Friday, August 19, 2011

Rhode Island Federal Court Freezes Dozens Of Foreclosure Cases In Effort To 'Persuade' Banksters To Sit, Negotiate Payment Workouts w/ Homeowners

In Providence, Rhode Island, WPRI-TV Channel 12 reports:
  • Rhode Island's new federal judge makes a decision that could affect dozens of Rhode Islanders facing foreclosure. Judge John McConnell, Junior has ordered the bulk of mortgage foreclosure cases in before Rhode Island's U.S. District Court to be put on hold, and for banks to try and negotiate with homeowners. 63 foreclosure cases in Rhode Island are affected.

***

  • "It stops the banks and the services in their tracks," said George Babcock, a Pawtucket attorney who is handling the majority of the foreclosure cases. "It gives them opportunity to sit with the magistrate," Babcock said, "and with the bank or servicer to try and work out a reasonable deal." The idea Babcock says is to keep Rhode Islanders in their homes.

For the story, see Judge puts RI foreclosure cases on hold (Banks ordered to negotiate with homeowners).

See also, The Providence Journal: Judge McConnell orders banks, struggling borrowers to talk it out:

  • In the past few months, dozens of cases calling into question the chain of ownership on mortgages and whether various companies have the right to foreclose on a homeowner have been transferred to U.S. District Court from state court.


  • At Chief U.S. District Court Judge Mary M. Lisi’s request, all the federal court cases will be handled by McConnell in conjunction with U.S. Magistrate Judge Lincoln D. Almond.

Miami-Dade Cops: Suspected Loan Modification Racket Not A 'Civil Matter;' Criminal Probe Ends With 4 Busts In Alleged Ripoff That Victimized Hundreds

In Miami, Florida, WPLG-TV Channel 10 reports:
  • Four members of a Miami company were arrested, accused of stealing $750,000 from hundreds of clients in a mortgage modification scam. Miami-Dade police said that during a six-month period in 2008 and 2009, Best Value Homes, Inc., at 7845 Coral Way, which billed itself as a mortgage loan modification company, used telemarketing to solicit perspective clients, telling them it could modify their existing home mortgages.


  • Police said clients paid an upfront fee of $1,500 to $1,750 and signed a third-party contract giving Best Value Homes permission to negotiate the mortgages with the financial institutions.


  • The company took the cash without completing any of the services, according to Miami-Dade police. Police were called to Best Value Homes, Inc., in February 2009 after about 15 people showed up at the company's office, claiming they were defrauded. The incident led to about 500 more claims of fraud and deception by the same people.


  • The suspects, Ronald Rodriguez, 31, Zoar Rodriguez, 27, Kellyd Rodriguez, 32, and Berta Cabrera, 54, all of Miami, face charges of conspiracy to commit racketeering and organized fraud. If convicted of all counts, each could face up to 60 years in prison.

Source: 4 Arrested In Mortgage Modification Scam (Police: Company Took Cash, Didn't Perform Service).

Another Florida-Based Loan Modification Outfit Tagged With Civil Suit; Allegations Point To A Foreclosure Relief Scam Operation, Says Ohio AG

In Cincinnati, Ohio, Courthouse News Service reports:
  • The Ohio attorney general says a Florida-based outfit called the American Residential Law Group is bilking Ohioans in a foreclosure-relief scam. Despite its name, nothing in the state's complaint indicates that the two men who run the business are lawyers.


  • Ohio sued the Fort Lauderdale-based business and the two men who run it, Oscar Estevez and Joel Jacobi, both of Miami. The attorney general says the men charge $1,395 to $3,350 for their purported services in "debt adjustment," but "often failed to perform the services listed in the contract."

For more, see State Sues to Stop Foreclosure Scam.

For the Ohio AG lawsuit, see State of Ohio v. American Residential Law Group, Inc. et al.

Ohio Blogger Files 'Friend Of The Court' Brief With State Supremes In Foreclosure Case

Ohio FRAUDclosure reports:
  • OHIO FRAUDclosure, an Internet "Blog Site," has submitted an Amicus Curiae (Brief) on behalf of ALL OHIO Homeowners in a landmark case US BANK NA v. DUVALL.


  • This case and decision currently in front of the Supreme Court of Ohio - turn on the Question: To have STANDING, as a plaintiff, in a mortgage foreclosure action, must a party show that it owned the NOTE and the MORTGAGE when the complaint was filed?

For more, see Ohio FRAUDclosure blogger brief to Supreme Court of Ohio.

For the 'friend 0f the court' brief, see Merit Brief Of Amici Curiae Homeowners Of The State Of Ohio, And Ohiofraudclosure.blogspot.com.

For earlier post on the Ohio high court review, see Ohio Supremes To Decide Whether Foreclosing Party Must Own Both Note, Mortgage At The Time Complaint Is Filed.

Thursday, August 18, 2011

R/E Operator Uses Defaulted HELOC, Non-Judicial F'closure To Snatch Control Of 200-Unit NYC Bldg. Out From Under Landlord Current On 1st Mtg Payments

In Jamaica, Queens, The Real Deal reports:
  • In a strategy that many insiders say was highly unusual (and very creative), the Bluestone Group wrested control of a 200-plus-unit apartment building in Jamaica, Queens, by getting its hands on the owner's line of credit. The property owner had taken out both a first mortgage and a revolving line of credit from a regional community bank. While the owner never stopped making payments on its mortgage, it defaulted on the line of credit about a year and a half ago.

***

  • To recoup the money it was owed on the line of credit, the regional bank sued in State Supreme Court, and won a judgment against the borrower earlier this year. Because the line of credit was secured by the owner's 51 percent stake in the Jamaica apartment building, the bank could have taken control of the property. But banks are often reluctant to engage in messy real estate battles. So when Bluestone got wind of the judgment, it approached the bank to buy the line of credit.

***

  • Eli Tabak, a principal with Bluestone, said he first learned of the defaulted line of credit through the special assets department at the community bank. Tabak noted that one advantage to purchasing an equity interest is that competing investors are less keen on doing the same, since it's considered a risky play. "People are afraid to buy high in the capital stack, so the paper is not worth that much," Tabak said.

***

  • Tabak declined to disclose how much he paid. But once he had the line of credit in hand, he was able to foreclose on the equity (rather than the real estate, as most foreclosures do). Bluestone was also able to foreclose much faster than a standard property foreclosure.


  • In mid-June, Tabak held a nonjudicial foreclosure sale in his attorney's office. Such a foreclosure provides fewer protections for the borrower and is less regulated than a standard foreclosure. There were no other bidders.


  • And, as the new owner, Tabak will be responsible for paying the in-place mortgage. The whole process, from buying the debt to foreclosing, took him only about a month.


