+ Days Entitles Her To Rights As Tenant, Says Advocate

In Riverside, California, KABC-TV Channel 7 reports:
  • Rental scams are on the rise in Riverside County. Police in Moreno Valley are investigating a suspected case of felony fraud. One family lost their house and their money even though their rent was paid. It had seemed like the perfect house. Marilyn Elliott and her two children moved in last month. But on Sunday night, it all turned to chaos. "They were like, 'You need to open up the door.' And I'm like, 'What is this?'" recounted fraud victim Marilyn Elliot.

  • It was the Moreno Valley police investigating a report of squatters on the property. What a way for Marilyn Elliot to find out that the lease agreement she signed was bogus. The house was entering foreclosure and officers ordered Elliott to be out within 24 hours.

***

  • The Fair Housing Council [of Riverside County] (http://www.fairhousing.net/) says that many victims do not know their rights. Under the law Elliott does have temporary protection from eviction. "On a weekly basis we are flooded with calls about the same situation," said Juanita Kodera, Fair Housing Council. "If she has been in the unit over 30 days, that makes her a tenant." It took some time to prove she had been there for a month. The receipt for the $3,500 cash she paid was just a handwritten note. Now the police department says it will be up to the bank to give Elliott more time.

For the story, see Riverside renters warned of cash scams (go here for KABC-TV Channel 7 video). KappaPhonyLandlordScam

City Gives Merrill The Boot In Multi-Million $ Municipal Bond Peddling Deal Amidst Charges Of BofA's Failure To Modify Mortgages For Its Residents

In Sunrise, Florida, the South Florida Sun Sentinel reports:
  • It pays to be nice. Just ask Mayor Roger Wishner, who helped kill a multimillion-dollar city partnership with Merrill Lynch because parent company Bank of America has been accused of being mean to the little guy. Two weeks ago, city commissioners voted to hire Merrill Lynch to help sell up to $103 million in bonds. On Monday, commissioners changed their minds and went with Goldman Sachs instead. Why the change of heart? Bank of America, which acquired Merrill Lynch in January, has taken heat recently for not being very helpful to customers needing help renegotiating their mortgages to avoid foreclosure.

For the story, see Sunrise to Bank of America: Clean up your act.

See also, WFOR-TV Channel 4: Sunrise Cancels Bank Of America Deal On Bond Sales:

  • Wishner said he would be willing to work with Bank of America in the future, however, he said he first wants to see the company do more to assist homeowners. Wishner said a starting point would be to create a specific office in South Florida with a point person to help struggling homeowners.

Business As Usual In Philadelphia's Courtroom 676

In Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, The New York Times recently ran a story on the proceedings that continue to take place in City Hall Courtroom 676, the home of the city's Residential Mortgage Foreclosure Diversion Pilot Program:
  • Every Thursday morning, the courtroom on the sixth floor of the regal City Hall here is given over to the conciliation conferences. It fills up with volunteer lawyers in jogging shoes, who are representing homeowners; gray-suited corporate lawyers working for mortgage companies; and all variety of delinquent borrowers — elderly citizens leaning on canes, construction workers in coveralls, parents with bored children in tow. The lawyers exchange preliminary settlement terms, while the homeowners fill out papers and wait.

  • In some cases, deals are struck that lower monthly payments for borrowers and allow them to retain their homes. When a homeowner cannot afford the home even at modified terms, the program helps to create a graceful exit, in which the borrower accepts cash for vacating the property or signs over the deed in lieu of further payment.

For the story, see Philadelphia Gives Homeowners a Way to Stay Put.

NJ Woman Gets 2 To 5 For Pocketing Upfront Cash In Exchange For Phony Mortgage Help To Avoid Foreclosure

In Monroe County, Pennsylvania, the Pocono Record reports:
  • A New Jersey woman will be spending two to five years in state prison after she was sentenced on Tuesday for promising to help homeowners avoid foreclosure and then keeping the money she was given for their mortgages. Shirley Gail Matthews, 53, of Pemberton, N.J., told homeowners that she could negotiate with their mortgage company and help them keep their homes. She was convicted in July of keeping the money she was given and never using it to help pay mortgages. The charges were part of a lengthy history of similar charges, prosecutors said, and Matthews currently faces similar charges in Wyoming County.

***

  • She was found guilty by a jury in Monroe County Court of deceptive business practices, theft by deception and theft by failure to make required disposition of funds.

For more, see Woman gets prison time after mortgage scam conviction.

See also, The Allentown Morning Call: Mortgage scam ends with prison:

  • ''It's outright theft and thievery,'' Monroe County President Judge Ronald Vican told her. "It's the lowest form of disreputable conduct.'' [...] ''She's made a practice of this,'' Vican said, noting her prior theft record as he rejected her lawyer's request for a lighter sentence. ''And she's picked on people who are really vulnerable.'' foreclosure rescue loan modifcation upfront fees

Wednesday, November 18, 2009

Land Wrestled Away From Screwed Over Homeowners In New London Eminent Domain Fight To Remain Undeveloped As Corp. Giant Announces Plans To Bolt City

From an op-ed column in The Connecticut Post:
  • In a country where private property is sacred, the government's right to seize land for its own devices will always be contentious. Done in the service of building a school or a hospital, it can be defensible. Taking people's homes for the nebulous "public good" of economic development is deplorable.

  • In a case that went all the way to the U.S. Supreme Court, the residents of New London fought back against such folly. When the drug company Pfizer announced in 2001 it was opening a new research center in that city, officials began the process of acquiring nearby land for an accompanying development project. Homeowners who were to be forced out said "no." The residents lost that case, as the Supreme Court four years later ruled the government had the right to take their homes and turn the land over to a private developer,(1) all because the plan was supposed to, someday, bring jobs and tax dollars to the struggling community. It was a bad decision then and only looks worse in retrospect.

  • The news now is that Pfizer is leaving New London, closing its facility and moving its work up the street to Groton. All the grand development plans, which weren't progressing in any event, have now been shelved for good. Where people's homes once stood, only weeds grow.

For more, see Lessons learned on eminent domain.

See also:

(1) Kelo v. City of New London, 545 U.S. 469 (2005).

Feds File Civil Suit In Central Florida Against Alleged Upfront Fee Loan Modification Racket; "Attorney Renting" Among Allegations

In Tampa, Florida, Courthouse News Service reports:
  • Mortgage and "foreclosure relief" companies backed by a law firm took thousands of dollars from customers who ended up in worse shape than they started, the FTC says. It sued the Crowder Law Group dba Legal Support Services, 11 individuals, and Washington Data Resources, and Optimum Business Solutions dba Attorney Finance Services.(1) The Federal Trade Commission says the defendants steered their victims away from free programs offered by lenders and suckered them into spending thousands of dollars on programs with cheerful names such as "Fresh Start Program" or "Hope4Homeowners."

***

  • The agency says Washington Data Resources and Optimum Business Solutions contracted with attorneys in several states to place calls to consumers to explain the process. Other than the telephone call, the attorneys have little if any involvement with the consumers and are paid for each consumer they agree to accept as a client, the FTC says. The defendants repeatedly fail to obtain the promised loan modifications.

For more, see FTC Says Law Group Helped in Debt Scam.

For the lawsuit, see FTC v. Washington Data Resources, Inc., et al.

