
At
the Legal Assistance Foundation of Metropolitan Chicago,
the phone calls come nearly every day from yet another
financially desperate homeowner who's become the victim
of a "foreclosure rescue" scam.
"This has become the No. 1 problem in terms of calls we're
getting and cases we're filing," says Daniel Lindsey,
supervising attorney for the foundation's Home Ownership
Preservation Project.
And it's clearly a nationwide problem that's likely to
get worse. The Better Business Bureau has received complaints
from every state and has issued an alert to warn consumers
to be cautious about foreclosure-rescue companies.
Alarmed that con artists are taking advantage of vulnerable
homeowners, many of whom are buckling under predatory loans,
state regulators are cracking down. So far this year, six
states have imposed rules against these companies, and
six more states have proposed legislation.
"The sad part about this particular offense," Dann
says, "is that (the homeowners) lose everything. You
lose the little bit of money they had squirreled away,
you lose your house and you lose your hope. How do you
quantify that?"
In a sweep in August, Dann filed complaints against six
companies, including American Housing Authority and Foreclosure
Assistance Solutions, and he says he expects to bring a
half-dozen more cases in the next few weeks. Phone numbers
for the companies were not available. Regulators and law enforcement in many states are targeting
the two most common forms of foreclosure rescue scams: "equity
skimming" and bogus or fruitless consulting services.
The first scam works like this: A company offers to take
legal ownership of the home temporarily. The homeowners
pay "rent" to the company, which promises to
return legal ownership to them once they regain their financial
footing.
But all too often, con artists borrow as much as they can
against the equity in the house — and collect the
rent from the original homeowners but never make any mortgage
payments. In the end, the property still goes into foreclosure,
and any equity the homeowner had built up is gone. Their
financial ruin is complete.
The second-most-common foreclosure-rescue pitch goes like
this: A company offers to renegotiate the homeowners' mortgage
with the lender or help refinance the property. In exchange,
they charge an up-front fee, typically $800 to $1,200.
Frequently, though, the company never contacts the lender,
or knows the borrower can't qualify for another loan. What
little extra cash the homeowner could have used to pay
the mortgage or move to an apartment has been wiped out
by worthless "services."
There are, of course, hundreds of reputable groups that
provide legitimate services for homeowners in trouble.
(Vested Interests, LLC is one of them in California.)
The Department of Housing and Urban Development has certified
2,300 counseling
agencies
to help
homeowners
nationwide
(www.hud.gov). HUD and the mortgage
industry also support the Homeownership Preservation Foundation,
which operates a toll-free counseling
hotline, 24 hours a day (888-995-HOPE). Last month, it
fielded 22,000 calls from homeowners in financial distress.
When scary letters start piling up
A family that's more than two months behind on a mortgage
will often come home to a mailbox stuffed with brightly
colored envelopes and postcards from companies promising
to help them save their homes. One such
postcard that Steve and Dawn Reyes received after Steve
lost his job as a carpenter was from Mortgage Assistance
Solutions, a Florida-based company that's known by its
customers as Fresh Start."
YOU WILL LOSE YOUR HOUSE IF YOU DON'T CALL US NOW!!!" the
postcard said. When Dawn called, the
company promised to refund its $1,200 upfront fee if it
couldn't help them. A month after they
signed up, the Reyeses received a summons stating that
their house was scheduled for auction on Dec. 12 of last
year."
I called the guy at Fresh Start, and I'm frantic," recalls
Dawn, 27, a stay-at-home mom and first-time homeowner in
Machesney Park, Ill. "I said, 'Look, I got this summons
to go to court; I thought you were talking to the bank.'" The
reply, she says, was: "Yeah, we're talking with
them. I'll call them and put a stop to them. We get a lot
of calls like this. It's just a scare tactic; nothing's
going to happen." The Reyeses had signed a document in November of 2006 giving
Mortgage Assistance Solutions permission to negotiate with
the family's lender. But the Illinois Attorney General's
office, which filed a lawsuit against Mortgage Assistance
Solutions two months ago, told Dawn that their lender didn't
receive that document by fax until Dec. 14 — two
days after Dawn received the summons, and called them.
Angry, Dawn demanded her family's money back. Mortgage
Assistance Solutions sent her $700 and said it was entitled
to the remaining $500 because of the time it spent on her
case.
Yet soon after Dawn canceled the services, she says, she
received another green-and-white envelope in the mail from
Fresh Start. It read: "FORECLOSURE COMPLAINT NOTICE.
Your House Is Scheduled To Be Sold At Auction. National
Bank."
Michael Stoller, a Los Angeles attorney and owner of Mortgage
Assistance Solutions, says, the Reyeses were "denied
a repayment plan because of insufficient income and lack
of supporting documentation." The family wasn't entitled
to a full refund, Stoller explains, because the company
charges $150 an hour for time spent negotiating with the
lender. Stoller says
his company is winding down its operations and will stop
doing business by early next year, because
of increased regulation and competition.
Marilyn Libby, 55, a nursing assistant, says Mortgage Assistance
Solutions helped her modify her subprime loan with her
lender. She says she feared she "was getting the shaft" from
the company, because she had received few updates about
her loan and was getting threatening letters from her lender
to foreclose on her home in Stout, Ohio. Libby obtained a lower fixed-rate loan last week, and afterward,
she says, "I called Fresh Start and said: 'Thank you,
thank you. I can sleep now.' "
But Bob Campbell, executive director of the Rockford Area
Affordable Housing Coalition, the non-profit counseling
service that helped the Reyeses, says: "I've got a
file sitting here on Fresh Start. We sent quite a few names
to the (state) attorney general because that was a name
we kept running into." The Better Business Bureau says it's received 106 complaints
nationwide against Mortgage Assistance Solutions in the
past year.
Preying on the victimized
Two months ago, Massachusetts Attorney General Martha Coakley
permanently banned foreclosure-assistance companies from
taking title of homes and then renting them back to their
cash-strapped owners. She's also filed lawsuits against
the people operating three such companies. Consumer
complaints about such scams have spiked this year, and
she says she expects that trend to continue for the
next year or two. What's most heart-wrenching,
Coakley says, is that many victims of foreclosure-rescue
scams had already been cheated
by predatory lenders.
Those predators, she says, persuaded the victims to take
out loans with unfavorable terms, knowing the borrowers
probably couldn't afford the payments they'd face once
their introductory "teaser" rate reset to a much
higher rate."
We saw this as an egregious problem at the end of a bad
process," Coakley says. "We saw people in trouble,
in foreclosure, and it appeared to my folks that this was
really, in that sense not serious in terms of impact but
in terms of perdition. People were coming in to pick at
the carrion."
Why people get behind
The most common reasons that lead people to fall behind
on their mortgages are job or income loss, health problems
or a death in the family. Yet fear, shame or distrust of
their lenders keeps about half of borrowers from calling
those lenders, according to Freddie Mac. That
communication gap can leave homeowners vulnerable to fast-talking
con artists who buy mailing lists of homeowners
in default or slap their business ads on telephone poles. Back
at the Legal Assistance Foundation of Metropolitan Chicago,
Lindsey says the saddest stories he hears are
from retirees who have lost the only home they've ever
owned, thanks to a foreclosure "rescue" fraud."
That property is their entire life, most of their wealth,
they've raised their children there, they are completely
emotionally invested in it, and that's exactly the last
thing they want to lose," he says. "The vulnerability
they are experiencing gets exploited by these 'rescuers.'"
Reprint
Courtesy of USA Today © All Rights Reserved, Story by
By Noelle Knox
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