  • "It's actually much simpler," said Edward Harris, an attorney in the real estate department at law firm Cozen O'Connor. Still, there are downsides to a mezzanine or other equity foreclosures. "You have all the warts, all of the mechanic's liens [and other liens], but when you foreclose on the first mortgage you extinguish most liens and other encumbrances. Some things, like unpaid taxes, survive foreclosure, of course," Harris said.

For the story, see Foreclosing on the equity, not the real estate.

Daughter-In-Law Accused Of Duping Elderly Homeowner Into Signing Refinance Papers, Pocketing $100K, Stiffing Bank, Leaving Senior Facing Boot

In Cottonwood Heights, Utah, ABC 4 News reports:

  • A 91-year-old Cottonwood Heights woman is days away from losing her home of almost 50 years. [...] Gene Call is reeling from the revelation that she was duped. It first came to light last year when she got a foreclosure notice.

***

  • Her daughter-in-law told Gene to sign papers to lower the interest rate. "I asked them why her name is first. They said it didn't matter," said Gene.


  • The signature actually allowed the daughter-in-law to take $100,000 of the home's equity.


  • Gene's son is outraged. "I wasn't aware there were no payments made. Mom wasn't aware there were no payments made," said Mike Call. He contacts Freedom Mortgage, but his calls are not returned. [...] A judge ordered a stay of ten days for the woman to try and work out a deal with the mortgage company.

For the story, see Fraud forcing 91-year-old out of home.

Court Orders Pre-Trial Shut-Down For Alleged Long Island Loan Modification Racket Accused Of Ripping Off 1,000+ Homeowners

In Nassau County, New York, the New York Daily News reports:
  • A judge shut down a Long Island mortgage brokerage accused of ripping off hundreds of struggling homeowners through loan modification scams. Homesafe America Inc. and its successor corporation, United Solutions Law Firm, allegedly scammed more than 1,000 homeowners facing foreclosure by falsely promising to get mortgage reductions from banks.


  • The Levittown, L.I., firms allegedly charged homeowners across the country - including some in Brooklyn and Queens - illegal upfront fees ranging from $1,500 to $4,000. Then they did little or nothing for the money.


  • Nassau Supreme Court Justice John Galasso's order bars Homesafe's founders, Guy Samuel and Scott Schreiber, from engaging in mortgage-assistance services before trial. The order was sought by lawyers for 15 homeowners who hit Homesafe and United Solutions with a $1.5 million suit in June.


  • "They deserved to be shut down," said plaintiff David Thorpe, a retired cop from Prole, Iowa. "I don't know how many more countless others there are out there who are in the same boat I am and made the same stupid mistake that I did." A call to Schreiber's attorney was not returned. Samuel could not be reached.

Source: Judge slams door on mortgage ripoffs Homesafe America Inc. and United Solutions.

For an earlier post on these alleged rackets, see Pair Of Alleged Long Island Loan Modification Rackets Get The 'Freeze' As Judges Limit Firms' Activities, Order Hold On Assets.

Wednesday, August 17, 2011

Showdown Looms In Elderly Predatory Loan Victim's Decade-Plus Battle To Hang On To Brooklyn Home Of 44 Years

In Bedford Stuyvesant, Brooklyn, the New York Daily News reports:
  • Feisty great-grandmother Mary Lee Ward has been battling to keep her modest Brooklyn house since the late 1990s.(1) The victim of a predatory subprime mortgage lender that went bankrupt in the housing crash four years ago, Ward has nearly lost the Bedford-Stuyvesant home a number of times - and faces eviction yet again on Friday. "There is no way I'm going to leave this place. Not alive," said a teary-eyed Ward. "This is my home for 44 years. I've put everything into it."


  • Ward, 82, was desperate for extra money back in 1995 to pay for a lawyer to help keep her great-granddaughter from being adopted. Ward found a flyer in her mailbox from Delta Funding, a subprime mortgage lender, promising her a cash advance of $10,000 if she borrowed against her one-family frame house on Tompkins Ave.


  • Ward signed. She said she has seen only $1,000 of the cash she was promised and has been in and out of courtrooms battling banks - and even her own lawyers - for more than a decade. She thought her home was safe after Delta Funding sent her a letter in 2001 saying they would cancel the loan. Ward says what she didn't know was that Delta Funding never rescinded the loan, and that banks have been playing hot potato with her mortgage for years.


  • The company was sued by the feds in 1999 for civil rights violations for targeting minority-group members - especially black women - in Queens and Brooklyn. The company went bankrupt in 2007, along with many other subprime lenders. But Ward's house remained in limbo.


  • She says the latest owner, 768 Dean Inc., bought her home at a foreclosure auction last September. "They're trying to throw me out and I have nowhere to go," Ward said. She said she received 18 eviction letters in the mail just on Aug. 6. Representatives of 768 Dean Inc. could not be reached for comment.


  • Ward, who lives on $840 a month from Social Security, says her $82,000 loan has now morphed into a debt of $200,000.


  • She huddled with her new legal team, lawyers for the grass-roots group Common Law, late last week to talk strategy. Legally, there's nothing they can do, but they're hoping they can rally people together for next Friday's showdown with city marshals, representatives of the group said.(2)


  • "We're hoping that with the support of her neighbors and fellow New Yorkers, she'll be able to get some bargaining power back," said Common Law lawyer Karen Gargamelli. Ward said she tosses and turns every night and looks forward to the day when she can rest easy. "Just let me have a little peace," she said.

For the story, see Great-granny, facing eviction from Brooklyn home, to fight in court for right to live in peace.

(1) See:

  • The Village Voice: Foreclosing on Bed-Stuy (Predatory Loans Have Residents Seeing Red),
  • The Village Voice: Liberals On Loan (Lender that preys on poor fights the state­ with help from leading democrats).

(2) In addition, housing advocates at Organizing 4 Occupation are working to block the eviction of Ms. Ward. The showdown with city marshals is set for Friday, August 19, 2011 at 9:00 am at 320 Tompkins Avenue, Brooklyn, USA.

Investor Files Amended 'Securitization Screw-Up' Suit; Believes Bankster's Knowing Bungle In Mortgage File Exchange Led To Purchase Of 'Unbacked' MBS

In New York City, Bloomberg reports:
  • Bank of New York Mellon Corp., targeted by New York for allegedly violating state law while representing mortgage-bond investors, was accused by Knights of Columbus of damaging its investment in mortgage securities.


  • Knights of Columbus, a charitable organization that invested in mortgage-backed securities, seeks to recover losses and demands punitive damages from the bank, according to an amended complaint filed [Tuesday] in New York state court in Manhattan.