(1) Washington Data Resources is a Florida corporation; Optimum Business Solutions is a Nevada LLC dba Attorney Finance Services; Crowder Law Group fka Jackson, Crowder & Associates dba Legal Support Services is a Florida corporation. Also sued, and their affiliations, are Richard A. Bishop (Optimum), Brent McDaniel (Washington Data), Tyna Caldwell (Crowder Law Group), Douglas A. Crowder (Crowder Law Group), Bruce Meltzer (Crowder Law Group), and Kathleen Lewis (Optimum).

Tennessee Judge Wipes Out Half Of Homeowner's $1M+ Wrongful Foreclosure Jury Award Against BofA; Leaves Another $300K In Limbo

In Johnson City, Tennessee, the Johnson City Press reports:
  • In late July, Jesse Miltier thought he had achieved justice in a five-year battle with Bank of America, which wrongfully foreclosed on his Watauga home in 2004. He’s found out otherwise since July 31, when a jury in Carter County awarded him $1,050,000 — including punitive damages, a rarity in wrongful foreclosure suits — as BOA has fought certain aspects of the award. Monday in Jonesborough, Judge Thomas Seeley heard motions in which BOA attorneys sought to lower that award to $200,000. By the end of the hearing, $550,000 of what the jury had awarded was wiped out, and the status of another $300,000 in punitive damages was up in the air.

For more, see Plaintiff home sick by decision.

Federal Prosecutor In "Money Store" Foreclosure Rescue Scam Case Takes Punch In The Face From Supporter Of Co-Conspirator At Sentencing Hearing

In Greenbelt, Maryland, The Washington Post reports on the sentencing of Joy Jackson Fordham, a retired exotic dancer who went on to become president of the now-defunct Metropolitan Money Store, a foreclosure rescue scam operation that screwed homeowners facing foreclosure out of millions in equity in their homes by peddling bogus sale leaseback arrangements that were purportedly designed to help save their homes from being repossessed by mortgage lenders.

  • The case produced more courtroom drama Monday when Assistant U.S. Attorney James A. Crowell IV was punched in the face by a relative of Jackson's key accomplice, Jennifer McCall, witnesses said. McCall was in court to be sentenced at a separate hearing later in the day, but the hearing was postponed after she fired her lawyers. After Crowell, [...] asked that she be jailed pending sentencing, one of her relatives leapt into the well of the courtroom and punched him. The man was taken into custody, officials said.

For the story, see 12-year prison term in mortgage swindle (A Maryland woman who stole millions from Washington area homeowners trying to avoid foreclosure is a "vulture" whose case should serve as a warning to other con artists, a federal judge said yesterday before imposing a sentence of more than 12 years).

Read the criminal complaint here and a court motion, which describes the alleged attack in greater detail, here.

See also:

Media Report Shines Light On Central Florida Short Sale Flipping Duo

A recent story on the apparent emergence of short sale flipping fraud reported by the Sarasota Herald Tribune contained this excerpt on a Central Florida duo who are engaged in practices some may consider suspect:
  • The evidence that short sale flippers are finding ways to benefit from bank losses can be found in deed records filed along Florida's Gulf Coast. Some individual investors and small groups of flippers have bought dozens of properties at discount prices and resold them within days, each time for thousands of dollars in profit.

  • Since September 2008, Tampa real estate agent Joe Wright and accountant Kevin Byrne have worked together to buy more than 30 pre-foreclosure houses and condos, with Wright's brokerage as the listing agent and Byrne's company as the buyer. In each case, the men arranged a short sale and quickly resold the property at a higher price. Of their 33 deals, 22 properties resold within 24 hours of purchase. The median one-day price increase was $25,000. Byrne and Wright did not return repeated calls seeking comment.

  • Their purchases, including nine in Sarasota and Manatee counties, involved properties that ranged in value from $50,000 to $800,000. They also included four properties owned by Wright. Court filings show that all four were on the brink of foreclosure when Byrne bought them from Wright at reduced prices and resold them for a profit.

  • In one deal last year, BB&T filed a foreclosure action against Wright and moved to seize a three-bedroom house he had built on Fielder Street in Tampa. Mortgage documents show Wright had a $545,000 mortgage, but BB&T agreed to sell the house to Byrne's company for $287,000 so that it could avoid the foreclosure process. Deeds show that the same day Byrne bought Wright's house, he resold it for $425,000, $138,000 more than the bank had been paid.

  • "If a bank knows that an end buyer is going to pay $425,000, why would it agree to take $287,000?" said Sean Martin, the owner of Martin Funding in Sarasota, which provided a loan on one of Byrne's deals. "Banks don't want others to profit at their expense." Such rapid price increases are "a huge red flag," said Mark Johnson, Florida vice president and underwriting counsel for Stewart Title, which provided Byrne with title insurance.

  • While Byrne benefited from the bump in price, Wright profited in different ways. He was able to erase nearly $1.2 million in debt from his name, and his company earned commissions as the listing agent for the sales, according to Multiple Listing Service records from the Mid-Florida Region. Wright's brokerage, with its 15 agents, is now Byrne's go-to real estate agency, according to MLS records, which track the sale of properties and record the listing agent on sales. It has been the listing company on every property Byrne's companies have bought in Hillsborough, Sarasota and Manatee counties since October 2008, MLS records show.

  • In addition, Byrne has used the same title agent, Chris Rodriguez, to close all of his short sale deals, at least since November 2007. Court documents show that Rodriguez moved into the same office building as Wright at 3309 Bay to Bay Boulevard in Tampa after Wright and Byrne began working on property sales together.

For the story, see The new flipping: short sales.

Tuesday, November 17, 2009

Key Operator In "Money Store" Rescue Scam Gets 12+ Years; Targeted Homeowners In Foreclosure w/ Bogus Sale Leasebacks In Home Equity Ripoffs

From the Office of the U.S. Attorney (Greenbelt, Maryland):
  • U.S. District Judge Roger W. Titus sentenced the president of the Metropolitan Money Store, Joy Jackson, age 41, of Fort Washington, Maryland, [...] to 151 months in prison followed by five years of supervised release for conspiracy to commit mail and wire fraud in connection with a mortgage fraud scheme that falsely promised to help homeowners facing foreclosure keep their homes and repair their damaged credit, announced United States Attorney for the District of Maryland Rod J. Rosenstein. Judge Titus also entered a judgement ordering Jackson to pay restitution of $16,880,884.86 and to forfeit three residential properties in Oxon Hill, Capitol Heights and Laurel, Maryland and three vehicles.

  • Joy Jackson presided over a ‘money store’ that was in the business of ripping off homeowners and mortgage lenders by submitting fraudulent paperwork to support over $37 million of loans that were never intended to be repaid,” said U.S. Attorney Rod J. Rosenstein. “Instead of helping financially distressed homeowners keep their homes as promised, she secretly used the home equity to buy luxuries for herself, including furs, jewelry and over $800,000 on her wedding.”

***

  • Jackson and others conspired to fraudulently promise to help homeowners, who had substantial equity in their homes but were facing foreclosure because of their inability to make monthly mortgage payments, avoid foreclosure and repair their damaged credit. The homeowners were directed to allow title to their homes to be put in the names of third party purchasers (the straw buyers) for a year, during which time Metropolitan Money Store promised to improve the homeowners’ credit ratings, help them obtain more favorable mortgages, and eventually return title to their homes to them. The homeowners were told that the equity withdrawn from the properties would be used to pay the mortgage and expenses on their homes and to repair their credit. The straw buyers were paid up to $10,000 to participate in the scheme and allow the properties to be put in their names. Jackson also served as a straw buyer on several properties in Maryland.

