Tuesday, March 19, 2013

HOA's Use Of Gate Access Restrictions As Debt Collection Tool To Squeeze Unpaid Maintenance Fees From Non-Paying Homeowners

In Lake Mary, Florida, the Orlando Sentinel reports:
  • A standoff of sorts has occurred at the gates of one of the region's most prestigious country clubs.

    Alaqua resident David Acosta owes as much as $100,000, possibly a record for the Orlando area, in homeowner-association fees. The exclusive Seminole County community has responded by trying to limit others' access to his home and by forcing Acosta to stop and get permission each time before passing through the subdivision's entrance gate.

    The fight over those pending restrictions has gone to court, where Acosta has been representing himself against lawyers for the association.
***
  • Gate restrictions are a debt-collection tool advocated by Winter Garden lawyer James Gustino, who represents not only Alaqua's homeowner association but also those for Stoneybrook East, Stoneybrook West and Lake Butler Sound. The gate-access question pending before Circuit Judge Marlene Alva in Acosta's case could determine whether such communities can restrict homeowners' use of common areas.

    "Anyone who is a full-time member of the family can get access, but not guests," Gustino said recently. "It's not that draconian in that sense. When you enter into a purchase contract, subject to covenants, conditions and deed restrictions, you enter into a contract with everyone else in the community, and their fortunes are impacted based on whether you comply."

Published Faulty Information By Online Real Estate Websites Causes Headaches For Some Homeowners

In Chicago, Illinois, WMAQ-TV Channel 5 reports:
  • For a homeowner who says she has never missed a mortgage payment, the word "foreclosure” listed next to her Sycamore home shocked Kristin Miller.

    Miller said she recently found the false foreclosure listing on Zillow, the wildly popular website where consumers turn for information on home values, price histories and foreclosures. "We were very worried when we saw it," she said. "The first thing my husband said is we better run our credit to make sure it has not been affected."

    Her concern isn't unique. Online forums offer dozens of angry homeowners complaining about false foreclosure listings on the site.

    "My jaw totally dropped," said Cassandra Jo Terry.

    The North Carolina woman said she has lived trouble-free in her house for decades and was stunned to see the "F" word next to her listing. "It is not in foreclosure at this time nor has it ever been at the point of foreclosure," she said.

    How does it happen? Zillow gets its information from public records, and public records are notoriously inaccurate. That much explains why the company's home value estimates are sometimes way off. But how does something as specific -- and potentially damaging -- as a foreclosure get into the system?

    Zillow refused to name its sources, the companies it hires to aggregate data. That makes a frustrating mistake even harder for homeowners to disprove.

    "That's when you start running into problems because you don't know where the data is actually coming from because it's an aggregation of different sources," explained Matt Farrell, the President-elect of the Chicago Association of Realtors.

    And agents, often at odds with online services, say bad data is becoming an everyday headache.
For more, see Homeowners: Real Estate Site Lists False Foreclosures (Experts say it's unlikely homeowners who find a "false foreclosure" on any online website will see negative ramifications to their credit record).

Kentucky Housing Advocates: Inflated Fee Rackets Associated With Tax Lien Investing That Put Financial Squeeze On Homeowners May Now Be Easier To Pull Off

In Louisville, Kentucky, the Courier-Journal reports:
  • A low-profile bill that sailed through the 2013 Kentucky General Assembly would make it easier for investors who buy property tax liens to charge homeowners up to $2,000 in legal fees, some Louisville advocates say.

    Under state law, tax lien investors are entitled to recoup interest from homeowners when they settle delinquent property taxes on the homeowner’s behalf. (American Tax Funding, Tax Ease and Nebraska Alliance Realty are examples lien buyers who have operated in Louisville).

    Lien buyers can also bill the homeowner for “reasonable” attorney’s fees incurred while preparing a foreclosure or protecting their interest in the property.

    Between the interest, late fees and the attorney’s fees, an unpaid property tax bill can double or triple in a year or two, making it very expensive for homeowners to remove a tax lien from their property.

    SB 27 appears to set “reasonable” attorney fees at $2,000. If tax lienholders want to charge more, they’d have to get approval from a court.

    Anne Marie Regan, an attorney with the Kentucky Equal Justice Center, said the bill encourages lienholders to charge $2,000 in legal fees as a matter of course.

    Cathy Hinko, executive director of the Metropolitan Housing Coalition, said $2,000 is too high “without support for the actual work done.”

    The bill does say fees should be ”based upon documented work performed at a rate commensurate with hourly rates customarily charged by private attorneys in that jurisdiction for similar services.”

    Sen. Tom Buford, the Nicholasville Republican who sponsored the bill, was not in his Frankfort office Thursday, and the line at his home was busy.

    Gov. Steve Beshear is “reviewing” whether to sign the bill, spokeswoman Kerri Richardson said.

Monday, March 18, 2013

Despite Jury's Actual Damage Award Of $0, Booted WV Homeowner Walks Away With $32K In Inflation-Adjusted Civil Penalties, $30K In Attorney Fees Anyway In Connection With Foreclosing Lender's Unlawful Debt Collection Practices

From Justia.com US Law:
  • In 1996, Terri Cole and her husband financed the purchase of a home through a loan secured by a deed of trust on the home and the underlying property.

    In 2005, Vanderbilt Mortgage and Finance, Inc. became the servicer of the loan. Code defaulted on her loan in 2010. Vanderbilt foreclosed and purchased the home and real property at a trustee's sale.

    Thereafter, Cole refused to vacate the home. Vanderbilt filed an unlawful detainer action. Cole counterclaimed, alleging that Vanderbilt had violated the West Virginia Consumer Credit and Protection Act (WVCCPA).

    Regarding the unlawful detainer claim, the circuit court found in favor of Vanderbilt.

    As to the remaining issues, the jury found Vanderbilt engaged in several violations of the WVCCPA.

    The circuit court subsequently awarded civil penalties to Cole totaling $32,125,(1) and, some weeks later, granted Cole's motion for attorney fees and costs.(2)

    The Supreme Court affirmed the circuit court's civil penalties order and award of attorney fees, holding that the circuit court did not commit error with regard to either the civil penalties order or the attorney fees order.(3)
Source: Opinion Summary - Vanderbilt Mortgage and Finance, Inc. v. Cole.

For the ruling, see Vanderbilt Mortgage and Finance, Inc. v. Cole, Nos. 11-1288, 11-1604 (WV. March 8, 2013).

(1) After a trial, the jury reached a unanimous verdict that the foreclosing lender engaged in 13 acts of unlawful debt collection, and awarded the foreclosed homeowner a total of $0 in actual damages.

Despite the lack of actual damages, the West Virginia high court agreed with the trial judge that the West Virginia Consumer Credit and Protection Act (WVCCPA) nevertheless allows for a discretionary award of civil penalties to the homeowner in addition to, and apart from, an award of actual damages, if any. The $32,125.24 award in civil penalties to the homeowner ("Ms. Cole") broke down as follows:
  • One civil penalty at $4,583.45 for failure to provide a statement of account upon written request.
  • Ten civil penalties at $2,250.00 for each penalty, totaling $22,500, regarding the placement of repeated and unsolicited calls to Ms. Cole's mother and third parties despite specific requests to cease.
  • One civil penalty at $458.34 for the use of language intended to unreasonably abuse the hearer.
  • One civil penalty at $4,583.45 for unreasonable publication of indebtedness to a third party.
The court noted that WVCCPA (§ 46A-5-101(1)) only allows for a civil penalty of no more than one thousand dollars for each violation. However, the court also noted that "[a]ny civil penalty enforced against them may be adjusted for inflation pursuant to W. Va. Code § 46A-5-106 (1994)" to account for inflation from the time the WVCCPA became operative - 12:01 am on September 1, 1974.