  • Bank of New York, which serves as trustee for trusts holding loans underlying mortgage securities, mismanaged the trust assets, Knights of Columbus said in a statement []. It accused the bank in the complaint of gross negligence and recklessness and said the bank’s actions caused a “substantial” loss.


  • It is apparent that the defendant knowingly failed in its obligation to receive, process, maintain, and hold all or part of the mortgage files,” Knights of Columbus, based in New Haven, Connecticut, said.


  • As a result, it didn’t acquire mortgage-backed securities, “but instead acquired securities backed by nothing at all,” the organization said.


  • Kevin Heine, a spokesman for Bank of New York, said the complaint “is without merit.”

***

  • Earlier this month, New York Attorney General Eric Schneiderman accused Bank of New York of misleading investors and violating state law in its role as trustee for bonds backed by Countrywide Financial Corp. loans. Schneiderman said Bank of New York knew of “loan documentation deficiencies.”


  • Countrywide’s failure to transfer complete mortgage loan documentation to the trusts hampered the ability of the trusts to foreclose on delinquent mortgages, impairing the value of the securities backed by the mortgages, Schneiderman said.

For the story, see Knights of Columbus File Amended Complaint in BNY Mortgage Security Case.

See also, The Wall Street Journal: Knights of Columbus Add New Claims To BNY Mellon Mortgage Suit (requires subscription; if no subscription, GO HERE - then click the appropriate link for the story).

For the amended lawsuit, see Knights of Columbus v. The Bank of New York Mellon.

Thanks to Deontos for the heads-up on the story.

Colorado Foreclosure Mill's Political Contributions Grease 'Impartial' County Foreclosure Officials' Campaign Coffers

The Denver Post reports:
  • Three public trustees have accepted thousands of dollars in campaign contributions from the state's top foreclosure lawyer and companies and individuals tied to him. A fourth trustee, as treasurer of a colleague's campaign, solicited and received a contribution from the lawyer's wife.


  • The contributions are the latest in a list of financial and political connections Denver attorney Larry Castle has forged over the years with the state's public trustees, who are charged with impartially overseeing the foreclosure process.


  • Castle, his law partners at Castle Stawiarski, several junior lawyers and employees, and a variety of business entities tied to him have contributed more than $25,000 to the trustees who ran for public office, campaign-finance records show.


  • "This is a brilliant and classic example of money in politics, where people give to get or just want to say thanks," said Jenny Flanagan, executive director of Colorado Common Cause. "The trustees are obligated to be above-board, and the whole concept of public trust is right there in their title."

For more, see Public trustees got thousands in campaign gifts linked to state's top foreclosure lawyer.

In related stories, see:

Bay State Deed-Recording Official On County Being Screwed Over Out Of Nearly $2M: MERS "An Elaborate Stiffing Scheme To Avoid Paying Registry Fees!"

In Pittsfield, Massachusetts, The Berkshire Eagle reports:
  • A Virginia-based mortgage registry business mired in the nation’s housing foreclosure investigation has apparently "stiffed" the three Berkshire Registry of Deeds offices of nearly $2 million in recording fees for more than a decade, local registry officials have claimed.


  • Mortgage Electronic Registration Systems Inc. of Reston, Va. failed to pay an estimated $1.18 million to the Middle District Registry of Deeds in Pittsfield from June 1999 through July of this year, according to Register of Deeds Andrea F. Nuciforo Jr. In addition, Nuciforo’s staff has calculated that the Southern and Northern District registries in North Adams and Great Barrington respectively are owed a collective $775,000 during the same 12-year period.


  • The $75 state-mandated fee in question is for each time a home mortgage is sold or swapped -- known as an assignment -- to another lending institution after it has been initially recorded in the appropriate registry. The money collected goes into the state’s general revenue fund.


  • MERS was established 16 years ago by mortgage companies Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac and financial giants like Bank of America and JP Morgan Chase to make it easier for banks and lenders to sell mortgages as an investment.


  • "It’s become an elaborate stiffing scheme to avoid paying registry fees," Nuciforo said. Nuciforo was among the state’s 21 registers of deeds who met with Massachusetts Attorney General Martha Coakley last week asking she further probe MERS’ recording practices, before signing off on a reportedly $20 billion nationwide settlement.

For more, see Mortgage business 'stiffing' county.

Class Members In Robosigner Class Action Get Screwed Over; Judge 'Green Lights' $17 Settlement While Lead Plaintiffs Walk With $8K, Debt Expungement

In Toledo, Ohio, Business First reports:
  • A class-action suit filed in 2008 in Ohio that sparked the “robo-signing” allegations that have rocked the nation's foreclosure pipeline has resulted in a settlement, the Toledo Blade reports.


  • U.S. District Court Judge David Katz granted approval of a $5.2 million settlement in Midland Funding vs. Brent, a case in which an Erie County woman lobbed charges of false affidavits used to secure judgments against borrowers.


  • Each of the roughly 133,000 people sued by Midland or a subsidiary will receive about $17 while lead plaintiffs will get $8,000 and have their debts expunged, the paper reported.(1)


  • A similar case filed by former Ohio Attorney General Richard Cordray in 2010 is pending in a Toledo federal court while attorneys await the outcome of a state Supreme Court case, the paper reported.

Source: 'Robo-signing' foreclosure case that set precedent settled.

(1) No mention of how much loot the plaintiffs' attorneys are dancing away with, or whether the now-twice-victimized class members will decline accepting their 'lucrative' score and opt out of the settlement (to go after this bankster in separate suits), round up the 'pitchfork brigade' to chase after the attorneys who sold them out, or just roll over in bed and go back to sleep in this latest illustration of the class action racket at work.

Tuesday, August 16, 2011

"Bah, Humbug!" Says Bklyn Judge On F'closure Mill's Affidavit Attesting To Conversation With Bank Officer Occurring Long After Outfit Ceased To Exist

In Brooklyn, New York, Reuters reports:
  • Shouting "Bah, humbug!," a New York judge threw out the planned foreclosure against a Brooklyn man based on an alleged fraudulent Christmas Eve phone call confirming the paperwork was in place to take his home away.


  • The judge, Arthur Schack, said US Bancorp's US Bank NA unit cannot foreclose on the Brooklyn home of Dario Trujillo, who faced foreclosure proceedings begun in July 2008 by Downey Savings and Loan. Downey failed four months later and was bought by Minneapolis-based US Bancorp.


  • Schack is a state Supreme Court justice in Brooklyn known for criticizing perceived abuses in mortgage servicing.


  • He was angered after lawyer Margaret Carucci said in a sworn affidavit that a Downey officer on Dec. 24, 2010 claimed to have personally reviewed and could vouch for the accuracy of the paperwork underlying Trujillo's foreclosure — although Downey had long ceased to exist.