For the entire press release, see President of Metropolitan Money Store Sentenced to Over 12 Years in Prison for $37 Million Mortgage Fraud Scheme (Personally Responsible for Over $16 Million in Losses to Mortgage Lenders; Used Over $800,000 of Fraudulently Obtained Proceeds to Pay for Her Wedding). foreclosure rescue

Wachovia Offering Financially Strapped Homeowners Cash, Deficiency Balance Waivers, Quick Closings To Encourage Short Sales & Avoid Foreclosure?

In San Diego, California, North County Times reports:
  • Wachovia Corp. is offering its borrowers money for selling their houses short, rather than going into foreclosure. Homeowners with Wachovia mortgages who are upside down on their property can get 1 percent of the price of their short sale, with a minimum of $2,500. The incentives only kick in once the deal closes. [...] The program was originally intended to be temporary, but there's no fixed end date for it yet. A source in Wachovia's short sale unit said the program will definitely run through November, and probably beyond. The source preferred not to be named for fear of getting fired.(1)

***

  • Another key feature for borrowers is that Wachovia's program leaves them with no lingering mortgage debt. Across the nation, attorneys have reported that the fine print on short-sale contracts from major lenders hold borrowers responsible for the unpaid mortgage balance, and lenders have pursued collections in court after the sale. [...] The cash incentive is only one of several steps Wachovia is taking to promote and streamline short sales. The lender dramatically curtailed the amount of paperwork short sellers must provide to get a sale approved, allowing them to get a short sale closed in as little as 10 days.

For more, see Wachovia offers cash to spur homeowners into 'short sales' (Lender quietly giving $2,500 or more in incentives to avoid foreclosure).

(1) Wachovia is promoting the program quietly by inviting real estate agents to seminars run by employees from the bank's short sale unit, the story states. Reportedly, the only seminars currently available in California are taking place in the San Francisco Bay Area, but they will becoming to Southern California early next year, a Wachovia source said.

Short Sale Flipping Fraud: Use Of Inflated Appraisals, Straw Buyers, Sale Terms Undisclosed To Lenders All Indicate That Scammers Are Still At It

In Central Florida, the Sarasota Herald Tribune reports:
  • Untold millions of dollars that banks could have recovered from the sale of distressed Florida homes have instead been pocketed as profits by a new breed of property flipper. These flippers target houses on the verge of foreclosure and persuade banks and mortgage companies to accept lowball buyouts, sometimes by using questionable appraisals and not disclosing that a quick sale at a higher price has already been arranged, experts say. No one knows how widespread the scheme has become. But a national glut of short sales -- pre-foreclosure sales in which the lender agrees to let the house sell for less than the mortgage owed -- has spawned a small industry of short-sale flippers, some of whom use these questionable tactics, experts say.(1)

***

  • Bankers and some organizations that regulate the real estate industry have taken steps to curb the latest form of flipping.(2) But the measures, including restrictions on writing mortgages for flipped properties, have not halted questionable transactions. Experts warn the number of short sale flips is likely to continue growing nationwide.

***

  • [F]raud experts warn that some of the real estate flipping they see today involves the same kind of insider deals and manipulated sale prices that plagued the housing bubble. The FBI recently added short sale flipping, dubbed "flopping" by some mortgage fraud experts, to its list of recognized real estate fraud. In a June 2009 report on mortgage fraud, FBI officials described various forms of short sale flipping fraud.(3) Each type involves misrepresenting the value of a house to a lender.

***

  • "These people are doing exactly what they did during the run-up," said Tim Mattingly, who owns an Orlando mortgage brokerage and title agency. "They are getting inflated appraisals. They are selling to straw buyers and they are hiding terms of their deals from lenders. It's amazing that after all we've been through, these people are still at it."

For more, see The new flipping: short sales.

See also, Toronto Sun: Florida's flopping circus (The Florida town made famous by Ringling Brothers' "greatest show on earth" has become a three-ring real estate circus of flippers, floppers and amazing deals).

(1) A Herald-Tribune examination of nearly 18,000 property sales that occurred in Sarasota and Manatee counties in 2009 showed that at least 250 properties have been sold multiple times at escalating prices so far this year, the story states. Reportedly, nearly 50 of those properties were bought then resold within 24 hours, suggesting that banks were underpaid for properties that already had a buyer willing to pay more. Just the most suspicious sales, where properties flipped within a day, have cost banks $1.7 million in Sarasota and Manatee counties so far this year. On houses bought and resold within a month, the bank short sales were $3.2 million less than the houses fetched just a few days or weeks later.

(2) In a June, 2009 story (see Title insurance group's move could stymie short sale flips), The Tampa Tribune reported that the Attorneys' Title Insurance Fund ("The Fund"), an Orlando-based outfit that is a major underwriter for attorneys who write title insurance in Florida, notified its 6,000 member attorneys that it will not insure deals made with a popular – but controversial – method for closing flips of short sales being advertised on the Internet that promises to make investors lots of money with little or no work.

In Sepember, 2009, The Fund announced that it will go ahead and insure short sale flipping deals that meet certain guidelines (see The Fund Underwriting Bulletin: Short Sale Transactions - Guidelines Revised). With all the heat now being applied to these deals by federal investigators, The Fund may want to rethink its most recent announcement. For examples of federal indictments involving alleged fraud in connection with short sales, see the following U.S. Attorney press releases:

(3) See also, What Else Are They Selling? Loan Mods That Turn Into Questionable Short Sales? (begins at page 17 of the recent National Consumer Law Center report, DESPERATE HOMEOWNERS: Loan Mod Scammers Step In When Loan Servicers Refuse To Provide Help):

  • In one version of a short sale scam, the realtor and the buyer collude to conceal the full price of the sale from the lender so that they can pocket the difference, often by using option contracts and back-to-back closings. This version is aimed primarily at defrauding the lender, though the homeowner is also hurt by an artificially low sales price, either by being liable on a deficiency or by paying taxes on a higher forgiven balance.
  • In another version of a short sale scam, the buyer takes over the mortgage without satisfying the due-on-sale clause and the sale is concealed from the lender. The owner of a We Buy Houses franchise explained at trial that these deals work when the homeowner is only 10% to 15% upside down, because the home is sold to a buyer who cannot qualify for a regular loan and so is willing to pay a premium above fair market value to avoid a credit check. Depending on how the transaction works, the homeowner may be out cash, lose the home, and still end up with a foreclosure on the credit report.

For a story on a questionable arrangement that combines short sales with sale leaseback deals that give short sellers an option to repurchase their homes in the future (presumably without the knowledge of the lender and/or loan servicer approving the short sale), see Short Sales Coupled With Lease-Buyback Option A Way To Help Those Facing Foreclosure Stay In Their Homes?

Two Charged In Alleged Rent Skimming Scam; Suspects Took Control Of Property From Desperate Owners & Pocketed Rent While Letting Bills Pile Up

In St. Louis, Missouri, the St. Louis Post Dispatch reports:
  • Two men who officials said posed as wealthy real estate investors have been charged with 25 counts of stealing or other felonies. St. Louis prosecutors said that Brian Stoker, 25, and Malcolm Aldrich, 54, stole property and rent money from investors who were looking to sell troubled real estate. Stoker was arrested last week and has posted bond. Aldrich remained at large.