By the way, and unlike a case involving an award of punitive damages, an award of civil penalties in a civil case where no actual damages were awarded is permitted and not unusual, as the West Virginia Supreme Court observed:
  • We are by no means the first jurisdiction to allow an award of civil penalties in the absence of an award of actual damages.

    A number of courts, including the United States Supreme Court, have awarded civil penalties without awarding actual damages.

    See, e.g., F. W. Woolworth Co. v. Contemporary Arts, Inc., 344 U.S. 228, 233 (1952) ("Even for uninjurious and unprofitable invasions of copyright the court may, if it deems just, impose a liability within statutory limits to sanction and vindicate the statutory policy."); St. Louis, Iron Mountain & S. Ry. Co. v. Williams, 251 U.S. 63, 66 (1919) ("Nor does giving the penalty to the aggrieved passenger require that it be confined or proportioned to his loss or damages . . . as it is imposed as a punishment for the violation of a public law . . . ."); Baker v. G. C. Servs. Corp., 677 F.2d 775, 781 (9th Cir. 1982) (concluding that under the FDCPA, "statutory damages are available without proof of actual damages"); Knoll v. Allied Interstate, Inc., 502 F. Supp. 2d 943 (D. Minn. 2007) (finding that the FDCPA is a remedial, strict liability statute, and thus, the debtor was not required to prove deception or actual damages to recover); McCammon v. Bibler, Newman & Reynolds, P.A., 493 F. Supp. 2d 1166 (D. Kan. 2007) (finding that actual damages are not required for standing under FDCPA because the FDCPA permits recovery of statutory damages in absence of actual damages); In re Hobbs, No. 10-42736 (Bkrtcy. E.D. Tex. filed 2012) ("[I]n light of the statutory damage provision, the Plaintiff need not show actual damages in order to recover under [the Code]."); DirectTV, Inc. v. Cantu, No. SA-04-CV-136-RF, 2004 WL 2623932, at *4 (W.D. Tex. Sept. 29, 2004) ("The law has held for many years that statutes may provide for damages even where a plaintiff cannot prove actual damages.").
(2) As to the amount of attorneys fees awarded by the trial court (foreclosing lender to be stuck with the tab), the West Virginia high court stated:
  • The court awarded $30,000 of the $48,852.00 requested in attorney fees to Ms. Cole pursuant to W. Va. Code §46A-5-104,[6] reasoning that, upon analyzing the facts pursuant to case law, Ms. Cole deserved attorney fees, but that the award should be limited "due to the mixed degree of success that was achieved."
The homeowner, Ms. Cole, was successful in 13 out of a total of 57 claims she made in her lawsuit against the foreclosing lender.

(3) Representing the homeowner was Sara Bird, Esq., with Mountain State Justice, Inc., a non-profit public interest law office dedicated to pursuing litigation focusing primarily on combating predatory lending and abusive debt collection techniques on behalf of low-income West Virginians, and which provides free legal services in its areas of practice to qualifying individuals.

Rent Skimming By Real Estate Investors Buying HOA-Lien Foreclosed Homes May Lead To Unneeded Stress, Uncertainty For Unwitting Tenants

In West Palm Beach, Florida, The Palm Beach Post reports:
  • Cunning South Florida real estate investors are buying titles to homes on the cheap through community association foreclosures then renting them out until the bank catches up.

    It’s the latest tactic aimed at capitalizing on South Florida’s quagmire of vacant and foreclosed homes.

    And since banks — the primary lien holder on the homes — sometimes take years to foreclose, the strategy could offer the investor a hefty return. Homeowner association foreclosures are usually based on unpaid dues, with judgments far less than what is owed on the mortgage. A savvy investor can pick up a home for a few thousand dollars from an association foreclosure auction and make that money back in several months’ worth of rent.

    But while the method pays starving homeowners associations their back dues and puts money in the investor’s pocket, unwitting tenants may get a surprise when a lender comes calling to repossess the home.

    That’s what Daniel Torres said happened to his elderly parents after renting a home in the Covered Bridge community west of Lake Worth.

    It was bought for $10,800 in April by a West Palm Beach-based firm after the community association foreclosed on it for unpaid dues. The unit in the quiet neighborhood was not yet in bank foreclosure, although the previous owner had died two years earlier and the last mortgage payment was made in October 2010, according to court records.

    The Torreses moved into the home in August. Chase filed foreclosure papers in November against the heirs to the previous owner’s estate. A property management company was soon knocking on the Torres’ door saying they needed to leave because the house was in foreclosure and the locks were being changed.

    “It scared me,” said Tony Torres, 75. “I love it here. It’s peaceful, and there are a lot of nice people.”

    Dennis Sickle, principal of the home’s title owner, Milan Investments Inc., said the company does not tell tenants the property was purchased subject to a bank mortgage because they are shielded from a bank eviction by the federal Protecting Tenants at Foreclosure Act of 2009. The act says the bank must honor the terms of a lease unless the property is sold to someone who will occupy it as a primary residence. In that case, they must be given a 90-day notice to leave.
***
  • Attorneys who specialize in real estate law say the method of buying title to homes out of a community association foreclosure and renting them out until a bank takes final possession is both a legal and sound business model that can turn a profit.(1)
***
  • Sickle’s company picked up its buying pace in April and now holds title to about 20 Palm Beach County properties, according to the property appraiser.(2)
***
  • In the Torres case, the association didn’t get paid and put a lien on the home in November for $2,924. The Torreses soon got a letter, which they showed to The Post, demanding they send their rent checks directly to the association or face a termination of their rental agreement. The move, which bypasses the landlord, is something allowed in law.

    They don’t need this kind of stress and uncertainty,” said the couple’s son, Daniel Torres, who is involved in a separate fight with the landlord to let his mother keep her Chihuahua.

    Daniel Torres said he feels he should have been told the home was purchased subject to a bank mortgage. He found the condominium on Craigslist and dealt with Realtor Adriann Dorbuck, who represented him in the transaction. Dorbuck said she didn’t know that it was an association foreclosure purchase either.

    “I was in total shock,” she said. “How could it not be disclosed to us?”
For the story, see Renters, be aware: Foreclosure maneuver affects you.

(1) Depending on how a semi-creative criminal prosecutor interprets and applies state law, engaging in rent skimming (also known as equity skimming) two or more times within a 3-year period might constitute a third-degree felony in Florida. See Section 697.08, Florida Statutes:
  • 697.08 Equity skimming.—

     (1) It is unlawful for any person, with intent to defraud the owner of real property, to engage in equity skimming, which is, to:

    (a) Purchase, within a 3-year period, two or more single-family dwellings, two-family dwellings, three-family dwellings, or four-family dwellings, or a combination thereof, that are subject to a loan that is in default at the time of purchase or within 1 year after the time of purchase, which loan is secured by a mortgage or deed of trust;

    (b) Fail to make payments under the mortgage or deed of trust as the payments become due, regardless of whether the purchaser is obligated on the loan; and

    (c) Apply, or authorize the application of, rents from such dwellings for the person’s own use.