  • "Ms. Carucci affirmed under the penalties of perjury that she communicated on Christmas Eve 2010 with the officer of a defunct financial institution," Schack wrote. "This is a deceptive trick and fraud upon the court. It cannot be tolerated. This Christmas Eve conduct, in the words of Ebenezer Scrooge, is 'Bah, humbug!"'


  • Schack directed Carucci and her law firm at the time, Westbury, New York-based Druckman Law Group, to explain at a hearing on Sept. 12 why they should not be sanctioned.


  • Nicholas Perciballi, a lawyer for the Druckman firm, had no comment on the ruling. Carucci is no longer employed by the firm and efforts to reach her were unsuccessful. US Bancorp had no immediate comment. A lawyer for Trujillo could not immediately be located.


  • The sworn affirmation is a new requirement in all New York foreclosure cases, instituted last year to cut back on foreclosure fraud and abuse.

For the story, see NY judge stops Christmas Eve foreclosure ('Bah Humbug' he says, allowing Brooklyn man to keep his home).

For the ruling, see Downey Sav. & Loan Assn., F.A. v Trujillo, 2011 NY Slip Op 51517(U) (NY Sup. Ct. Kings Cty. August 12, 2011).

Nevada AG Joins Counterparts In Three Other States In Stiff-Arming Proposal For Broad Releases For Banksters In 50-State Foreclosure Fraud Probe

Bloomberg reports:
  • Nevada’s attorney general joined three other states in questioning whether a possible settlement of a 50-state probe of foreclosure practices should protect banks from continuing mortgage investigations.


  • Nevada Attorney General Catherine Cortez Masto, whose office has sued Bank of America Corp. and is conducting civil and criminal foreclosure probes, said she will be “very cautious” about agreeing to a settlement that hinders them.

***

  • Masto joined New York, Delaware and Massachusetts in resisting broad releases for the banks in any settlement. Those states are conducting their own investigations into mortgage practices of banks.

For more, see Nevada Joins States Balking at Bank Releases in Foreclosure Practices Deal.

Post Probe: Review Of Metro-NYC Homeowners' Chapter 13 Filings Reveals Creditors' Claims Riddled w/ Robosigners, Broken Chains Of Title, Dubious Docs

In New York City, the New York Post reports:
  • The banks still just don't get it. In a staggering 92 percent of the claims brought by creditors asserting the right to foreclose against bankrupt families in New York City and the close-in suburbs, banks and mortgage servicers couldn't prove they had the right to kick the families out on the street, a three-month probe by The Post has shown.


  • But that didn't stop the banks from trying. By robosigning documents and pressing foreclosures without the proper paperwork, banks have attempted to steamroll their way over sometimes-outgunned homeowners, The Post has uncovered.


  • But homeowners and the courts are starting to fight back. Forced to finally face the mess, banks find themselves driven to the bargaining table, where they now hope to win a global settlement with all 50 states and the federal government.


  • The tangled, complex mess in New York shows how tough -- and expensive -- such a settlement could be for the banks. The Post dug through more than 150 Chapter 13 bankruptcy filings from June 2010 in New York's Eastern and Southern federal court districts -- covering the five boroughs, Long Island and nearby northern counties including Westchester--in search of local foreclosure or pre-foreclosure cases. We then put together a random sample of 40 cases where creditors such as banks -- but more often loan servicers -- filed proofs of claim for first mortgage debt.


  • The research unearthed claims riddled with robosigners, suspicious documents and outrageous fees. And in a stunning 37 out of 40 cases, The Post discovered a broken chain of title from the original lender to the company now making claim against a local family for its home and thousands of dollars in questionable fees.


  • In other words, the bank or mortgage servicer filing the claim failed to prove it has any right at all to make a claim it was owed the debt or that it could seize the home in question.


  • The Post looked at Chapter 13 filings because the banks or mortgage servicers file proofs of claim for the debt and must, under penalty of perjury, include accurate information about the mortgage, note and fees. In New York, filing public records with "intent to deceive" is a felony.


  • EXPERIENCED foreclosure defense lawyers who reviewed some of these cases for The Post say the findings reflect a widespread pattern of malfeasance by banks and loan servicers that has gone largely unchallenged for far too long.

For more, see House of cards (Post probe finds problems in bank foreclosure filings).

Report: Confidential Records Suggest Fannie Told Servicers To Ignore HAMP Rules When Steamrolling Forward With Foreclosure

In Detroit, Michigan, the Detroit Free Press reports:
  • Confidential records obtained by the Free Press show that Fannie Mae pressed lenders to foreclose on homeowners, even if they were negotiating for a loan modification — a violation of the government’s own rules.


  • Those rules tell banks they “may not refer a loan for foreclosure sale or proceed with a foreclosure sale” while homeowners are seeking loan changes under the federal Home Affordable Modification Program, which was designed to provide mortgage relief.


  • The confidential records are at odds with that promise. They directed banks to foreclose on mortgages more than 12 months delinquent, regardless of whether homeowners were applying for relief. Other documents show that Fannie Mae made clear to banks that Fannie expected a certain percentage of delinquent borrowers to lose their homes.

For more, see Inside Fannie Mae: Confidential records show how Fannie Mae breaks the rules.

Title/Closing Lawyer Charged In $1M+ Escrow Funds Ripoff; Secretary's Threats To Reveal Boss' Bad Acts Leave Her In 'Extortion' Hot Water: Prosecutor

In Henrico County, Virginia, the Richmond Times Dispatch reports:
  • At 6 feet, 2 inches tall and weighing 290 pounds, William Orr Smith is hard to miss. His presence was a major factor in finding out what happened to more than $1 million in Bank of America mortgage and foreclosure funds that seemed to vanish in February.


  • Authorities say Smith, a longtime Henrico County lawyer who headed up a bank subsidiary, was especially knowledgeable about the missing funds for one simple reason: He took the money, they contend.


  • Nearing his 71st birthday, he now faces two embezzlement charges involving $1,065,227. The courtly lawyer made his first court appearance Thursday morning, and Henrico Circuit Judge Daniel T. Balfour set Sept. 28 as the day Smith will enter a plea in the case.

***

  • Special Prosecutor Tracy Thorne-Begland said Smith is charged with basically operating a check-kiting scheme, handling mortgage and foreclosure proceedings with money that was intended to go elsewhere.

***

  • Smith, [...] also helped lead Virginia State Bar investigators through details of the scheme; in June, Smith voluntarily surrendered his law license. State Bar documents show that Smith was the owner/operator of Montbrook Title LLC, a title insurance agency whose primary client in recent years was LandSafe Inc., a subsidiary of Bank of America.