  • Beginning in February 2007, Brian Stoker Enterprises agreed to buy rental properties from desperate owners but then never followed through on the sales contracts, according to court documents. Meanwhile, Stoker and Aldrich took control of properties, the charges say, collected rent from tenants but never paid utility or mortgage bills. At least three owners sued Stoker to regain control of their buildings. In some cases, they said rental units were uninhabitable by the time they got the keys back. One, Dr. Abid Nisar, said he lost nearly $200,000. He has had to pay overdue bills and repair damage he blamed on Stoker. "I hope that he is put behind bars and he cannot harm anyone else," Nisar said.

For the story, see St. Louis prosecutors charge two with preying on real estate owners.

N. Miami Beach Loan Modification Outfit Skips Town With Customers' Cash; Homeowners Left Hanging

In Miami, Florida, WTVJ-TV Channel 6 reports:
  • A South Florida mortgage rescue company that once promised to save your home is accused of taking clients' cash and vanishing into thin air. Truman Foreclosure Assistance is one of several companies that sprung up in the recent housing crisis, vowing to help cut monthly payments and allow homeowners to stay put. But now customers from across the country claim the company didn't come close to living up to what it promised.

  • Customers like Kathy Sussman, from Miami, who paid $2,300 to Truman with no results. [...] Sussman wasn't in danger of losing her home but wanted a lower interest rate and a loan to renovate her home.

***

  • The company has seemingly vanished from their N. Miami Beach office building. The sign on their door is gone and workers at the building and customers claim they can't find anyone from Truman. And no one was answering their phones [...].

For the story, see Miami Mortgage Rescue Firm's Vanishing Act (Truman Foreclosure Assistance accused of taking money and skipping town).

Monday, November 16, 2009

Mass AG Reaches Agreement w/ Servicer To Provide Affordable Loan Mods To Qualified Borrowers, Up To $7.5K Relocation Expenses To Ineligible Homeowners

From the Office of the Massachusetts Attorney General:
  • [A]ttorney General Martha Coakley’s Office announced that it has entered into an agreement with Texas-based American Home Mortgage Servicing, Inc. (“AHMSI”) that will provide significant benefits to approximately 8,200 Massachusetts borrowers holding loans originated by Option One Mortgage Corp. (“Option One”) and H&R Block Mortgage Corp. (“H&R Block Mortgage”). Those mortgage loans are the subject of a lawsuit which the Attorney General’s Office filed in June 2008. The complaint alleges Option One and H&R Block Mortgage originated the risky subprime loans with reckless disregard for whether borrowers would be able to afford their loan payments – a practice that has contributed significantly to the foreclosure crisis in Massachusetts. Under the agreement, [...] AHMSI will be required to provide affordable loan modifications to certain borrowers who fall behind in their mortgage payments.(1)

***

  • The agreement is designed to remedy unfair and deceptive conduct by Option One and H&R Block Mortgage that was highlighted by the Superior Court in the injunction issued in November 2008. The injunction prohibits the defendants from initiating or advancing foreclosures on loans that are “presumptively unfair,” because they predictably led to default or foreclosure. That preliminary injunction was affirmed by the Massachusetts Appeals Court on October 28, 2009. The Attorney General’s litigation with Option One, H&R Block Mortgage, Block Financial Corp., and their parent company, H&R Block, Inc., is ongoing, and is expected to go to trial in 2010.(2)

For the entire Massachusetts AG press release, see Attorney General Coakley’s Office Reaches Affordable Loan Modification and Foreclosure Prevention Agreement with Mortgage Servicer (Purchaser Will Provide Affordable Loan Modifications to 8,000 borrowers).

(1) For delinquent borrowers who do not qualify for loan modifications, relocation payments of $3,000 to $7,500 and alternatives to foreclosure, such as deeds-in-lieu of foreclosure will be offered. The Attorney General’s lawsuit did not allege loan origination misconduct by AHMSI, and the company cooperated with the Attorney General in reaching this agreement.

(2) The lawsuit is seeking redress for the damage incurred by homeowners and Massachusetts communities as a result of the unfair and deceptive lending practices of the defendants. The lawsuit also alleges civil rights violations because the defendants' policies and practices resulted in discriminatory pricing to the detriment of black and Hispanic borrowers; disparate pricing violates antidiscrimination laws. UndoMortgageLoans TILAdelta

Expiring Statute Of Limitations To Allow Two Dozen Mortgage Fraud Suspects To Walk Free?

In Clarke County, Georgia, the Athens Banner Herald reports:
  • Prosecutors may have let too much time pass to indict nearly two dozen people arrested three and a half years ago and charged with a massive mortgage fraud scheme at a Southeastern Clarke County subdivision, some defense attorneys say.

  • A real estate professional tipped off Athens-Clarke police in spring 2005 that he suspected home sales at the Milford Hills subdivision [...] involved shady dealings; authorities rounded up suspects between April 2006 and June 2008, all on charges they violated the state's Racketeering Influenced and Corrupt Organizations Act.(1)

***

  • To prosecute a racketeering case, prosecutors must prove underlying crimes - like theft by deception, forgery, deceptive business practices and identity theft - each of which has a four-year statute of limitations in which the case must be prosecuted. The clock starts ticking when the alleged crime is committed. "It's our opinion the statute of limitation has already expired for most of the charges in this case, and if the state brings charges down the road, we would make the case it's too late to do so," said [Page] Pate, who represents Athens attorney C. Michael Rose, the closing attorney for many Milford Hills properties.

  • Prosecutors have five years to bring indictments for RICO crimes, but Pate said he and other attorneys would argue a racketeering case can't be made when the statute of limitations means prosecutors can't charge for the underlying crimes.

***

  • Although the attorney general hasn't yet sought indictments, that doesn't mean he's decided there's no case, said [Georgia Attorney General Thurbert] Baker's spokesman, Russell Willard.(2) "The matter is still open and pending," Willard said. "If we had affirmatively decided to not bring charges, we would already have closed the file." Willard refused to say whether he agrees with defense attorneys' claims that the statute of limitations for prosecution has expired.

  • Athens attorney Edward Tolley represents Brian Dupree, a former Athens businessman authorities say was at the center of the scheme to buy up Milford Hills properties, then inflate their values for resale. Tolley agreed with Pate that the statute of limitations may have passed, and if anyone's to blame for the Milford Hills fiasco, it's the banks, he said.

For more, see Time may be up on mortgage fraud cases (Attorneys point to statute of limitations).

(1) According to the story, the alleged plot, which may have netted as much as $7 million, was orchestrated by developers, real estate agents, appraisers and at least one lawyer who used fraudulent mortgage applications and property appraisals to inflate home values and defraud mortgage lenders, officials said.

(2) Initially investigated by Athens-Clarke police, this case later was taken over by the office of Georgia Attorney General Thurbert Baker, the story states.

Michigan Judge Says Failure To Modify Loan In Violation Of HAMP Is Defense To Set Aside Foreclosure & Can Be Raised In Subsequent Homeowner Eviction

In Macomb County, Michigan, Workers World reports:

***

  • Attorneys who work with the coalition won a significant court victory on an appeal in a foreclosure eviction case. The Macomb County Circuit Court held that a lender’s failure to modify a loan in accordance with the federal Home Affordable Modification Program can be asserted as a defense to void a foreclosure, and that this defense can be raised by homeowners in an eviction proceeding stemming from the foreclosure. This is one of the first cases in the country to affirm this right.(1)

Source: Coalition wins foreclosure victories.

(1) Despite these victories, coalition organizers report that the foreclosure and eviction crisis is intensifying, according to the story. Jerry Goldberg, a foreclosure attorney and coalition leader, noted how increasingly the government, through Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, is the main culprit in eviction actions stemming from foreclosures.