    (2) A violation of subsection (1) constitutes a felony of the third degree, punishable as provided in s. 775.082, s. 775.083, or s. 775.084.
Rent/equity skimming may also be illegal in other jurisdictions. See People v. Phelps, 837 P.2d 755 (Colo. 1992), quoting with approval from United States v. Capano, 786 F.2d 122 (3d Cir.1986):
  • "Equity skimming is the practice of diverting revenues generated by mortgaged property in default to purposes other than property maintenance or mortgage payments."
(2) Ibid.

Real Estate Agent Cops Plea To Fraudulently Scoring $17M+ In Refinance Proceeds Out From Under 50+ Unwitting Land Trust Beneficiaries

In Fort Myers, Florida, WBBH-TV Channel 2 reports:
  • A stunning admission of guilt [] from a well-known real estate agent in Cape Coral.

    Greg Eagle admitted to duping dozens of people by mortgaging property without telling the beneficiaries. Federal agents say his actions are a part of an alarming trend in Southwest Florida. So common, this year, they've opened a new Federal Reserve inspector general office in Fort Myers to tackle criminals like this.

    When Sharon Bauer's mother passed away she was left with this inheritance – two percent of a land trust in Cape Coral. I know my mother trusted the whole thing. She did," said Bauer.

    In 1991, two percent of the land trust on Pine Island Road cost $82,000. In 2006, an appraisal estimated it at $600,000. "Plans were to build a huge mall out here and make that the hub of Cape Coral," explained Bauer.

    But now, the money is gone. The investor, Gregory Eagle admitted he mortgaged 101 acres of land behind the back of 52 interest holders, including Bauer's mother. Thursday, the 62-year-old pleaded guilty in federal court to fraud charges.

    "I was sick to my stomach. I was angry. Then I got depressed," said Bauer.

    Federal agents tell us investor fraud is on the rise at an alarming rate in Southwest Florida. The economic downturn in 2008 spurred it on. The Lee County Sheriff's Office couldn't give us an exact number of complaints, but says the numbers go up each year.

    "I think we just have the correct population. It's a very large population. A lot of people are retired with a lot of money and that makes a breeding ground for fraud," said Nicole Waid, with the U.S. Attorney's Office.

    Eagle now faces 30 years in federal prison on each of the six counts. He is out on $100,000 bond. One of the conditions of his release is that he surrendered his passport. His sentence date has not been set yet.
Source: Cape real estate broker pleads guilty to fraud.

See also, U.S. Attorney (Fort Myers) press release: Fort Myers Man Pleads Guilty To Bank Fraud And Investor Fraud:
  • [E]agle [] executed a number of loan documents in which he falsely claimed he was the sole beneficiary and that he had authorization to mortgage the property. In the first mortgage loan in 2002, Eagle received $2 million from Florida Community Bank.

    He paid off that loan in 2006 with a mortgage loan from First National Bank of Pennsylvania. The 2006 loan was for an amount exceeding $17 million. Eagle used most of the proceeds of the second loan for his own personal use, mainly to fund other projects.

    Eagle defaulted on the First National Bank of Pennsylvania mortgage loan, causing the bank to initiate foreclosure proceedings in October 2009. The unpaid principal balance is $17.03 million.

    The beneficiaries to the Pine Island 101 Land Trust have not received compensation for their initial payments as interest holders, yearly mortgage, taxes, insurance, and administrative payments, nor for the increase in the value of the Trust property from the time the Trust was created in June 1990.

Sunday, March 17, 2013

Indiana Regulator Invokes State Securities Law In Civil Suit Tagging Real Estate Broker With Peddling Crappy Investments In Rental Property, Pocketing $10.7M From Elderly

In Indianapolis, Indiana, the Indianapolis Business Journal reports:
  • Three Carmel family members who sold $10.4 million in ownership interests in rental properties to elderly clients are accused by the Indiana Secretary of State’s Office of committing securities fraud.

    The office’s securities division this month filed suit in Hamilton Circuit Court against attorney Charles Blackwelder, his son Chad Blackwelder and his daughter Cara Grumme. The three own CFS Inc., which also is named in the suit.

    CFS, located in the Village of West Clay, is a licensed brokerage that has provided “real estate investment opportunities” since 1998, according to the company’s website.

    The court appointed a receiver Feb. 20 to oversee CFS investor assets and issued a preliminary injunction barring the trio from selling securities pending the outcome of the lawsuit. “The defendants’ actions show that they have and will continue to misappropriate investors’ funds,” the securities division argued in requesting the injunction.

    The division wants the three to pay restitution to investors and civil penalties of $10,000 for each part of the Indiana Securities Act they are found to have violated.

    According to the complaint, CFS did not register its securities offerings with the state, and Charles Blackwelder, who sold the securities, is not registered to sell them.

    Their attorney, Mark Barnes, refuted the allegations by arguing that real estate is not considered a security under the law. “There aren’t any securities present in this case,” he said. “What Chuck did was sell interest in real estate, and real estate isn’t a security.”

    Former Indiana securities commissioner Mark Maddox, an Indianapolis attorney who has represented investors in disputes against investment firms for more than two decades, disagreed.

    Lots of real estate investments turn out to be securities,” said Maddox, who is not involved in the case. He cited real estate limited partnerships and real estate investment trusts as examples.

    According to the lawsuit, CFS sold $10.4 million in ownership interests in rental properties to investors. The company’s portfolio contains 35 commercial and residential properties in the Indianapolis area valued at $7.1 million, the complaint says. It does not specify how much money investors have lost.

    That is screwing investors right out of the gate, to the tune of almost 50 percent, if I’m reading that correctly,” Maddox said.

    Some clients last year began receiving foreclosure notices on at least six properties while several other homes in CFS’s portfolio became overleveraged because the entire equity in the properties had already been sold to previous investors, the suit says.

DC Lawyer Cops Plea To $100K+ Client Ripoff; Resolved Lawsuits Without Telling Victims, Then Pocketed Settlement Proceeds

From the Office of the U.S. Attorney (District of Columbia):
  • Deairich R. Hunter, 47, an attorney from Washington, D.C., pled guilty [] to a federal charge stemming from his theft of $109,830 in payments from insurance companies that were intended to settle some of his clients’ disability and personal injury claims.
***
  • Hunter pled guilty to a charge of theft or embezzlement in connection with health care. He is to be sentenced April 26, 2013 by the Honorable Beryl A. Howell. The charge carries a maximum statutory sentence of 10 years in prison and a fine of up to $250,000. As part of his plea agreement, Hunter agreed to pay $109,830 in restitution to his clients and a medical provider whose bills were to be paid out of the settlement funds.
***
  • [Among other things,] Hunter generally agreed to notify these clients of any offers of settlement and to inform clients of significant developments, among other things. In some cases, he agreed to pay his clients’ health care expenses directly from the proceeds of the recovery in their cases.

    However, on a number of occasions, Hunter settled such claims without notifying his clients and without authority to do so and then the defendant stole the settlement proceeds, resulting in a total loss amount from this scheme of $109,830.
For the U.S. Attorney press release, see Lawyer Pleads Guilty to Stealing Money Intended For His Clients (Scheme Cost Victims More Than $100,000).

(1) The Clients' Security Fund of the District of Columbia Bar manages and distributes monies to members of the public who have sustained a financial loss caused by the dishonest conduct of a member of the DC Bar. It reimburses clients up to a limit of $75,000, according to its website.

For similar "attorney ripoff reimbursement funds" established to reimburse clients who have suffered a loss due to the dishonest conduct of attorneys in other states and Canada, see:

Now-Disbarred Bay State Lawyer Cops Plea To Pilfering $900K From Dead Clients; Used Some Proceeds From One Ripoff To Pay Victims Of Another

From the Office of the Massachusetts Attorney General:
  • A now-disbarred attorney has pleaded guilty in connection with stealing a total of nearly $900,000 dollars from an estate she represented, a beneficiary of that estate whose funds were in a trust she managed, and an elderly client, Attorney General Martha Coakley’s Office announced today.