  • "LandSafe hired Smith to conduct residential real estate settlements and foreclosures of homes with loans financed by Bank of America in Maryland and Virginia," according to the State Bar.


  • Audits discovered that Smith was not reconciling his escrow accounts, and Smith eventually told a State Corporation Commission investigator that his trust accounts were depleted and that some funds were missing.


  • "He explained that he was out of trust on all of his accounts and that he had been commingling funds from Virginia and Maryland transactions to cover shortages," according to a State Bar affidavit. Smith, the State Bar concluded, left only Bank of America with losses and reported his conduct to prosecutors.


  • But Smith, who had held his law license for 44 years, isn't the only person in his office under investigation. Thorne-Begland said Thursday that a secretary of Smith's faces a charge of extortion after threatening to go to authorities with information about Smith's dealings. Donna M. Allen, 37, who lives in rural Dinwiddie County, received about $20,000 from Smith during several months in 2010.

For the story, see Henrico lawyer, charged with embezzling $1 million, helped investigate his crimes.

Monday, August 15, 2011

Judge Slams S. Jersey Foreclosure Surplus Snatcher For $675K+ In Ex-Homeowner Ripoff; State AG Vows To Grab Scammer's Assets To Satisfy Court Judgment

From the Office of the New Jersey Attorney General:
  • A Superior Court Judge has determined that a Camden County businessman committed multiple violations of the state’s Consumer Fraud Act (“CFA”) when he misled homeowners in foreclosure into believing that they needed his help in obtaining surplus funds to which they were legally entitled.(1)

***

  • Filed in Gloucester County, the State’s two-count civil complaint alleged that Samuel E. Goodwin, III, 75, of Gloucester City, charged homeowners up to 65% of the total surplus funds remaining once the foreclosure process was completed. In June 2010, the State filed a Motion for Summary Judgment, which the court granted in part, finding that Goodwin violated the CFA by misrepresenting to consumers that surplus funds could be lost to the State. In March 2011, the State renewed its Motion for Summary Judgment.


  • In its Final Judgment and Order, the court granted the State’s renewed Motion for Summary Judgment:

    Finding that Goodwin engaged in unconscionable commercial practices in violation of the CFA by imposing fees ranging from approximately $5,300 to $56,540 for applying for surplus funds on behalf of consumers;

    Permanently enjoining Goodwin from advertising and otherwise soliciting consumers to submit surplus fund applications;

    Permanently enjoining Goodwin from retaining an attorney to file surplus fund applications on behalf of consumers; and

    Permanently enjoining Goodwin from receiving any monetary payment derived from any application for release of surplus funds
    .


  • Goodwin took advantage of homeowners going through foreclosure, and attempted to enrich himself, by misleading consumers in order to charge outrageous fees,” Attorney General Paula T. Dow said. “We remain vigilant, and are ready to take action, against anyone who attempts to take advantage of homeowners facing foreclosure.”


  • In addition to paying $329,198.08 in restitution to 24 consumers, the court also ordered Goodwin to pay $225,000 in civil penalties to the State, plus $122,998 in reimbursement for the State’s attorneys’ fees and investigative costs.


  • The Final Judgment and Order has been entered as a statewide lien. The Division of Consumer Affairs will continue its efforts to identify any assets that Goodwin may have now, and in the future, to be applied to satisfy the Final Judgment and Order.


  • This defendant stole from the desperate and vulnerable – people suffering from the anguish of losing their homes,” said Thomas R. Calcagni, Director of the State Division of Consumer Affairs. “Our Financial Fraud Unit continues its fight to protect distressed homeowners from financial predation, and we intend to pursue Goodwin and his assets, so restitution is paid to those who were deceived.”

For the NJ AG press release, see Camden County Businessman Ordered to Repay $329,000 to Consumers Whose Homes Were Foreclosed Upon and Sold, Under Settlement with the New Jersey Division of Consumer Affairs.

Go here for Statewide Judgement and Lien.

(1) Surplus funds are the monies remaining after the foreclosure sale takes place and mortgage, tax, and other legal obligations have been paid. In August 2007, when the State Division of Consumer Affairs filed its lawsuit, homeowners in foreclosure could claim surplus funds by filing a simple form available from the Superior Court Trust Fund Unit and after paying nominal fees totaling less than $100. The process for obtaining surplus funds has since changed and the current process provides for a motion for release of surplus funds to be filed by the party named in the judgment of foreclosure with the Office of Foreclosure.

Sacramento Feds Continue Ringing Up Convictions In N. California Foreclosure Sale Bid Rigging Conspiracies

In Sacramento, California, The Modesto Bee reports:
  • A Tracy man on Friday pleaded guilty to conspiring with a group of real estate speculators who agreed not to bid against each other at public foreclosure auctions in San Joaquin County, the U.S. attorney's office in Sacramento reported.


  • Real estate investor Walter Daniel Olmstead, 39, pleaded guilty to federal charges of conspiring to rig bids and commit mail fraud at the real estate foreclosure auctions. Olmstead participated in the scheme from November 2008 to July 2009, according to his plea agreement.


  • "By rigging public auctions of foreclosed properties, the defendants who have pleaded guilty as a result of this investigation illegally manipulated the market for residential real estate," said U.S. Attorney Benjamin Wagner in a news release.


  • The conspiracy's primary purpose was to suppress and restrain competition and to obtain selected real estate at the foreclosure auctions at noncompetitive prices, according to court documents.


  • After the conspirators' designated bidder bought a property at a public auction, the conspirators would hold a private auction where they would bid a higher amount than the public auction price. The conspirator with the highest bid in the private auction got the property.


  • Federal prosecutors said the difference between the price at the public auction and at the private auction was the group's illicit profit. It was divided among the conspirators in payoffs.


  • As of Friday, seven people have pleaded guilty in connection with this investigation: Anthony Ghio, John Vanzetti, Theodore Hutz, Richard Northcutt, Yama Marifat and Gregory Jackson.

For the story, see Guilty plea in San Joaquin real estate fraud case.

Recent Foreclosure Fraud Mess At Florida AG's Office Gets Messier

The Florida Times Union reports:
  • An assistant attorney general in the Tampa Economic Crimes Division has resigned the day after he wrote a 16-page memo criticizing the department. Andrew Bennett Spark said he didn't want to comment any further, but did acknowledge that he resigned on Wednesday.


  • Tuesday, he sent a memo to the state's media outlining a handful of complaints of the Economic Crimes Division. He said that an investigation into what he considered false advertising by a car dealer was cut short because the car dealer's attorney, Robert Shimberg, was on Attorney General Pam Bondi's transition team. The department would not open an investigation into a fitness chain, he said, because it was also represented by Shimberg.