Novice Bidders In Online Condo-Lien Foreclosure Sales Left Holding The Bag As They Unwittingly Buy Units Subject To Unpaid, Big-Balance 1st Mortgages

In Sarasota, Florida, the Sarasota Herald Tribune reports:
  • Erika Ginsberg-Klemmt and William Anderson met online, but not in a good way. Driven by the misconception that they had stumbled on a brilliant formula that would allow them to buy a Siesta Key condominium for pennies on the dollar, the two novice real estate investors began unknowingly bidding against each other on Sarasota County's new online auction Web site. Anderson ended up prevailing with a bid of $86,001 and believed that he held unencumbered title to a condo once valued at $327,000. But all Anderson really won was the right to pay off $20,000 in unpaid association dues.

  • More than a dozen investors who made similar mistakes in Sarasota and Duval counties since July are now out hundreds of thousand of dollars. Though they acknowledge that they were "suckers" and "stupid," they also question why government-run Web sites do not do more to warn novice bidders. "Okay, I'm an idiot," said Ginsberg-Klemmt, who settled in Sarasota in 2005 and began buying liens this summer after living on a sailboat with her husband for more than a decade. "But I'm not alone. Every day another sucker believes what we did."(1)

  • The fact that inexperienced investors have been burned by bidding for foreclosures on the sites calls into question whether Florida counties have rushed into this brave new world of online bidding.

***

  • Thanks to a law passed by the Florida Legislature in 2008, counties across the state began to look at removing the auction process from the courthouse steps. The goal was to reduce costs and allow anyone to bid on foreclosed properties remotely. The first winning bidder for a sale held for Manatee County was someone from Montana, said Craig McIntyre, vice president at Realauction.com, the counties' auction company.

  • "Anyone on the Internet anywhere in the world can participate," he said. "You don't need to leave home and you can bid in your pajamas." Maybe that is the problem, burned investors say. Just because you are in your PJs does not mean you can skip a title search, property inspection or other basics before buying a property. But the process makes you feel like you can.(2)

For more, see When government auctions went online, what was for sale got lost.

(1) Ginsberg-Klemmt, the winning bidder on five condo association liens in Sarasota, Manatee and Duval counties, has been hyperactive in contacting people who have made the same mistakes, urging them to fight to get their money back and to force counties to change the process, the story states.

(2) According to the story, the attorney for Sarasota County Clerk Karen Rushing's office said, "Whether it be a sale in the courthouse or online it doesn't alleviate the onus of responsibility to research it."

Southern California Man Gets 11 Years For Using Stolen I.D.s To Hijack Unwitting Homeowners' HELOC Accounts; Ripoff Netted $1M+

From the Office of the U.S. Attorney (Los Angeles):
  • An Orange County man has been sentenced to 132 months in federal prison for orchestrating two identity theft schemes in which he obtained personal information from hundreds of consumers and used the data in an attempt to fraudulently obtain approximately $1.5 million from home equity lines of credit (HELOCs) and credit cards accounts. Martin Quoc Pham, 28, of Garden Grove, was sentenced [...] by United States District Judge George H. Wu. In addition to imposing the 11-year prison term, Judge Wu ordered Pham to pay $537,973.

***

  • In the [HELOC] scheme, Pham and his associates used personal identifying information to take over HELOCs at JPMorgan Chase Bank. Once they had online access to the HELOCs, Pham and his co-conspirators transferred money into bank accounts they controlled. This scheme, which lasted only five months but netted well over $1 million, caused losses to the bank and to individual victims whose identities were taken over.(1)

For the U.S. Attorney press release, see Orange County Man Sentenced To 11 Years In Prison For Two Identity Theft Schemes Involving Lines Of Credit.

(1) In the second scheme, Pham and his co-conspirators used personal identifying information to encode counterfeit credit cards that were used to obtain merchandise and gift cards at WalMart stores and Sam's Clubs across Southern California.

Sunday, November 15, 2009

Staten Island DA Charges NJ Man w/ Felony Grand Larceny In Alleged Sale Leaseback, Foreclosure Rescue Ripoff That Victimized 86-Year Old Homeowner

In Staten Island, New York, the Staten Island Advance reports:
  • It was supposed to be a "mortgage rescue" operation: An 86-year-old woman and her daughter put their trust in a New Jersey accountant who promised to help keep them in their family home. Except the accountant was running a complex deed-theft scam, authorities say, and the Richmond grandmother finds herself living in a home that no longer belongs to her, still fighting to stave off the foreclosure the accountant was supposed to prevent.(1)

  • Earlier this week, District Attorney Daniel Donovan's office charged Alejandro Alonzo, 58, of North Bergen, with felony grand larceny, accusing him of orchestrating the scheme and pocketing more than $30,000 in the process. "This transaction was structured to make it look like a refinancing," said Jeff Gentes, a staff attorney with the Homeowner Defense Project of Staten Island Legal Services in St. George, who represents the original homeowner. "But in reality, they're selling their house." And Alonzo, who was supposed to have used the proceeds of the sale to make good on a year's worth of mortgage payments, instead made off with the cash, Gentes said.(2)

For more, see Grandmother at risk of losing her home (Mortgage 'savior' was a wolf in sheep's clothing, prosecutors say).

(1) Some guidance to those seeking an approach to undoing bogus sale leaseback, foreclosure rescue scams on behalf of financially strapped homeowners who have been screwed over in these equity stripping rackets can be found in a couple of 2008 Brooklyn, New York lower court rulings favorable to the scammed homeowners and obtained on their behalf by the non-profit law firm, Brooklyn Legal Services Corporation A. See Brooklyn Court Rulings Void Deeds & Subsequent Mortgages Used To Drain Home Equity In Bogus Sale Leaseback Foreclosure Rescue Scams.

(2) Criminal prosecution alone will not be of much help to the scammed homeowner in attempting to recover from this ripoff. Undoing a scam like this in order to return the scammed homeowner to her financial position before Alonzo arranged the sale leaseback, foreclosure rescue transaction that stripped her home equity will probably require the homeowner to bring a civil lawsuit in which she attempts to:

  • Void the title transfer as one procured by fraud, or recharacterize the title transfer as an equitable mortgage; and

  • Assert that the lender providing the financing for the equity stripping transaction (ie. Countrywide) was, by reason of the scammed homeowner's continued possession of her home, on notice of the scam and, accordingly, not entitled to protection of the recording statutes as a bona fide purchaser / bona fide encumbrancer (and, thereby, subjecting the lender's mortgage lien to cancellation as well - except to the extent that the loan proceeds were applied to satisfy any existing mortgages, in which case the lender would be entitled to subrogate itself to (ie. step into the shoes of) those existing mortgage holders with respect to their rights in the property).

The unavailability of bona fide purchaser protection to real estate purchasers and lenders when a seller of real estate remains in possession of the premises sold has, arguably, been best expressed by the California Supreme Court in Pell v. McElroy, 36 Cal. 268, 1868 Cal. LEXIS 186 (1868):

  • The simple, independent fact of possession is sufficient to raise a presumption of interest in the premises on behalf of the occupant. And we can discover no just or rational ground for giving to this fact less significance as notice to a party purchasing the legal title from one not in possession, in consequence of the fact that such occupant had by deed divested himself of the legal title.