    Maureen F. Pomeroy, age 46, of Bedford, pleaded guilty on Monday in Middlesex Superior Court to charges of Larceny over $250 from a Person 60 or Older (2 counts), Larceny over $250, and Embezzlement by Fiduciary. After the plea was entered, Middlesex Superior Court Judge Kimberly Budd scheduled a sentencing hearing for March 11, 2013.

    In May 2010, the AG’s Office began an investigation into Pomeroy’s activities after receiving a complaint from one of her former clients. During the time she practiced as an attorney, Pomeroy specialized in real estate and estate planning, and would routinely draft wills or other financial documents for her clients.

    According to authorities, one of Pomeroy’s clients was an 85-year-old man who had retained her services to prepare a will and other estate planning documents for him, and to assist him in obtaining funds from several bank accounts. Authorities allege that from July 2008 through October 2008, Pomeroy stole over $810,000 from this client. Pomeroy used these funds for her personal benefit and used some of the elderly client’s funds to repay two clients from whom she had earlier misappropriated money.

    According to authorities, Pomeroy defrauded the estate of a man and his son. In October 2007, Pomeroy attended a closing on the sale of the deceased man’s home under a power of attorney and concealed her receipt of over $32,000 of the sale proceeds.

    In addition, Pomeroy set up a trust for one of the deceased man’s adult sons. Pomeroy, who was trustee for the man, deposited amounts the man received into bank accounts she set up, but withdrew substantial sums (over and above her fees) from the account for her own benefit from January to June 2008.

    Pomeroy repaid the estate in September 2008, and also paid over $50,000 from her personal account on the deceased man’s son’s behalf in October 2008. In each instance she used funds belonging to the elderly client.(1)
For the Massachusetts AG press release, see Disbarred Attorney Pleads Guilty in Connection with Stealing Nearly $900,000 from Elderly Client, Estate, and Trust.

(1) The Massachusetts Clients' Security Board of the Supreme Judicial Court manages and distributes monies from the court's Clients' Security Fund to members of the public who have sustained a financial loss caused by the dishonest conduct of a member of the Massachusetts bar acting as an attorney or a fiduciary.

For similar "attorney ripoff reimbursement funds" established to reimburse clients who have suffered a loss due to the dishonest conduct of attorneys in other states and Canada, see:

Saturday, March 16, 2013

Pair Pinched In Alleged Attempt To Reclaim Home Lost In Foreclosure; Removed New Owner's Stuff From Premises After Breaking In, Changing Locks; Written Apology Saying They Believed Bank's Actions Were Unwarranted Led To Arrest

In Yavapai, Arizona, The Arizona Republic reports:
  • Two men were arrested [] on suspicion of theft, burglary and criminal damage after they are accused of attempting to reclaim a home just outside of Prescott and removing all of the legal owner’s property from the home, according to the Yavapai County Sheriff’s Office.

    Authorities said the men, identified as Brent Ten Pas, 57, and Steve Armstrong, 60, are suspected of putting up signs reading “Private Property/No Trespassing” around a home in the 300 block of Marapai Road in Gloom Creek, which were noticed by the legal homeowner on Feb. 15.

    The homeowner purchased the home from the bank in August 2012, furnished the home and was using it as a secondary residence, according to the Sheriff’s Office. The homeowner went to residence on Feb. 15 and found the signs.

    According to authorities, a note on the front door directed the homeowner to vacate the property immediately and warned that any remaining furniture would be placed in storage and further access would be considered trespassing. The note was signed with Ten Pas and Armstrong’s names, according to the Sheriff’s Office.

    The men had apparently boarded up the home, installed a security camera, changed the locks and placed the victim’s belongings in a Prescott Valley storage unit, authorities said.

    Sheriff’s Office deputies discovered that Ten Pas and Armstrong had been ordered to leave the home in February 2012, as it had been foreclosed upon by the bank, according to the Sheriff’s Office.

    On Feb. 21, the victim received a letter from the two men which included an apology and explained that they believed the foreclosure was unwarranted, stating that the victim “had just bought a stolen car,” authorities said.

    Deputies obtained warrants for Ten Pas and Armstrong on Feb. 28, at which point they were arrested.

Squatter Pinched For Allegedly Filing Land Documents To Title-Hijack Memphis Mansion; Invokes 'Sovereign Citizen' Status In Defense Against Criminal Charges; Held On $2M Bond

In Memphis, Tennessee, WPTY-TV Channel 24 reports:
  • After living the high life for about a week in a mansion that isn't hers, police arrested a squatter at the east Memphis estate overnight.

    Tabitha Gentry, 32, was arrested and charged with Aggravated Burglary, Criminal Trespassing and Theft of Property over $60,000.

    She claims to be a sovereign citizen of the Moorish National Movement, who believes the law does not apply to her. Gentry filed paperwork with the Shelby County Register of Deeds on February 25, claiming to seize the property on the 600-block of S Shady Grove "in the name of Allah, the Most High, Creator of the Heavens and Earth." The 10,000 square foot home is owned by Renesant Bank after going into foreclosure in August 2011.

    The bank posted a 24-hour eviction notice on March 5, which Gentry ignored. When confronted by ABC 24 just hours before her arrest, we asked what she planned to do if the police came to force her out. She simply replied, "I'll deal with them."

    Tabitha Gentry was booked at the Shelby County Jail at 2:45 a.m. on Friday, March 8. She is being held on a $2 million bond, [...]. The case is still under investigation. The Shelby County Sheriff's Public Information Officer, Chip Washington, stated additional suspects and charges are likely.

    This isn't Gentry's first tangle with the law. Last fall she was charged with Aggravated Assault for trying to run over a police officer during a traffic stop in south Memphis. At the time she provided police with a sovereign citizen identification card.

Out-Of-Town Homeowners End Up With 'Squatting' Problem When Dubious 'Nomad' Dupes Their Real Estate Agent Into Handing Over Keys To Unoccupied Residence & Moves In With Kids In Tow

In Boca Raton, Florida, the South Florida Sun Sentinel reports:
  • As the number of renters increases and empty homes abound, some people are finding creative ways to get themselves into new homes — without paying for them.

    If recent trends in South Florida are an indication, any vacant dwelling can become a target. Even occupied ones are sometimes not safe. And once people are in, it proves difficult to get them out.

    That's the situation in a neighborhood west of Boca Raton. A 39-year-old woman convinced a real estate agent to hand her the keys to an empty house, Palm Beach County deputies say. But the woman, Tamica Jordan, has never paid a dime to anyone. The owners, who live in Alabama, want her out of the house, but because of legal protections for tenants, it seems no one can make her leave any time soon.
***
  • Jordan's public records trail across California, Virginia and Florida in the past eight years shows a history of judgments filed against her for eviction. It is unclear whether she has since repaid these claims, but the records illustrate a nomadic cycle of moving in, paying no rent, getting evicted — and repeat.

    She arrived at the Silver Woods Court cul-de-sac with two children and little else. She introduced herself to neighbors and told them she came from California and worked at a bank.

    Jordan denied she is dodging rent, denied she had a pattern of evictions and denied that she has done anything to alarm her neighbors. She described herself as "a very peaceful person."