  • Spark also complained that the department made it more difficult for him to investigate ProVest, a process server that has been the subject of a number of complaints in connection to foreclosures. Spark said he inherited the ProVest case when June Clarkson and Theresa Edwards were fired as the attorney general's lead investigators into foreclosure fraud.

***

  • [According to a statement from Florida AG Pam Bondi,] "Yesterday, we attempted to place Spark on administrative leave while the inspector general investigated the public dissemination of information on active investigations; however, before we could do so, he resigned."

For more, see Assistant attorney general resigns after blasting Tampa department.

See also, The Palm Beach Post: Assistant attorney general resigns after memo blasting Florida AG's office.

Minn. Regulator: Loan Mod Racket Clipped Dozens Out Of $360K In Upfront Fees, Then Stiffed Them Out Of Refunds For Promised But Undelivered Services

From the Minnesota Department of Commerce:
  • The Minnesota Department of Commerce has charged Eden Prairie-based Modify My Loan US, LLC, its owners and principals with allegedly defrauding approximately 200 homeowners, mostly from Minnesota, charging them a collective $362,203 in advance fees.


  • The company, which began operations in Minnesota without a license, also allegedly used false advertising, failed to disclose to customers its precarious financial condition, charged customers fees for loan modification services which were ultimately not provided, and failed to make promised refunds.


  • According to the department, Modify My Loan US, LLC (MML) charged many Minnesota consumers advance fees ranging from $2,000 to $2,950 for loan modification services, even though the company's contracts with those customers promised no such fees would be charged. Roughly 200 homeowners paid a collective $362,203 in fees.

For the Minnesota Department of Commerce press release, see Commerce Charges Loan Modification Firm with Scamming 200 Homeowners Out of $362,000.

Sunday, August 14, 2011

Fair Housing Group Effectively Employs Use Of 'Testers' In Undercover Loan Modification Scam Project

A recent report from the National Fair Housing Alliance reports the results of a recent investigation conducted(1) into the tactics of upfront fee loan modification scam artists. The evidence gathered by this project documents, obtained through the use of "testers" who contacted the loan modification rackets inquiring of the services offered, details the devious practices that appear to be common to many mortgage scammers.

For the report, see Have I Got a Deal for You! An Undercover Investigation of Mortgage Loan Modification Scams.

(1) The investigation was a joint project of the:

NYC Non-Profit Law Firm Recognized In Local Battle Against 'Sewer Service,' Sleazy Process Servers

From the New York City-based non-profit law firm MFY Legal Services:
  • Clearinghouse Review: Journal of Poverty Law & Policy’s recent article, Public Interest Lawyers Are Key in Passage of Landmark Legislation to Stem “Sewer Service” in New York City shows how MFY’s groundbreaking report, “Justice Disserved,” was a critical step in raising awareness of the extent and disastrous consequences of “sewer service.”

For more, see Public Interest Lawyers Are Key in Passage of Landmark Legislation to Stem “Sewer Service” in New York City.

For the MFY Legal Services press release, see MFY’s Battle Against “Sewer Service”.

Criminal, Civil Charges Brought In Vacant Home Hijacking Scam; NC AG: Phony Deeds, Bogus Liens "Filled With Gibberish ... A Fraud On The Whole System"

In Raleigh, North Carolina, WRAL-TV reports:
  • The state Attorney General’s office is investigating a Wake County property deed scam ring(1) after authorities arrested a Raleigh man Tuesday who they say squatted at a foreclosed home [...] for more than a month. Shawn Adrian Pendergraft, 39, [...] faces breaking and entering, obtaining property by false pretenses and second-degree trespassing charges. He is being held in the Wake County jail under a $170,000 bond.


  • No one else has been charged, but Attorney General Roy Cooper says Pendergraft and five others(2) filed fraudulent paperwork to transfer foreclosed homes into their names and then set up bogus land trusts to place more than $1 million in property liens on the homes.


  • It’s a very bizarre occurrence,” Cooper said. “These people go in and file bogus liens on properties. They file bogus deeds to themselves.”


  • The liens, Cooper said in a news release, were “filled with phony legal language lifted from the Internet and designed to intimidate the true property owners and potential buyers into thinking that the property couldn’t be sold without paying the phony lien.”

For more, see One charged, five investigated in Wake County squatting scheme.

For the North Carolina AG press release, see AG unravels bogus property deed scam in Wake County (Scammers used fraudulent deeds, liens to try to claim foreclosed homes):

  • Pretending that you can own a home just by filing phony paperwork filled with gibberish is an insult to honest homeowners and a fraud on the whole system,” Cooper said.

(1) In addition to the criminal charges, the North Carolina AG has filed a civil lawsuit against this racket. See State of North Carolina v. Pendergraft, et al.:

(2) According to the story, at Cooper’s request, Wake County Superior Court Judge Henry W. Hight Jr. granted a temporary restraining order against the following allegedly phony land trusts:

  • Natural International Land Trust, ONCE International Land Trust and Nu Vision International Trust,

and the individuals believed to be behind them:

  • Shawn Adrian Pendergraft, Nathaniel John Church, Don Cornelius McCullers, Malandie Terrell Winston, Montreal Lee White and Lawrence Christopher White.

Fannie Mae To Banksters: OK To Continue Screwing Over Homeowners With Controversial 'Dual-Tracking' Loan Modification Racket

The South Florida Sun Sentinel reports:
  • Many South Florida homeowners facing foreclosure may believe getting a preliminary loan modification offer from their lender will save them from losing their home. But, in fact, new rules approved by Fannie Mae allow lenders to continue foreclosure proceedings on those who haven't made a mortgage payment in more than 120 days.


  • Those homeowners are safe only when they go back to regularly paying their mortgage, which typically happens only after a permanent loan modification is in place.


  • In June, Fannie Mae, which backs many mortgages in South Florida and across the country, ordered lenders not to start foreclosures on homeowners who are less than 120 days behind. Instead, lenders must offer loan modifications or other solutions.


  • But that's not the case for those who are at least four months behind in their payments. Lenders can continue with the controversial "dual tracking" for them, so struggling owners can be paying in a trial modification program while going to court to fend off foreclosure.

For more, see Under new rules, loan modification won't protect you from foreclosure.

Suspect Gets 24 To 102 Months In Mtg Payment Hijacking Scam; Sent Letters To Borrowers Falsely Advising That His Outfit Obtained Loan Servicing Rights

From the Office of the Nevada Attorney General:
  • The Office of the Nevada Attorney General announced [] that a local man was sentenced to prison in connection with a mortgage scam involving Nevada homeowners. Judge Linda Bell sentenced Joseph Lawrence Yorkus, age 50, to a maximum of 102 months with a minimum of 24 months in the Nevada State Prison and ordered him to pay restitution to the victims in the amount of $346,155.15 for schemes relating to mortgage fraud, mortgage rescue fraud, credit repair and collection enterprises.