***

  • An absolute deed divests the grantor not only of his legal title, but right of possession; and when such grantor is found in the exclusive possession of the granted premises long after the delivery of his deed, here is a fact antagonistic to the fact and legal effect of the deed; and we cannot appreciate the justice, sound reason, or policy of a rule which would authorize a subsequent purchaser, while such fact of possession continues, to give controlling prominence to the fact and legal effect of the deed, in utter disregard of the other notorious prominent antagonistic fact of exclusive possession in the original grantor. He cannot be regarded a purchaser in good faith who negligently or willfully closes his eyes to visible pertinent facts, indicating adverse interest in or incumbrances upon the estate he seeks to acquire, and indulges in possibilities or probabilities, and acts upon doubtful presumptions, when by the exercise of prudent, reasonable diligence he could fully inform himself of the real facts of the case.

***

  • The continued exclusive possession of a vendor after his formal conveyance of the legal title is a fact in conflict with the legal effect of his deed, and is presumptive evidence that he still retains an interest in the premises, and is sufficient to put a purchaser upon inquiry, and subject him to the general rule heretofore announced in case of the party in possession being a stranger to the title as of record.

-----------------------------

Courts in other states have taken positions consistent with the foregoing. For example:

Illinois:

Life Savings & Loan Association v. Bryant, 125 Ill. App. 3d 1012, 81 Ill. Dec. 577, 467 N.E.2d 277 (1st Dist. 1984):

  • Illinois courts have uniformly held that the actual occupation of land is equivalent to the recording of the instrument under which the occupant claims interest in the property. (Bullard v. Turner (1934), 357 Ill. 279, 192 N.E. 223; Beals v. Cryer (1981), 99 Ill. App. 3d 842, 426 N.E.2d 253). The open and visible possession of land by the equitable owner is sufficient to charge a mortgagee with notice of the rights of such owner, and the mortgagee will take subject to the rights of the person in possession. Williams v. Spitzer (1903), 203 Ill. 505, 68 N.E. 49.

In re Cutty's-Gurnee, Inc., 133 B.R. 934 (USBC N.D. Ill. 1991) (applying bona fide purchaser doctrine in the context of an equitable mortgage):

  • It is clear that where a physical inspection of the property would reveal an adverse interest or where there is a party in possession other than the record title owner, the subsequent lien claimant has a duty to inquire of the possessor as to his interest and is charged with knowledge of the facts discoverable from such an inquiry or inspection. Miller, 381 Ill. at 244, 44 N.E.2d at 853; Burnex Oil Co. v. Floyd, 106 Ill. App. 2d 16, 23, 245 N.E.2d 539, 544 (1st Dist. 1969); In re Ehrlich, 59 Bankr. 646, 650 (Bankr. N.D. Ill. 1986).

Georgia:

Whiten v. Murray, A04A0655, 267 Ga. App. 417; 599 S.E.2d 346; 2004 Ga. App. LEXIS 671 (2004):

  • Possession of land shall constitute notice of the rights or title of the occupant. In order for the possession to have the effect of notice, it must be actual, open, visible, exclusive, and unambiguous. He who takes with notice of an equity takes subject to that equity. Notice sufficient to excite attention and put a party on inquiry shall be notice of everything to which it is afterwards found that such inquiry might have led. Ignorance of a fact, due to negligence, shall be equivalent to knowledge in fixing the rights of the parties. (Citations and punctuation omitted.) Bacote v. Wyckoff, 251 Ga. 862, 866 (2) (310 S.E.2d 520) (1984).

Minnesota:

Stone v. Jetmar Props., LLC, A06-851, 733 N.W.2d 480; 2007 Minn. App. LEXIS 80 (Minn. App. 2007):

  • Public policy generally favors allowing a degree of reliance on the title shown in public records. See Nussbaumer v. Fetrow, 556 N.W.2d 595, 599 (Minn. App. 1996), review denied (Minn. Feb. 26, 1997) (stating policy of allowing judgment creditors to rely on record). But the reliance allowed is not absolute. A "party attempting to invoke the doctrine [of equitable estoppel] cannot be negligent and cannot have knowledge of the defect in the title." W. Concord Conservation Club, Inc. v. Chilson, 306 N.W.2d 893, 896 (Minn. 1981). A prospective purchaser is obligated to discover anyone in possession of the land at issue and to "inquire into the nature and extent of the occupant's interest." Id. As a result of this obligation, the purchaser is held to have knowledge of all the "rights of the [possessor] and also of all facts connected therewith which reasonable inquiry would have developed." Claflin v. Commercial State Bank, 487 N.W.2d 242, 248 (Minn. App. 1992), review denied (Minn. Aug. 4, 1992). "In order to have status as a bona fide purchaser the mortgagee's inquiry must be directed to the person in possession; inquiry of the mortgagor, who may have reason to conceal the truth, is not sufficient." Id.

In New York, where the Staten Island Advance story took place, the New York Court of Appeals has enunciated principles not in conflict with California's Pell v. McElroy ruling in this regard. The following excerpt from Phelan v. Brady, 119 N.Y. 587; 23 N.E. 1109; (NY 1890) captures this point:

  • At the time of the execution and delivery of the mortgage to the plaintiff, the defendant Mrs. Brady was in the actual possession of the premises under a perfectly valid but unrecorded deed. Her title must, therefore, prevail as against the plaintiff. It matters not, so far as Mrs. Brady is concerned, that the plaintiff in good faith advanced his money upon an apparently perfect record title of the defendant John E. Murphy. Nor is it of any consequence, so far as this question is concerned, whether the plaintiff was in fact ignorant of any right or claim of Mrs. Brady to the premises. It is enough that she was in possession under her deed and the contract of purchase, as that fact operated in law as notice to the plaintiff of all her rights.

  • It may be true, as has been argued by the plaintiff's counsel, that when a party takes a conveyance of property situated as this was, occupied by numerous tenants, it would be inconvenient and difficult for him to ascertain the rights or interests that are claimed by all or any of them. But this circumstance cannot change the rule. Actual possession of real estate is sufficient notice to a person proposing to take a mortgage on the property, and to all the world of the existence of any right which the person in possession is able to establish. Governeur v. Lynch, 2 Paige, 300; Bank of Orleans v. Flagg, 3 Barb. 318; Moyer v. Hinman, 14 N. Y. 184; Tuttle v. Jackson, 6 Wend. 213; Trustees of Union College v. Wheeler, 61 N. Y. 88, 98; Cavalli v. Allen, 57 id. 517.)

For a couple of relatively recent New York intermediate appellate court rulings referencing the effect of continued possession of an occupant on the status of a buyer or lender as a bona fide purchaser / bona fide encumbrancer, see:

  • Ward v. Ward, 503624,2008 NY Slip Op 4984; 52 A.D.3d 919; 859 N.Y.S.2d 774; 2008 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 4816 (App. Div. 3d Dept. 2008;
  • Doyle v. Siddo, 31 A.D.3d 697, 818 N.Y.S.2d 474, 2006 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 9569 (N.Y. App. Div. 2d Dep't, 2006).

For other states, see Bona Fide Purchaser Doctrine, Possession Of Property By Occupants Other Than The Vendor & The Duty To Inquire.

Son Gets Six Months For Forging Ill Mom's Signature To Refinance Home; Blows Loan Proceeds In Failed Attempt To Buy Foreign Bride

In Wolverhampton, West Midlands, The Express & Star reports:
  • A Wolverhampton man forged his ill mother’s signature in order to re-mortgage the house they jointly owned to pay off debts and buy a foreign bride, a court heard. Stephen Collymore signed his 68-year-old mother’s name on a land registry document in 2004 to obtain £35,000 from Halifax, Wolverhampton Crown Court was told. The 42-year-old, of Tyburn Road in Wednesfield, was said to have used the money to pay off debts and buy a foreign bride, although no-one ever arrived in the UK.

