D.C. Foreclosure Rescue Operator Settles One Sale Leaseback Lawsuit; Denied In Request To Set Aside Verdict In Another
- Five D.C. residents who say they were tricked into signing away their homes have reached out-of-court settlements that enabled them to regain ownership and a total of $455,000. The settlements end a three-year-old lawsuit, a rare happy ending for the growing number of people who claim to be victims of foreclosure rescue scams. In the suit, the elderly plaintiffs alleged that to stave off foreclosure they signed paperwork for what they thought were loans that would cover missed mortgage payments. Instead, they had signed away their homes to Washington businessman Vincent L. Abell and his associates.
With respect to the buyback terms called for in the arrangements:
- "The buyback terms were so onerous that there was no way to meet them," said N. Thomas Connally III, a lawyer at Hogan & Hartson, who, with AARP, represented the plaintiffs. "The arrangements were designed to fail from the start, and they allowed Mr. Abell to take ownership of the property by paying the former owner almost nothing." The monthly payments were often so high that many of the plaintiffs fell behind, lost their buyback option and ended up facing eviction, said Connally, whose firm worked on the case pro bono.
Regarding another case involving foreclosure rescue operator Vincent L. Abell:
- Abell's legal troubles are not over. In March, after a
two-week trial in D.C. Superior Court, a jury awarded more than $3 million in punitive damages and $60,000 in compensatory damages to Maria Wilson of the District, who had separately accused Abell, his company and Baltimore of defrauding her in a similar foreclosure rescue operation. On Jan. 9, Judge Mary A. Gooden Terrell denied the defendants' motions to set aside or reduce the verdict, Connally said. "Whether she'll ultimately be able to collect from those folks, who knows?" said Connally, who represented Wilson.
For more, see Homeowners in Alleged Scam Get Settlement (Payments to 5 D.C. Residents Conclude 3-Year Legal Battle).
Go here for other posts on Vincent Abell and his associate, Calvin Baltimore. elder financial abuse whale
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