  • "Mr. Yorkus took advantage local homeowners who were already struggling to make their monthly mortgage payments," said Attorney General Catherine Cortez Masto. "He stole those payments and placed these homeowners in peril of losing their homes."


  • Yorkus created several businesses including Great Western Business Services, Sundance Consulting, BAC Collections, Learn Your Rights and Fresh Start Consulting and used them to obtain money from unsuspecting homeowners, placing them in jeopardy of losing their residences.


  • He pled guilty to one count of Mortgage Fraud for his part in sending correspondence to local homeowners advising them that their mortgages, which were legally held by Bank of America, had been transferred to his company, Great Western, and advised them that future mortgage payments should be made to Great Western.

For the Nevada AG press release, see Local Man Sentenced In Connection With Mortgage Scam.

Saturday, August 13, 2011

Florida Lawmakers Look To Jam Revolving Door Between State AG Office & Outfits Under Investigation

In Tallahassee, Florida, Sunshine State News reports:
  • A trio of Democratic state lawmakers say they'll file legislation to prevent lawyers who leave the attorney general's office or certain other agencies from going to work for a company that had been under investigation while they were there.


  • The move is in response to one former lawyer in the attorney general's office having done that, but there are at least two other lawyers who worked for the office who also worked for some of the foreclosure-related law firms and services companies that have been under investigation by the state.

***

  • In May, Joe Jacquot, who had worked on McCollum's leadership team, left the AG's office, now headed by new Attorney General Pam Bondi, and went to work for Lender Processing Services as a vice president of government affairs.


  • The bill was written primarily because of press reports about Jacquot, but he isn't the only lawyer who has made such a move.


  • In June, Mary Leontakianakos, who had headed up the economic crimes division under McCollum that oversaw the mortgage probe and left in January with the change in administrations, took a job with Marshall Watson. Leontakianakos, who had worked in the AG's office since 1992, had even been quoted in news reports when McCollum's office announced it was going after Marshall Watson.


  • And back in April, Bondi fired an assistant attorney general named Erin Cullaro, who also worked in the economic crimes unit and had previously worked for another of the firms the office investigated, Florida Default Law Group.

***

  • Jacquot didn't respond to a request for comment, nor did LPS. The mortgage news site HousingWire reported recently that Jacquot had recused himself last year from the LPS investigation, though it's not clear why.

For more, see Bill Aims to Close Revolving Door Between AG, Probed Companies.

Law Student's Winning Argument Marks Another Big Foreclosure Win In Bay State High Court For Harvard Legal Clinics

From Harvard Law School:
  • In the latest victory for the HLS Clinical Programs’ anti-foreclosure work, the Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court ruled on Aug. 4 against lenders in a case argued by Harvard Legal Aid Bureau student Jennifer Tarr ’11.


  • In a 6-0 ruling, the state’s high court agreed with Tarr that lenders trying to evict someone after foreclosure carry the burden of proving the foreclosure was valid. It also held that the state housing court has jurisdiction to hear a challenge to an already-completed foreclosure when the challenge is brought in an eviction case. (See stories in the Boston Globe and Bloomberg.com.)


  • The SJC's decision represents a huge victory for the Bureau and housing advocates throughout Massachusetts,” said David Williams ’12, president of the Harvard Legal Aid Bureau (HLAB), which for several years has been aggressively fighting foreclosures in Boston through its Foreclosure Task Force and Project No One Leaves.(1)Because of Jen's successful advocacy, the Foreclosure Task Force will be able to continue the fight against foreclosures in Boston Housing Court."

***

  • The case has implications for anyone in Massachusetts living in a home that has been foreclosed on, [HLAB deputy director Esme] Caramello said. “It clarifies that those people can have their story heard before the housing court or whatever court is hearing the eviction case, and they can’t be evicted unless the bank can prove a valid foreclosure,” she said.

***

  • The Bailey case builds on another major win by the HLS clinics in the SJC last January, when the high court found that Wells Fargo and US Bancorp had wrongly foreclosed on two homes because the banks could not prove that they owned the mortgages at the time of the foreclosure sales.(2) Max Weinstein, a clinical instructor in the predatory lending practice at the HLS Wilmer Hale Legal Services Center, was co-counsel in the case, representing one of the mortgagers, Antonio Ibanez. The court’s decision received national attention.

For the story, see HLAB Wins Major Victory for Homeowners in Massachusetts High Court.

(1) See ‘Project No One Leaves’ keeps people in their homes:

  • [H]arvard Law students are racking up numerous victories, including the almost-unprecedented result of getting banks to reduce the principal amount on mortgages.
  • Students have also negotiated a string of five-figure and higher settlements against banks that don’t keep properties in good condition for tenants who live there, and in 2008, two students won a $54,000 jury verdict against the Bank of New York for turning off heat and water in a tenant’s home to try to force him out.

(2) See:

R/E Brokers Lose Licenses Over Allegations Of Encouraging Clients To Stiff Lenders Out Of House Payments, Listing Homes At Artificially Low Prices

In Pierce County, Washington, Real Estate Today reports:
  • A well-known Pierce County husband and wife team specializing in short sales has been barred from practicing real estate for 10 years by the Washington Department of Licensing (DOL) for multiple violations of the state's licensing code.


  • Bonny Lake broker Michael Hellickson, his wife Tara Hellickson, also a broker, and their brokerage, Hellickson.com Inc., were scrutinized after the state received more than two dozen complaints about their practices. Their licenses were suspended in September 2010, then reinstated in October pending a hearing.

***

  • Among the charges brought against the Hellicksons were listing homes at artificially reduced prices; misrepresenting and advertising that the Hellicksons were the No. 1 agent in Washington, Oregon and Hawaii and would purchase a home listed with them if it had not sold in 30 days, and encouraging clients to stop making payments on their home loans.

For more, see State yanks license of 'Northwest's No.1 real estate agent'.

Feds' Lawsuit: 'Georgia Attorney's Screw-Up In Prepping Mortgage Document Left Us Holding The Bag On Unenforceable $2.8M Loan'

In Fulton County, Georgia, the ABA Journal reports:
  • A Georgia law firm and one of its partners has been sued for malpractice by the Federal Deposit Insurance Corp. over a bad $2.8 million loan.


  • Because a security deed prepared by Jampol, Schleicher, Jacobs & Papadakis for a 2005 loan closing to an investment company was defective, the FDIC has been unable to foreclose on collateral for the loan, it alleges in a lawsuit filed in federal court in Atlanta, the Fulton County Daily Report reports.