  • Collymore, who was reported to the police by his mother Joanna, was yesterday handed a 26-week prison sentence, suspended for a year, and ordered to complete 150 hours of unpaid work. Miss Rhiannon Jones, prosecuting, said: “The defendant and his mother jointly purchased the home in Eastfield Road in 2002 from Wolverhampton Council and they lived together. In October 2004 the defendant forged his mother’s signature on the land registry document and obtained the mortgage from Halifax at £35,000. [...]"

***

  • Mrs Collymore, who suffers from diabetes and angina, went to the police in July 2008 to tell them what had happened and her son was arrested months later in September. A statement from Mrs Collymore read out in court said: “This has shocked and upset me. I’m worrying all the time about losing my home.”

For more, see Man forged signature to buy bride.

Maryland Man Accused Of Using Forged Deeds To Steal Real Estate; Judge Refuses To Allow Suspect To Use Allegedly Stolen Land To Secure Bail Bond

In St. Mary's County, Maryland, Southern Maryland Newspapers reports:
  • Daniel Jason Brown, 31, of Leonardtown faces 64 charges connected with four alleged incidents of property deed forgery and six charges connected with an alleged incident of witness corruption. [... Assistant State's Attorney Daniel] White [...] alleged that Brown is in possession of property that he acquired with stolen deeds and urged the court to force Brown to post a cash bond, rather than one backed by property. The land, White said, "in our opinion, is a proceed of those crimes." Judge C. Clarke Raley imposed a $50,000 cash bond, stating, "We have no prediction of what the future holds."

For more, see Indictments allege land deed forgery (Brown also faces charges connected with incidents of witness corruption).

Wheelchair-Bound Senior Left £27,000 Delinquent On Nursing Home Bills After Con Man Used POA In £200,000 Ripoff

In Bradford, West Yorkshire, the Bradford Telegraph & Argus reports:
  • A conman who fleeced a trusting pensioner of her life savings so he could buy luxury goods has been ordered to pay her £76,000 in compensation. Bhupinder Sahota milked nearly £200,000 from the bank accounts of 85-year-old wheelchair-bound Marie Rose Penn after she granted him Power of Attorney over her finances. Sahota was jailed for three years in June after pleading guilty to four charges of theft and two of fraud.

  • Bradford Crown Court was told that it had been agreed between the prosecution and defence that the amount of criminal benefit available was £76,000. Prosecutor Paul Nicholson said Mrs Penn’s nursing home fees were mounting and she was now in the region of £27,000 in debt to the nursing home.

For more, see Bradford conman fleeced vulnerable pensioner.

Landlord Accused Of Using Illegal "Self-Help Eviction Procedure" In Failed Attempt To Boot Delinquent Family From Rental Home

In Geneva, Illinois, The Geneva Republican reports:
  • Early Monday afternoon, the power at Stacey Schnaitman’s house suddenly shut down. “I ran outside,” she said. “There was a man outside that told me, ‘This house is supposed to be vacant.’” But it’s not vacant. Living at the four-bedroom, two-bathroom house on the 1200 block of Illinois Avenue is the Schnaitman family: Stacey, 37, and James, 39, and their children, Greer, 4; Cheyenne, 3; James Jr., 1; and their unborn daughter, Aslyn.

***

  • The family is amid an eviction dispute with the landlord that could leave the Schnaitmans homeless. They say they’ve been paying most of their bills to landlord Ken Voegele, who says he has received no rent or utility payments for months. [...] St. Charles police were dispatched to the Schnaitman house [...], according to department spokesman Paul McCurtain. Police said the landlord was trying to shut off the home’s water and electricity. Stacey Schnaitman said the landlord had sent a letter to the city saying the house was vacant and asking that utilities be turned off.

***

  • An e-mail obtained by The Republican sent to the family [...] by Sue Voegele, wife of Ken, warned the family that it would soon be without utilities. “Hi Stacey and Jim,” the e-mail said. “Ken asked me to let you know that the utilities at the house on Illinois Street will be shut off next week.” Robert Surratt, the city’s code enforcement officer, said [...] that he was just on the phone about the situation. “I (told them), ‘Make sure you leave (the utilities) on,’” Surratt said. “People can’t use the city to do their eviction for them. They just can’t. We won’t turn it off to get someone out of a house.”

  • Utility bills for the property were in Ken Voegele’s name until Monday, when Stacey Schnaitman said she changed the Nicor Gas and St. Charles bills to her name, on recommendation from the city. According to documents obtained by The Republican, the family had previously been paying the utility bills via checks written to Voegele.

For the story, see Family of five struggles with eviction dispute.

Saturday, November 14, 2009

Homeowner Faces City Demolition Order As She Attempts To Rescue Earlier-Vacated Home Now In Legal Limbo As Lender Fails To Hold Foreclosure Sale

In Mansfield, Ohio, the Mansfield News Journal reports:
  • Having recently learned she still owns the house she thought was lost to foreclosure last year, Tina Powell wants to move back in at 152 W. First St. The city, however, placed a demolition order on the home this fall. Powell insists she's the victim of a big mix-up. She and her husband bought the house in 2001, and he died there in 2006. She says she left their home behind in June 2008, believing her mortgage company had taken possession of it.

  • "I didn't have the money for an attorney. I didn't inquire. I just obeyed," Powell said. But then the mortgage company went defunct. And her name remained on the deed. Not knowing those crucial facts, she also later discovered she'd missed out on opportunities to fight demolition. "I didn't know I still owned the place. I would never had left, if I would have known," she said.

  • Over the course of the city's condemnation process, notifications were sent out with her name on them -- but to a Columbus address that apparently belonged to the mortgage firm, she said.

For the story, see Condemned house at issue in Mansfield. legal limbo

Foreclosed 15-Bedroom "Monster House" Homeowner Admits To Stripping $1M In Fixtures From Mansion; Now Faces Felony Grand Theft, Vandalism Charges

In Encinitas, California, The San Diego Union Tribune reports:
  • The woman who built the county’s largest home — known as the “monster house” — and lost it to foreclosure in February admitted [...] that she stripped it of $1 million in fixtures, but said it was to protect her masterpiece after the bank refused to hire security. Suzy Brown, 45, said she returned everything. But seven months after the property agent for Capital One Bank filed a police report, the District Attorney’s Office charged Brown [...] with felony grand theft and felony vandalism. [...] “I basically took the law into my own hands to protect a very special place,” Brown said in an interview [...]. “I removed the most valuable assets and I promptly returned them once they had a security guard.”

  • The bank foreclosed on the 15-bedroom Encinitas house Feb. 13 after Brown had not made payments for more than a year. She moved out March 22, and the missing items were reported March 26.

For more, see Mansion’s owner 'took law into my own hands'. foreclosure stripping

Alabama State Fire Marshal: People Burning Down Their Own Homes Across State On Upswing

In Montgomery, Alabama, WBRC-TV Channel 6 reports:
  • The number of people burning down their own homes is increasing across the state, according to State Fire Marshal Ed Paulk. “It's not race specific. It's not socioeconomic specific. It affects everybody,” Paulk says.

  • He describes the situation as the following: A homeowner faces foreclosure. They start a fire, hoping it will be ruled an accident...hoping they'll recoup insurance money. Paulk warns that it is a crime. A crime that he says has doubled in the last year or two as the economy has continued to suffer. [...] UAB business professor, Bob Robicheaux says history shows that in a crippled economy, it is not just homeowners that resort to economic fires. Business owners are known for the practice as well.

