A lot of people are in dire financial straights because they got sucked into what is now being called the mortgage crisis.
Now that the problem is being examined carefully, a lot of fraud is being blamed as being a contributing factor to the entire mess. The problem is that the fraud aspect of the mortgage crisis is hardly over. Mortgage scams designed to take advantage of people in financial trouble are flooding the Internet and even the classified section of local newspapers.
Mortgage fraudsters for the most part don’t have a conscience and could care less if they steal from your grandparents, neighbors or you!
The FBI, who has put more than a few of these people behind bars in recent history is using the intelligence gathered in their investigations to reach out to the public on how to avoid becoming conned with promises of a new beginning, or rescue from their current dilemna.
“And while some of these steps may require you to do a little extra work now in the long run it may save you aggravation, money, and even your house,†according to Special Agent Scott Broshears, a mortgage fraud supervisor with the FBI.
The first recommendation is to get referrals and then check out the licenses of real estate and mortgage professionals with government (state and local) regulatory agencies.
They also recommend that you do your own research on what homes have been sold for in your area. Checking out tax assessments is one way to do this.
Beware of too good to be true mortgage deals, especially using a no money down gimmick.
Never let anyone talk you into making a false statement on a mortgage application. This is how a lot of people ended up with mortgages they couldn’t afford in the first place.
Don’t sign a blank document or a document with blank lines. Something could be added later. Read everything thoroughly and if you don’t understand everything completely get legal assistance.
Don’t get conned into paying an upfront fee to get out of mortgage trouble. Be especially wary if these solicitations come from e-mail or web advertisements. You will likely be out the up-front fee and in the same boat as before you paid for the assistance.
In more sophisticated upfront (advance) fee schemes involving foreclosure fraud, victims are even talked into signing over their property. The victim loses the upfront fee, their house and still owes their mortgage when this occurs. Advance fee fraud has been around for centuries and is merely a false promise of something that is too good to be true in return for an advanced payment.
On a final note, the FBI recommends that if you are facing foreclosure, the best thing to do is to see if your lender will work for you.
Agent Broshears and the men and women working with him have seen their case-load with mortgage fraud triple in the recent past. By sharing these tips, learned from real life investigations, they hope to make their job easier and see a few less people victimized by this growing phenomenon.
If you need more information on mortgage fraud, the FBI has a page on their site dedicated to this subject.
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Follow-up comment rss or Leave a TrackbackCongress needs to investigate and property owners need to be WARNED about mortgage lenders’ filing falsified IRS tax form 1099-A’s or 1099-C’s –especially for FORECLOSURES. To illustrate, here is a portion of my statement concerning Wells Fargo’s false 1099-A, as well as a link to entire actual statement posted at:
http://www.lawgrace.org/2008/08/08/my-august-8-2008-statement-to-the-louisiana-secretary-of-state-office-of-financial-institutions-concerning-wells-fargo-irs-and-mortgage-frauds-sham-foreclosures-and-judicial-collusion-and-national-app/
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This Financial Office mistakenly thought a complaint was filed concerning my property; and on July 30, 2008, Ms. Kathy Drzewiecki responded on Wells Fargo’s behalf. . . .As your records show, GE Capital Mortgage Services, Inc., became defunct in year 2002 when it merged into GE Mortgage Services, LLC, its “successor.” Therefore, it is impossible for foreclosure auction to have LAWFULLY been carried out in year 2005 on behalf of the non-existent GE Capital Mortgage Services, Inc. Also, contrary to what Ms. Drzwiecki wrote, it is NOT POSSIBLE in year 2005 for Wells Fargo to continue being the “mortgage servicer” for non-existent GE Capital Mortgage Services. Furthermore, if my property was (impossibly) ACQUIRED by GE Capital on May 19, 2005, there is NO LAWFUL REASON for the IRS form 1099-A to exhibit Wells Fargo’s name!
Another thing Ms. Drzewiecki’s letter failed to state is that I initially acquired my residence property in 1993 through AmSouth Bank. For home improvement in 1999, I refinanced it with GE Capital. I had equity in the property, and I never had a subprime loan. (Marriage failure caused me financial ruin; and crooked deals in Family Court sealed my fate.)
On the other hand, facts overwhelmingly demonstrate that, using defunct GE Capital’s identity, debt collector attorney Herschel C. Adcock, Jr., fraudulently seized and acquired more than $80,000 when he flipped my property. Also, contrary to the form 1099-A, the Fair Market Value was not $12,000 -as manifest from the year 2005 sale price for which that property was sold in that same tax year purportedly to a third party.
A lot of foreclosed former property owners will one day discover there is a 1099-A or a 1099-C for which the IRS wants answers. If that 1099 is replete with false information, there could be severe tax effects and a lot of needless untangling to be burdened with.
Across the country, foreclosures have been halted because “real party interest” was absent from those foreclosure proceedings. Yet (in Louisiana), it would not be farfetched for foreclosures to become filed in the name of ‘Mary had a little lamb’, and judges allow peoples’ homes to become seized.
from Barbara Ann Jackson
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