  • The suit contends that the deed incorrectly lists the corporate owner of property used as security for the loan and omitted one of the lots to be used as security from a legal description.

Source: FDIC Sues Law Firm, Says Security Deed Errors in $2.8M Loan Closing Bar Foreclosure.

For the Fulton County Daily Report story, see FDIC Targets Lawyer in Bad Loan Suit.

Court To Housing Authority: Tenant's Monthly Section 8 Subsidy To Rent-Skimming Landlord To Be Paid Directly To HOA Until Unpaid Dues Are Fully Paid

In West Palm Beach, Florida, The Palm Beach Post reports:
  • A Palm Beach County homeowner renting to Section 8 tenants will lose the federal housing supplement after a court ruled the money should be used to pay his delinquent HOA fees.


  • Circuit Court Judge John Hoy ordered the West Palm Beach Housing Authority on July 19 to divert future rent payments from the owner of the suburban Lake Worth home to the Willoughby Estates Homeowners' Association, Inc., until late dues and legal fees are paid. Attorneys for the association say the ruling gives guidance for future cases on how federal housing money should be used to settle homeowner debt.


  • "State statute doesn't specifically address how the (U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development) should handle this kind of situation," said attorney Michael Bender, whose Pompano Beach-based firm Kaye & Bender represents the association. "Hopefully this will assist the housing authority in going forward and they will no longer challenge these cases." A message left at the housing authority was not returned.


  • A new Florida law allows homeowner associations to collect rent directly from tenants who are living in homes where the owner is not paying dues. The law also allows associations to evict those tenants.

For the story, see Judge says Section 8 funds should pay off HOA dues rather than go to delinquent owner of West Palm Beach home.

Interest, Activity Ramps Up For Investors Buying Deeds To Underwater Homes For Small Cash Outlays

In St. Petersburg, Florida, ABC News reports:
  • At the Hillsborough County, Fla., courthouse bidders line up twice a day to buy distressed properties, including homeowner association foreclosures. HOAs foreclose on homes after the owner fails to pay association fees.


  • The HOA foreclosures are attracting investors who often take temporary ownership of the property and rent it out until the bank gets around to foreclosing on its mortgage. One group of investors has purchased 71 properties valued at $8.2 million for $220,000, according to the St. Petersburg Times. The group's big purchase this year: A four-bedroom bay-front home in Apollo Beach, Fla., valued at nearly $1.2 million sold for $10,010 to FYM Inc.

***

  • Investors purchase the deed or title to the property and are able to rent the property until the lender forecloses, which can take up to two to three years. In the meantime, investors are able to recoup the price paid to the HOA and make a profit, sometimes in a matter of months. The story was first reported in the St. Petersburg Times.(1)

For more, see Investors Purchase $1.2 Million Home for $10K.

(1) Some real estate brokerages have also begun offering their own "Cash For Keys" programs in search of underwater homeowners willing to sign over the deed to their homes and give the buyer immediate possession in exchange for a couple of thousand bucks. See e.g. CASH FOR KEYS OF YOUR HOME - Even if you Owe More Than It’s Worth!:

  • "Why let your property go to foreclosure auction and have the bank take possession of your property? With our Cash for Keys program you will get paid to sell your property to a buyer who will work with the bank and lien holders to settle via cash payment(s), all debts related to the home."

Mobile Home Residents Face Homelessness As New Buyer Of Park In Foreclosure Wants Everyone Out

In Niagara Falls, New York, WIVB-TV Channel 4 reports:
  • A local mobile home park in Niagara Falls has been sold and residents are left with a lot of questions that aren't being answered. It's one of the downsides of owning a home in a mobile home park. You put your life into living there, but if the park owner decides to use the property for something else, you, in effect, could become homeless.


  • Homeowners at Sabre Park are furious. They have spent thousands of dollars on their mobile homes, kept them up, made improvements, and now, they're finding out the park owner is selling the place and interested buyers want the trailers out.

***

  • Many of the homeowners found notices taped to their doors, purportedly from an attorney for the Sabre Park's owner, saying the new owners will pay $25,000 for the entire park and assume their $6 million mortgage. The park is apparently in foreclosure and a management firm has been hired by a court-assigned receiver to run things. Kathleen Graham said, "Everybody's going to be homeless."


  • A chilling thought for Joyce and Jim O'Donnell, who have lived in their double wide for more than 25 years. Joyce said, "We just don't know where we're going to go at our age, you know? We'd hate to give up this; we put our money in this. Where do we go?" "We can't sell it. Nobody's going to buy it because they're going to have to take it out of here. It'd cost us a small fortune to move one of these double-wides," said Jim.


  • The O'Donnells are not alone. Many of the residents wanted these to be their retirement homes.

For more, see Mobile home residents booted from park.

Scam Suspect Faces Bail Bond Revocation As Home Securing His Freedom Faces Foreclosure

In Pinellas County, Florida, News Channel 8 reports:
  • Pinellas County prosecutors say when Jeffrey Maricle ran a company called Global Funding LLC, he stole a fortune from more than 50 independent truckers across the nation in an equipment-leasing scheme that turned sour three years ago. Now, because of his own failing finances, Maricle could lose his freedom while awaiting trial.


  • Maricle's attorney says the home Maricle used as collateral for his jail bond is in foreclosure. If he loses the home, the bondsman could revoke his bail. "It depends on the bonding agency," said John McGuire who represents Maricle in his ongoing criminal case.

For more, see Suspect in equipment scheme could be jailed before trial.

Court Grants Some Relief For Deceased Left In Limbo By Complications Arising From Revoked Operator's License For Cemetary In Foreclosure

In Calvert County, Maryland, NBC Washington reports:
  • Some families waiting to put loved ones to rest at a Calvert County, Md., cemetery facing foreclosure can finally move forward. Southern Memorial Gardens in Dunkirk had its license revoked by the state after legal problems with the cemetery’s former owner.


  • A Calvert County judge ruled on Wednesday that those who pre-paid for a plot can proceed with burial plans, News4's Melissa Mollet reported. However, the complication for families is far from over. The cemetery is not allowed to help with the burial process in any way, and those who were not able to pre-pay for arrangements are left trying to figure out how to proceed with their loved ones’ remains.


  • Criminal charges were brought against the current owner and manager for trying to help families with burials before the license situation could be resolved. Southern Memorial Gardens is still working to resolve the foreclosure issue. The cemetery is scheduled for auction at the end of the month.

Source: Foreclosed Cemetery Ruling Gives Relief to Some Maryland Families (Burials approved for those who had pre-paid for services).

In a related story, see WUSA-TV Channel 9: Woman Dead For 33 Days Still Not Buried Due To Cemetery Controversy.