For more, see "Economic fires" increase across Alabama.

San Diego Cops Recruit Neighborhood Watch Group In Effort To Put Kibosh On All-Night Bashes In Teen-Hijacked Vacant Foreclosures

In Encinitas, California, KGTV Channel 10 reports:
  • The San Diego County Sheriff's Department is recruiting extra help in an effort to prevent all-night rave parties in foreclosed homes, 10News reported. In the Encinitas Ranch development, a neighborhood watch group is born, and coordinator Dick Stern knows exactly what he's watching for. "It was quite disturbing seeing those aftermath of the parties," said Stern. This past summer, authorities said a rash of foreclosures in the North County turned into party scenes as teen bashes left pricey homes damaged and trashed, often causing thousands of dollars in damage.

For more, see Neighbors Band Together To Prevent Foreclosed-Home Parties.

Friday, November 13, 2009

Colorado Homeowner Obtains Temporary Restraining Order Halting Foreclosure; Alleges Loan Servicers Failed To Respond To HAMP Loan Mod Applications

In Brighton, Colorado, The Denver Post reports:
  • Traci Willms turned to the federal Home Affordable Modification Program to save the childhood home in Brighton she bought from her mother and shares with her two children. But after two separate loan-modification applications with two different servicers in the past six months, she never received an answer.

  • Last week, she sued to stop the foreclosure sale of the home, arguing that the HAMP program prevented such an action. "All we want them to do is run the paperwork and do their job," Willms said. An Adams County judge issued a temporary restraining order to prevent a sale, in what could be an early test case of the new loan-modification program. "We are arguing that this foreclosure is illegal and should be stopped," said Sarah Parady, a consumer attorney with Colorado Legal Services in Denver. Mortgage servicers participating in the HAMP program agree to suspend foreclosure proceedings for borrowers whose applications are under review or who are in a trial modification period, Parady said.

  • Complicating Willms' case, GMAC Mortgage, which participates in HAMP, transferred servicing rights to her loan to MGC Mortgage of Plano, Texas, which does not, in July. Within days, the owner of the loan, LNV Corp., initiated a foreclosure. To prevent lenders from giving loans the hot-potato treatment, HAMP requires anyone accepting a loan under review for modification to treat it as if it were still under the program, Parady said.

***

  • Shannon Peer, director of housing counseling with Brothers Redevelopment, said many lenders keep the foreclosure clock ticking even as they review a modification application. Some servicers will deny a modification request right before the deadline for a foreclosure sale, he said. But in Willm's case, she never got an answer.

For the story, see Brighton homeowner in fight to stop foreclosure (Cites loan-modification delays).

California State Bar Task Force Hammers Five More Attorneys In Continuing Probe Into Alleged Loan Modification Misconduct

In San Francisco, California, The National Law Journal reports:
  • The State Bar of California's crackdown on attorneys for alleged loan modification misconduct has claimed five more lawyers in Southern California, three of whom have resigned.

***

  • On Nov. 2, Timothy Thurman of Trinity Law Group in Los Angeles resigned with charges pending after the FBI arrested him in October. He was charged with forging the signature of a federal judge on a fake court order that he gave to his clients so that they could avoid eviction. His law firm, launched earlier this year, provided litigation and loan modification services. [...] On Nov. 4, two other lawyers resigned with unspecified charges pending: Gary Davidson of Costa Mesa, Calif., and Eric Douglas Johnson of Culver City, Calif. Davidson did not return a call for comment, and a phone number to Johnson's law office is no longer in service.

  • Also on Nov. 4, Paul Lucas of Lucas Law Center in Aliso Viejo, Calif., was put on involuntary inactive status for allegedly becoming a threat to the public. Among the accusations are that he lied about his firm's refund policy and its relationship with Future Financial Services, which he has described as the marketing arm of his law office.

***

  • On [Nov. 6], Sean Rutledge of United Law Group in Irvine, Calif., was placed on inactive status for taking money from his clients, not performing services and failing to refund fees in 14 client matters.

For more, see Calif. Bar Crackdown on Loan Modification Misconduct Claims 5 More Attorneys.

See also, The State Bar of California news release: State Bar Loan Modification Task Force Shuts Down Practices Of More Lawyers.

Financial Turmoil, Uncertainty Hovering Over Arizona Senior Independent Living & Retirement Community Forces Elderly To Flee Homes

In Green Valley, Arizona, the Green Valley News & Sun reports:
  • The beautiful but nearly empty Retreat at Santa Rita Springs retirement village is facing financial hard times and it is up to the mortgage holder as to whether it continues operating. [...] Meanwhile, many of the dozen elderly residents still there are making arrangements to move after hearing of financial turmoil and seeing their beloved staff fired last Friday on two hours’ notice.

***

  • The turmoil has been devastating for residents and former staff. “It’s all very confusing, isn’t it?” said Georgia Ryder, who has lived in Green Valley on and off since 1980. “Since Friday we didn’t know anything. I cried for two days. I’m going to miss all my friends like crazy. I’ve been here (in Green Valley) 30 years.” Ryder has found a place to live in Tucson and other residents are doing the same because they cannot take the uncertainty. "Watermark [the former management company] left the food here that they bought, so we have food until Friday,” Ryder said, underscoring the worries residents have. [Former executive director Debbie] Engen said, “It’s hard, it really is. Between staff and residents, you get very close. It’s like a family. We brought stuff from home and did whatever we could to make a go of it with no funds.”

For the story, see Retirement apartments in financial bind.

Elderly Couple Accuse Grandson Of Pocketing Mortgage Proceeds On Family Home After Duping Them Into Unwittingly Signing Over Title; Now Face F'closure

In St. Paul, Minnesota, Fox News TV Channel 9 reports:
  • [Stella] Hernandez is not embarrassed to admit she’s 81 years old. Her husband Joseph is 91. He is a decorated WWII veteran, and she was a real life “Rosie the Riveter” working on B-24 bombers at St. Paul’s Holman field. For the past 40 years they’ve lived on Dayton Avenue in the shadows of the St. Paul Cathedral. But now a family dispute means they may face foreclosure.

  • Six years ago, the Hernandez’s claim they were tricked into signing a qui[t] claim deed on the house giving ownership to their grandson. Afterwards they claim he allegedly took out loans on the home’s equity and didn’t repay them. What he did with the money they don’t know because they haven’t been able to talk to him. “I don’t know,” said Mrs. Hernandez. "I don’t know anything about his whereabouts or anything.”

***

For the story, see Elderly Couple Fighting Foreclosure in St. Paul. FinancialAbuseOfElderlyAlpha DeedContraTheft

Georgia Man Accused Of Getting His Dementia-Stricken Grandmother To Sign Over Title To Property

In Moultrie, Georgia, The Moultrie Observer reports:
  • A Moultrie man was apprehended Monday after he allegedly took advantage of his grandmother’s illness. Daniel Lee Baker, 25, [...] was charged with two counts of crimes against the elderly and probation violation. Colquitt County Sheriff’s Investigator Sgt. Jason Thompson said Baker allegedly had his grandmother’s property signed over to him. In addition to the property, his grandmother, who suffers from dementia, allegedly also gave Baker the power of attorney over her affairs. Additional changes against Baker were pending additional information into the allegations, Thompson said.

Source: Man accused of crimes against grandmother. FinancialAbuseOfElderlyAlpha DeedContraTheft