    "I don't know how to respond to that," she said of the accusations she is a "serial squatter." "That all sounds crazy." Yet Jordan has at least eight eviction filings and default judgments going back eight years and totaling at least $26,032.
***
  • On Feb. 28, Palm Beach County Sheriff's Deputy Joseph Caroscio confronted Jordan at the Silver Woods Court house, a report shows. The owner of the house, who lives in Alabama, called deputies to have her thrown out.

    But because she had her children there, her belongings and the keys, there was nothing the deputy could do. Caroscio wrote "it was clear that there was a miscommunication" or even "some type of fraud."

    Elaine Holland, a local Remax Realtor, was named in Caroscio's report, but in an interview she said another agent handled the listing. She would not detail Jordan's alleged strategy to obtain keys without any deposit or proof of employment. She said only that "somebody made a mistake" and that "there are lawyers working on this."

Bill Introduced In Texas Legislature To Curb Crackpots From Using Adverse Possession Affidavits As Self-Created Free Housing Vouchers That Provide Immunity From Criminal Trespass Charges

In Dallas, Texas, KXAS-TV Channel 5 reports:
  • A string of squatters attempting to use an old law to legitimize taking over empty houses has inspired a new bill that aims to prevent copycats from following in their footsteps.

    While some of the more high-profile squatting cases—like that of Kenneth Robinson, who made headlines last year for flaunting his "$16" Flower Mound house—have faded from the spotlight, their examples continue to linger.

    "It's still going on in Denton County, we've heard about it in Houston. I get calls regularly from Alabama, Kentucky," said Tarrant County Constable Clint Burgess, who had to study up on the law of adverse possession when apparent squatters, including Robinson, began presenting him with obscure affidavits two years ago. "We had never seen anything like it," Burgess said.
***
  • Tarrant County has managed to crack down on the practice by refusing to accept the affidavits at the county clerk’s office and prosecuting abusers. But Burgess encouraged State Sen. Jane Nelson, who represents Denton and Tarrant counties, to sponsor legislation that would prevent the scam from bleeding into other parts of the state.

    Under the new law, filed last week, anyone interested in gaining ownership of an unused property would have to send written notice to the last known address of each person who holds an interest in it, from mortgage lenders to homeowners. "This bill simply states what a reasonable person would expect—that property does not convey simply by squatting," Nelson wrote in a statement.
***
  • While a squatter may not stand a chance to legally acquire a home he entered illegally, the use of adverse possession affidavits has still slowed down what is typically a straightforward process—swiftly filing a charge or a warrant against the suspected squatter.
***
  • That sort of confusion allowed some of the initial North Texas cases to remain in legal limbo for weeks, and in some cases months before authorities had the information they needed to evict a squatter.
***
  • While the new legislation could thwart the abuse of adverse possession in Texas, it remains a problem in other areas of the country still recovering from the foreclosure crisis.
 For the story, see New Bill Aims to Limit Squatters' Abuse of Obscure Law (The state law would target people who believe an “adverse possession” affidavit is a ticket to taking over an empty foreclosed home).

Freddie Dumps Recently Foreclosed Home Once Used As Meth Lab, Leaving First-Time Buyers Holding The Bag; Victims Advised to Walk Away As Cost To Remediate Exceeds Property Value

From the foothills of Oregon's Cascade Mountains, ABC News reports:
  • The Hankins family had been saving for five years when they saw a starter home for sale for only $35,000. They jumped at the chance and purchased the home in the foothills of southern Oregon's Cascade Mountains.

    "One of my favorite memories was painting Ezra's room green, and he wanted to help so he helped dad," Jonathan Hankins told ABC News. "This is our home, this is great. It seemed too good to be true."

    The house was a foreclosure advertised "as is." The Hankinses took out a loan instead of a mortgage and had a carpenter friend check it out instead of spending money on an inspector.

    "We knew there were a couple of broken windows. We knew the furnace was probably on its way out," Hankins said. "Overall, the house had great bones. Little did we know that those bones would be contaminated and poisonous."

    After weeks of sanding, priming, plumbing and painting, Hankins started getting dry mouth, nose bleeds and sinus headaches, and the house had a strong urine odor. Their dream house appeared to be making them sick.

    Turns out the little starter had a secret past. It was once used as a meth den, and all the dangerous chemicals had seeped into the floors and ceiling.

    "We ordered a test kit which only cost us $50," Hankins said. "The results came back at nearly 80 times our state's lowest level of contamination."

    It's been seen before on the AMC drama "Breaking Bad." The hit show follows meth dealers who use a super lab with ventilation. But in the real world, "home cooking" all those dangerous chemicals leaves behind such high levels of poison, you have to put on hazmat suits to conduct a standard test.

    Months later, the meth residue was still there.

    "Contractors that specialize in clandestine meth lab clean-up have quoted us costs that are more than what the house is even worth," Hankins said.

    Lawyers told them to walk away quietly because it's only illegal to sell a house with a problem if you know there is a problem. "It's horrifying," Hankins said. "It's like a nightmare, you know, a home buyer's nightmare."

    The Hankinses said the seller, Freddie Mac, should have known about the danger and that meth residue should require a warning, like lead paint and asbestos.

    "It's very easy for them to come in and say, 'Well, we didn't live there, so we have no knowledge of it," Hankins said. "They didn't know some of those homes may be contaminated.

    "The Hankins chose to forgo a home inspection or any other environmental test and bought the home in 'as is' condition," Freddie Mac said in a statement to ABC News. "We empathize with the Hankins [family] but neither we nor the listing agent had prior information about the home's history."

    Real estate mogul Barbara Corcoran said buyers can't depend on the government, their lender or the seller to warn them.

    "All Jonathan and Beth had to do was talk to the neighbor before they bought that house," she said. "Every neighbor who's next door to a meth house knows what's going on. They see the cops coming in. Or you could go the police station, talk to the police."

    Freddie Mac may have not known what was in the house, but the local police department did. Officers went to the home 34 times while the previous owner lived there. "We've been to this house several times," Chief Jim Hunter said. "We made undercover narcotics buys on at least three occasions."
***
  • The Hankinses continue to pay the mortgage on their empty home and rent a second house to live in.

    Freddie Mac said the couple should have done their own testing and the house was bought "as is."

    But for the Hankins family, they may never buy another home again. "Home ownership is the American dream, right?" Hankins said. "And when your dream becomes a nightmare, [it] makes it really hard to want to go back and start all over again."

$500 Meth Inspection Helps Prospective Buyers Dodge Costly Bullet; Test On Recently Foreclosed Home That Was Since Fully Renovated By New Owner Reveals High Level Of Contamination

In Lynnwood, Washington, KCPQ-TV Channel 10 reports:
  • A local family has a warning for home buyers after nearly purchasing a home contaminated with meth.

    Kendall and Ryan Appell put an offer on a home in Lynnwood that had been completely renovated with hardwood floors, stainless steel appliances and granite countertops.

    The home used to be a rental property, went into foreclosure and then was bought at auction. The Appells started talking to neighbors and what they heard raised some red flags.

    “One neighbor made a mention that the people lived there before may have been into some shady dealings. He even said it might have been a drug house at some time,” said Ryan Appell.

    The Appells decided to hire a company to test the home for meth contamination.

    Theresa Borst, of Bio Clean Inc., swabbed inside vents, cabinets, and a wood stove in the Lynnwood home and found dangerously high levels of meth contamination throughout the house. The acceptable level in the state is 0.1 micrograms per 100 cubic centimeters. The home registered at 30 micrograms in some areas.

