Serving Wake County in Beautiful and Historic North Carolina

Avoid Foreclosure


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Life happens.  Sometimes bad things happen to good people.

Have you ever known anyone who has fallen behind on house payments due to some kind of hardship?  I’m not talking about spending too much, but a hardship like a death of a spouse, job loss, divorce or a major illness.  Before considering bankruptcy or having the bank foreclose on the property, consider what is known as a short sale.

A short sale happens when an owner is behind on payments and the house is worth less than what is owed.  A lender may agree to a short sale, agreeing to accept less than what is owed.  In order for a short sale to be agreed upon, the home owner must prove a hardship situation to the lender.  We provide assistance to those in need and have worked thru this difficult process with others.

What we’re seeing in the Raleigh area is a trend that we do not like.  Lenders foreclose on about 80 homes in Wake County each week, and default rates on home loans have soared by 250 percent since 1998, officials said (source WRAL.com)

A leading cause of being upside-down on a mortgage is because of creative lending.  Being upside-down simply means owing more than the home is worth.  Many people facing foreclosure have adjustable rate mortgages.  When interest rates rise, so do payments and it is difficult for many people to make the additional payment.  Other loan programs have allowed people to buy putting no money down.  Other loans have even offered greater than 100% financing.  So if there is a financial hardship and owners get behind on payments, they very well may be upside-down with the lender.

There are distinct advantages for a home owner in doing a short sale versus being foreclosed upon or declaring bankruptcy.  A bankruptcy is very bad on a credit report.  What most people don’t know also is that a lender can still come in and foreclose on a home even if it is a homestead and the seller has declared bankruptcy.  A foreclosure is even worse on a credit report than a bankruptcy.   With a short sale, the only penalization on the credit report is for the missed payments.

How can a home owner recognize if the lender may foreclose on the home?  The first thing that usually happens when someone becomes behind on payments is a letter from the lender stating that the seller is in arrears.  The big warning signal is getting a letter from a lender stating that unless payments are brought up to date by a certain time period, they will accelerate the loan.  This means that they are going to call the entire amount owed due.

If a home owner is facing a financial hardship and falls behind, he should consider calling a REALTOR® to talk about the possibility of a short sale.  An owner should make sure the REALTOR® has a good understanding of the short sale process before deciding to work with him or her.  An experienced REALTOR® will have access to all the paperwork, the lender’s short sale contact information and can be ahead of the game in terms of contacting a lender before the lender starts foreclosing.

If you or anyone you know is facing a situation that might lead to a short sale, please contact me immediately at 919-388-4863

Introduced
(Powered by GovTrack.us.)
Sep 25, 2007
Sponsor Rep. Charles Rangel [D-NY]
Status Enacted
Last Action Dec 20, 2007: Became Public Law No: 110-142.

Foreclosure "Rescue" Scams

 


Solutions that sound too good to be true usually are!
If you're selling your home without professional guidance, beware of the predatory practices of the

Foreclosure Rescue Scammers.

 

These scammers’ tactics revolve around heavily promoted deals and advertising that is supposedly designed to Save your home from facing foreclosure.  But with frightening regularity this HELP either unwittingly drains your property's equity or leaves the RESCUER owning your house – and your family evicted from your home. 

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In most cases it's hard to escape the conclusion that that's exactly what the RESCUE is designed to do.

 

The predominant foreclosure Rescue Scams appear to come in 3 varieties.

 

The 1st might be called Phantom Help, where the RESCUER charges outrageous fees either for light-duty phone calls and paperwork the Homeowner could have easily performed, or on a promise of more robust representation that never materializes.

 

In either event the Homeowner is usually left without enough assistance to actually save the home but with little or no time left to prevent this grievous loss by the time they realize it. The RESCUER essentially abandons the Homeowner to a fate that might well have been prevented with better intervention.

 

A 2nd variety of the scam is the Bailout that never quite works. This scenario includes various schemes under which the Homeowner surrenders title to the house in the belief that they are entering a deal where they'll be able to remain as a renter and buy it back over the next few years. Homeowners are sometimes told that surrendering title is necessary so that someone with a better credit rating can secure new financing to prevent the loss of the home.

 

But the terms of these deals are almost invariably so onerous that the buyback becomes impossible, the Homeowner permanently loses possession, and the RESCUER walks off with all or most of the home's equity.

 

The 3rd variety is a Bait-and-Switch where the Homeowner does not realize they are surrendering ownership of the house (for a ridiculously small fraction of its actual value) in exchange for the Rescue.  Many Homeowners later insist that they believed they were only signing documents for a new loan to make the mortgage current and that they had no intention of selling or giving up their home to anyone.

 

It's important to note here that

·         A substantial number of these cases involve fraud and forgeries of deeds.

·         Worse, in many cases the original homeowner is left holding the original mortgage on the home they no longer own!

 

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Here's an outline of typical tactics employed in these scams:

·         The RESCUER finds distressed homeowners through public foreclosure notices in newspapers or at government offices. These records are more readily accessible than in the past because they're computerized and more private firms now compile and sell the lists. The Homeowner has not been foreclosed on yet, but is merely threatened with foreclosure after falling behind on mortgage payments.

·         The RESCUER then contacts the homeowner by phone, personal visit, card or flyer left at the door, or advertising. Initial contact typically revolves around a simple message such as "Stop foreclosure with just one phone call," "I'd like to $ buy $ your house," "You have options," or "Do you need instant debt relief and CASH?" This contact also frequently contains a "Time is of the Essence" theme, adding a note of urgency to what is already a stressful and possibly desperate situation.

·         Initial meetings stress the promise of a "Fresh Start" – likely what a frightened Homeowner most wants to hear – and often feature written or recorded "Testimonials" from other Homeowners the RESCUE Scammer has supposedly saved. While it is true that these programs work for some, what's glossed over is the fact that Help often comes at a very steep price.

·         Homeowners are also frequently instructed to cease all contact with lawyers or the mortgage lender and let the RESCUER handle all negotiations. (i.e. "We have learned that any discussion between you, the Homeowner, and the Mortgage Company or their Attorney(s) at this point, will preempt our efforts and prevent us from being successful.")  This doubly devious tactic simultaneously cuts off access to legitimate re-finance and sale options while running out the clock on ways for the Homeowner to prevent their foreclosure.

·         Once it's too late to save the home the property is either taken by the RESCUER or, having been drained of substantial equity through the RESCUER’s imposition of heavy fees and other charges, it’s simply lost to foreclosure.

·         After things fall apart many Homeowners suffer the added stress and indignity of being duped and evicted by their RESCUER from the home they once owned.

·         Separately, but also quite worrisome, this scam appears to have spawned a side industry of scam artists who teach others how to drain equity from homes facing foreclosure. These Scam Instructors often advertise their seminars under the disguise of Buying Real Estate With No Money Down, Cashing In On the so-called Pre-Foreclosure Market, or some such.

*This is in part an excerpt from the 2005

Dreams Foreclosed: The Rampant Theft of Americans' Homes Through Equity-stripping Foreclosure "Rescue" Scams.

Complete the information below to request a copy of the full 68-page report

                                                                                    

 

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Edward Dresp