    “All of a sudden it was like if we stayed here, we could die. Our dog would live about six months and would die because of the levels of chemicals in this place,” said Ryan. “We’re a married couple and the thought of in the next five to 10 years bringing kids into that house was pretty terrifying, so I feel like we lucked out to get out of it when we did,” said Kendall.

    Had they gone through with the deal, contractors said, the Appells might have had to spend up to $100,000 stripping the house to the studs and rebuilding it to make it livable. They said the $500 they paid for the testing was well worth it.

    Borst said of the foreclosed properties they test, 90 percent come back with meth contamination. Borst said it’s wise to contact the health department and local police to see if there is any history of drug manufacturing or use.

    Just like with the Appells, it’s a great idea to talk to as many neighbors as you can, too, about the former tenants.

80,000+ Meth Labs Seized Since 2004 Represent Small Fraction Of Homes Infected With Toxic Contaminants

CNNMoney reports:
  • Call it crystal, crank, or ice, you don't want to live in a house where methamphetamine was cooked up. Many Americans, however, unwittingly purchase homes or rent apartments contaminated with the drug's poisonous residue.

    There have been nearly 84,000 meth lab seizures since 2004, according to the Drug Enforcement Administration. But only a fraction of meth labs, as few as 5%, get discovered by authorities, according to Mark Woodward, a spokesman for the Oklahoma Bureau of Narcotics and Dangerous Drugs Control.

    "Millions of people live in properties that were used as meth labs," said Joseph Mazzuca, who co-founded Meth Lab Cleanup in Athol, Idaho, with his wife, Julie. Last year, his company booked more than 1,500 jobs inspecting and decontaminating homes.
***
  • Meth labs can turn up anywhere. Last year, one was found in a building of million-dollar-plus apartments on Manhattan's West Side. But the root of the problem lies in America's heartland. In states like Missouri, Arkansas and Oklahoma, thousands of meth labs are discovered each year.
***
  • For every pound of meth produced, five to seven pounds of chemical waste is left behind. Meth molecules can cling to walls and floors, accumulate in carpets and cabinets and penetrate materials like insulation and drywall, according to Glenn Morrison, an associate professor of environmental engineering at Missouri University of Science and Technology. And they can be re-emitted for months or even years.

    Short-term exposure to these chemicals can lead to headaches, nausea, dizziness and fatigue. Over a long period, liver and kidney damage, neurological problems, and increased risk of cancer can occur, according to the Minnesota Department of Health.
For the story, see My home was a former meth lab.

Friday, March 15, 2013

Illinois Homeowner Tags Mortgage Lender, Contractor For Alleged Premature Foreclosure Trash Out; Says Many Personal Items Were Swiped, Never Returned; Seeks $250K+ In Damages

In Madison County, Illinois, The Madison-St. Clair Record reports:
  • A Madison County woman is suing a mortgage company she claims unlawfully entered her deceased father’s home and destroyed property.

    Diana Rogers filed a lawsuit Feb. 11 in Madison County Circuit Court against Reverse Mortgage Solutions Inc. and National Field Network LLC.

    According to the complaint, Rogers acquired a home on Perch Drive in Highland after her father passed away. Prior to his death, Rogers’ father had secured a reverse mortgage from Live Well Financial Inc., the petition says. Rogers says the home was foreclosed on in January 2012 but says she remained entitled to the premises through Feb. 24, 2012.

    Rogers says Reverse Mortgage Solutions was hired to oversee and manage the sale of the property following the foreclosure. That company allegedly hired National Field Network to act on its behalf.

    Rogers says she had undergone shoulder surgery prior to the foreclosure and had temporarily moved into her son’s home about a mile away from her own house. She says she visited the home daily to check mail and care for her cat. The home was furnished and all utilities were functioning, according to the complaint.

    On Feb. 8, sixteen days prior to the date Rogers was legally required to surrender the property, she says two people acting on behalf of RMS and National Field Network went on to the property without permission and drilled out the lock on the front door. She says the workers “removed and disposed of numerous valuable items, decimated the home and left the contents not removed from the home in a state of ruin.” Rogers claims many of the items taken from the home have never been returned.

    Rogers accuses RMS and National Field Network of intentional trespass, negligent trespass, trespass to chattels, conversion and conspiracy. She contends the defendants knew they had no right to be on the property and cause damage but acted with gross negligence and wanton disregard.

    The former homeowner is asking to be awarded more than $250,000 in damages for loss of property, mental anguish, humiliation and inconvenience.

Another Foreclosure Trash Out Contractor Screws Up; Victimized Property Owner Says Outfit Made Off With $150K Worth Of Stuff; Cops Punt On Criminal Probe - Say It "Happens All The Time ... Is Not A Crime"

In Coupland, Texas, the Austin American Statesman reports:
  • The workers who were supposed to clear out his neighbor’s foreclosed house instead cleaned out Mike Moors’ barn, making off with his wife’s wedding dress, their love letters, his boat, his backhoe, the works.

    Moors wants to know where his stuff is and when he’ll get it back. The answer might be never.

    “Are my things in storage somewhere?” asked Moors, 53, an unemployed construction worker who has been asking the same questions for more than a month. “Have they sold it at auction? How do I explain to my wife that she may never get her wedding dress back? There were many other heirlooms taken that are priceless.”

    Safeguard Properties, the Ohio company that hired the crew to prepare the house next door for foreclosure in December, acknowledges the error and says an insurance company is verifying Moors’ claim and will soon have information for him. But not yet.

    Moors cannot imagine how the mistake was made in the first place. A fence separates his property on County Road 460 from his former neighbor’s land. And there isn’t a home on Moors’ land, just a barn.

    Moors, who lives in Taylor, discovered his belongings were missing in late January when he drove by the property, which he hopes will be the site of his retirement home. At first he thought he had been ripped off. He didn’t see his 16-foot fiberglass boat. A closer look revealed that the metal barn was broken into. The bolts on a metal rail fence securing the barn were cut off, and the fence was removed. Missing were his $15,000 Case 580 backhoe, a small printing press for sign-making and two locked construction trailers on wheels that were parked on either side of the barn.

    A neighbor, Joe Diaz, saw it all. Three men in trucks and carrying clipboards showed up and began hauling things off. “They were here all day and part of the night. They couldn’t get the backhoe out so they dragged it out and put it on a trailer,” Diaz said.

    Diaz said he was suspicious but not enough to call police: “I hadn’t seen Mr. Moors in a couple of months so I assumed the worst and thought he’d died or something. This was happening in broad daylight; I thought it was legit.”

    This type of thing has been known to happen. In 2008, a Cedar Park couple who just bought a previously foreclosed house came home to find all their belongings missing. Field Asset Services workers hadn’t heard of the sale and believed the house was still in foreclosure. The company apologized; the couple sued.

    Records from the national Better Business Bureau show that Safeguard Properties, which has a “C” rating and 33 complaints against it, was alleged to have made virtually the same mistake in 2011. The records don’t indicate where it occurred, but they say Safeguard failed to respond to the BBB’s attempt to resolve it. The Texas Attorney General’s Office confirmed late Friday that two complaints have been filed against the company in the past.

    Moors estimates the value of the missing items at $150,000, but he says he doesn’t want money. The contents of the trailers included a late aunt’s antique ceramic figurines and a 100-year-old trunk that once belonged to the grandfather of his wife, Janine.

    There also was a cedar chest with her wedding dress that she wore Nov. 16, 1985, a wedding reception book and love letters that Mike Moors and his wife had exchanged when they were dating.

    “When I think about that wedding dress, it makes me so sad that it’s gone. Nothing, nothing can replace it,” Janine Moors said.

    Mike Moors filed a theft report with the Williamson County Sheriff’s Office on Jan. 24. He said Detective Brian Johns sent him an email that said Safeguard Properties was responsible, but that the company was acting in good faith. Case closed. “This happens all the time, not that it makes it right, but it is not a crime,” Johns told Moors in the email.(1)

    Frustrated, Mike Moors said he spent the next few weeks calling and sending registered letters to county officials, the lender CitiMortgage and Safeguard Properties. He finally filed a claim in February.

    Sue McConnell, a spokeswoman with the BBB in Ohio, said that, according to its records, no government agency has taken action against Safeguard.

    Safeguard isn’t providing any details about Moors’ belongings. Diane Roman Fusco, a spokeswoman for the company, said the information is confidential, but that Moors can get the details from claims solution specialist Lisa Horvath. Mike Moors said he called Horvath on Thursday, and she told him the information was confidential.

    “She also told me it’s not necessary to get the media involved. She said, ‘I promise I will do the right thing,’” Mike Moors said.

    Janine Moors hopes for more than a promise. “A woman plans her whole life for her wedding day and choosing that dress,” she said. “And when you don’t have it anymore, it wants to make you cry.”
For the story, see No answers after foreclosure crew empties wrong building.

(1) I guess this case qualifies as a "civil matter."

Buyer Who Bought Home With Delinquent Loan For All Cash Faces Foreclosure Anyway As Servicer Returns Money Along With Foreclosure Notice

In Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, WPXI-TV Channel 11 reports:
  • A local man is facing a mortgage mess. He paid cold hard cash for his house, but the lending company is still foreclosing. So he called Target 11's Robin Taylor for help.

    "I bought this house. Legally, it's all registered in the prothonotary's office. They money is there and I'm still getting foreclosed on," said Noel Norris of Leechburg, Pa.

    I did some digging and discovered hundreds of similar complaints against Ocwen Loan Servicing. Last fall, the Better Business Bureau issued a warning about the company. Homeowners say they've made their mortgage payments, but the company is foreclosing anyway. It's been a real nightmare for Norris.

    His mother owned the house he grew up in. She fell behind on her mortgage payments, so Noel decided to buy the home.

    Noel closed on the property Oct. 5, 2012. Ten days later, Ocwen Loan Servicing sent his money back along with a foreclosure notice.

    "You buy the house. You send them the money for the house and they send it back to you?" I asked.

    "The money was wire transferred to their account, guaranteed funds. It's in there. My attorney did that. They turned around and sent me a check back," said Norris. The payoff quote was $74,000, but Ocwen is charging interest and penalties as if the money was never paid.
***
  • For Noel, it's been frustrating, but a settlement has finally been reached, allowing him to stay in his home. He told me he couldn't afford to fight Ocwen any longer. "The legal system's not free. It might not be perfect, but it's not free, for sure," said Norris.

Thursday, March 14, 2013

Banksters Play Critical Role In Internet Payday Lending Racket; Refuse Account Holders Requests To Immediately Terminate Automatic Withdrawals, Leading To Customer Overdrafts, Fat Fees

The New York Times reports:
  • Major banks have quickly become behind-the-scenes allies of Internet-based payday lenders that offer short-term loans with interest rates sometimes exceeding 500 percent.

    With 15 states banning payday loans, a growing number of the lenders have set up online operations in more hospitable states or far-flung locales like Belize, Malta and the West Indies to more easily evade statewide caps on interest rates.

    While the banks, which include giants like JPMorgan Chase, Bank of America and Wells Fargo, do not make the loans, they are a critical link for the lenders, enabling the lenders to withdraw payments automatically from borrowers’ bank accounts, even in states where the loans are banned entirely. In some cases, the banks allow lenders to tap checking accounts even after the customers have begged them to stop the withdrawals.
***
  • For the banks, it can be a lucrative partnership. At first blush, processing automatic withdrawals hardly seems like a source of profit. But many customers are already on shaky financial footing. The withdrawals often set off a cascade of fees from problems like overdrafts.

    Roughly 27 percent of payday loan borrowers say that the loans caused them to overdraw their accounts, according to a report released this month by the Pew Charitable Trusts. That fee income is coveted, given that financial regulations limiting fees on debit and credit cards have cost banks billions of dollars.
***
  • While the loans are simple to obtain — some online lenders promise approval in minutes with no credit check — they are tough to get rid of. Customers who want to repay their loan in full typically must contact the online lender at least three days before the next withdrawal.

    Otherwise, the lender automatically renews the loans at least monthly and withdraws only the interest owed. Under federal law, customers are allowed to stop authorized withdrawals from their account. Still, some borrowers say their banks do not heed requests to stop the loans.

    Ivy Brodsky, 37, thought she had figured out a way to stop six payday lenders from taking money from her account when she visited her Chase branch in Brighton Beach in Brooklyn in March to close it. But Chase kept the account open and between April and May, the six Internet lenders tried to withdraw money from Ms. Brodsky’s account 55 times, according to bank records reviewed by The New York Times. Chase charged her $1,523 in fees — a combination of 44 insufficient fund fees, extended overdraft fees and service fees.

    For Subrina Baptiste, 33, an educational assistant in Brooklyn, the overdraft fees levied by Chase cannibalized her child support income. She said she applied for a $400 loan from Loanshoponline.com and a $700 loan from Advancemetoday.com in 2011. The loans, with annual interest rates of 730 percent and 584 percent respectively, skirt New York law.

    Ms. Baptiste said she asked Chase to revoke the automatic withdrawals in October 2011, but was told that she had to ask the lenders instead. In one month, her bank records show, the lenders tried to take money from her account at least six times. Chase charged her $812 in fees and deducted over $600 from her child-support payments to cover them.

    “I don’t understand why my own bank just wouldn’t listen to me,” Ms. Baptiste said, adding that Chase ultimately closed her account last January, three months after she asked.
For more, see Major Banks Aid in Payday Loans Banned by States.

See also, Dimon Pledges to Change JPMorgan’s Practices on Payday Loans:
  • Jamie Dimon, the chief executive of JPMorgan Chase, vowed [...] to change how the bank deals with Internet-based payday lenders that automatically withdraw payments from borrowers’ checking accounts.

Recently-Convicted County Treasurer Bagged In Tax Lien Auction Bid-Rigging Racket Now Tagged Along With Several 'Deep Pocket' Entities In Civil Suit Seeking Class Action Status

In Edwardsville, Illinois, Courthouse News Service reports:
  • A longtime Madison County treasurer rigged tax lien real estate auctions for his political allies, a class action claims in Madison County Court.

    Plaintiff Virgil Straeter claims Frederick Bathon, Madison County treasurer from November 1998 through 2009, conspired with several companies and auctioneer James Foley to carry out the scheme.
    Bathon has pleaded guilty to federal antitrust charges and promised to reveal his co-conspirators as part of the plea deal, according to the complaint.

    "During his tenure as treasurer, and particularly in connection with the tax sales over which he presided from 2003 through 2008, Bathon colluded and conspired with Jim Foley and others, who called the sales as auctioneer, and with the buyers, who were also contributors to his re-election campaign, to rig the bidding at the sales so that the winning bid would always or nearly always by made by one of the members of the conspiracy at or near the statutory maximum 18 percent interest rate," the complaint states.

    Bids in the tax-lien auctions start at the state's maximum 18 percent annual rate, and are bid down toward zero, with the low bidder awarded the lien certificate.

    Straeter says the scheme forced distressed property owners to pay inflated prices to redeem their properties and avoid foreclosure. In some cases, Straeter says, the owners were unable to reclaim their property because of the conspiracy. Straeter says the scheme caused him to pay higher prices to reclaim 11 of his properties. All of those properties were bid at the 18 percent maximum, according to Straeter.

    "Since Bathon stepped down as treasurer and competitive bidding was reintroduced to the process, the average interest rate has been below 4 percent for each sale," the complaint states.
    Straeter claims approximately 10,000 properties were subject to the tax lien conspiracy.

    The class consists of all property owners whose property was auctioned off to the co-defendants, or who had to reclaim their property at inflated rates from 2003 to 2008. They seek actual and punitive damages for violations of the Illinois Antitrust Act, civil conspiracy, spoliation, breach of fiduciary duty and negligence.
***
  • Named as defendants are Bathon, Foley, Madison County, RLI Insurance Company, Western Surety Company, Land of Lincoln Securities, Prairie State Securities, VI Inc., SI Securities, Sabre Group, Empire Tax Corp., Vista Securities, former Madison County Clerk Mark Von Nida and seven individual buyers.

Cleveland Housing Advocacy Group Steps Up To Salvage Two Mismanaged Local Lease-To-Own Programs That Left 90 Rent-Paying, Aspiring Homebuyer-Families Facing Foreclosure

In Cleveland, Ohio, The Plain Dealer reports:
  • A bailout of two rent-to-own programs will allow more than 90 low-income families to buy their houses in Cleveland's Glenville neighborhood, according to the Cleveland Housing Network.

    The housing advocacy agency has led a rescue that included buying mortgages and paying back taxes and penalties to keep the houses out of foreclosure and in the programs, said Rob Curry, the agency's executive director. "They're totally back from the edge," Curry said Monday.

    The programs date to the 1990s, when investor-backed partnerships built and leased the houses to low-income families with provisions allowing the renters to buy at below-market prices after 15 years.

    Most of the money to build the houses came from large corporations wanting to invest in low-income housing in return for substantial federal tax credits.

    But problems surfaced two years ago, when some renters looking to buy their houses discovered that the partnerships' management company had for years failed to pay property taxes.

    In April, 2011, Huntington National Bank moved to foreclose on a loan to one of the partnerships, Northeastern Neighborhood Homes Limited Partnership II, because more than $95,000 in taxes and penalties going back to 2007 had not been paid.
***
  • In launching a rescue effort, the Cleveland Housing Network and Neighborhood Progress Inc. negotiated to buy the mortgages, held by Huntington and Chicago-based Urban Partnership Bank, at discounted prices. [...] Carrie Rosenfelt, community development relationship manager at Huntington Bank, said Huntington sold its mortgage at a discount because of the Cleveland Housing Network's experience working with rent-to-own programs.

Wednesday, March 13, 2013

Multi-State Probe Targets Banksters' Role In Collecting Delinquent Consumer Debt Peddled Out To Collectors For Pennies On The Dollar; Investigators Round Up The Usual Suspects

Reuters reports:
  • The largest U.S. banks face a multi-state investigation into whether they helped debt collectors pursue faulty judgments against credit card customers, according to people familiar with the matter.

    At issue is whether weak record-keeping by banks or a failure to pass accurate information to collection agencies harmed consumers.

    The allegations against the banks echo those central to last year's $25 billion federal-state mortgage settlement to resolve charges that the banks "robo-signed" documents and pursued foreclosures with faulty information.

    This latest probe targets the same banks, including Bank of America (BAC.N), JPMorgan Chase (JPM.N), Citigroup (C.N) and Wells Fargo (WFC.N), said the sources who spoke on condition of anonymity because the investigations are continuing.

    As with the mortgage cases, the investigation focuses on the banks' poor paperwork and their weak tracking of the debts.

    When they sold delinquent credit card debt to the buyers, often at only a few cents on the dollar, they allegedly failed to provide them with the evidence that the borrowers owed the money. It is unclear, however, if the incomplete information was used to pursue borrowers who were not delinquent.
***
  • The probe against the banks marks an expansion of the scrutiny that to date has largely focused on the debt collectors.
***
  • Investigators are finding that the banks often did not provide buyers of the debt with evidence that individual credit card accounts were delinquent. Instead the banks only provided basic information about how much money they thought was owed and who the borrower was, without providing original contracts, past statements, or other additional documentation.
***
  • Despite a lack of documentation, consumer advocates and people familiar with the investigations say debt buyers still pursued court rulings that allowed them to potentially garnish wages and debit bank accounts.

    Consumers usually fail to contest the court proceedings, these people said, because they often don't receive the notices, don't know how to respond, or cannot take the day off work, and courts enter default judgments against them.

    "A lot of these debt buyers are flooding state courts attempting to collect debts that they've bought for pennies on the dollar," said Ira Rheingold, executive director of the National Association of Consumer Advocates. "They're filing these affidavits about how much is owed, and who owes it, but the reality is, they have no information."

Nevada AG Scores Plea In Criminal Prosecution Of Upfront Fee, Debt Reduction Mortgage Refinance Ripoff

From the Office of the Nevada Attorney General:
  • Nevada Attorney General Catherine Cortez Masto announced that on March 6, Gary Dimattia, 62, of Las Vegas, pled no contest to ten felonies in connection with his operation of a mortgage lending fraud scam, including four counts each of mortgage lending fraud and theft, one count of multiple transactions involving fraud and deceit in the course of enterprise or occupation, and one count of pattern of mortgage lending fraud.
***
  • Operating under the name Financial Link Services, Dimattia peddled a so-called “Balance Reduction Program” promising to arrange to have investors purchase his clients’ mortgages from their lenders and refinance his clients at current market value, thereby eliminating negative equity and reducing monthly payments.

    He typically charged $3,495-$3,895 up front but failed to deliver the promised services or refund the fees.

Missouri AG Tags Loan Modification Outfit In Civil Suit; Phony Promises Of Attorney Involvement, Unlicensed Practice Of Law Among Allegations

From the Office of the Missouri Attorney General:
  • Attorney General Chris Koster [] filed a lawsuit against two related businesses that purported to provide loan modification and mortgage relief to desperate homeowners.

    Koster’s suit is against Legal Helpers Debt Resolution, LLC and Mortgage Law Group, LLC, as well as the companies’ managing partner, Jason Edward Searns; senior partner, Thomas Macey; and senior partner, Jeffery Aleman.

    The lawsuit alleges that the defendants preyed on vulnerable Missouri consumers who were already dealing with difficult financial circumstances, especially during the economic downturn. The defendants allegedly lured consumers with promises of mortgage modifications or debt settlements, then encouraged them to pay the companies, rather than their creditors. As a result, many consumers defaulted on their obligations and never received the services the defendants promised.
***
  • Specific allegations in the lawsuit state the businesses broke Missouri’s consumer protection laws by:

    (1) Misrepresenting to consumers the results the defendants could achieve and the time necessary to achieve promised results;

    (2) Persuading consumers to stop making payments to their lenders and creditors while failing to inform the consumers of the legal consequences that could result from withholding those payments;

    (3) Taking upfront payments from consumers for debt relief and loan modification services;

    (4) Failing to provide services as promised to consumers;

    (5) Failing to place legally required notifications of consumers’ rights in contracts;

    (6) Misrepresenting that the defendants’ services would be performed by attorneys licensed to practice law in Missouri, and:

    (7) Engaging in the practice of law in Missouri without a license to do so.