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| Breaking Foreclosure News This is the latest in breaking foreclosure news hitting the internet and I think you should read it. Some of the news is helpful and some is quite disturbing. You'll find good news and bad news. But all of it's reality and we all need to face it! Please feel free to post any stories and news in this section in regards to your local market. |
This is a discussion on Article: Stop Foreclosure Wolves within the Breaking Foreclosure News forums, part of the Homeowner Party - Homeowners Unite to Fight Back category; Hey gang! If you haven't suscribed to the Consumer Warning Network's e-newsletter, I would urge you to do so because ...
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| | #51 (permalink) |
| Senior Member Join Date: Jan 2008
Posts: 243
Nominated 0 Times in 0 Posts TOTW/F/M Award(s): 0 | Re: Article: Stop Foreclosure Wolves Hey gang! If you haven't suscribed to the Consumer Warning Network's e-newsletter, I would urge you to do so because they are big homeowner advocates and have very timely, up-to-date news about what's happening on the foreclosure front. I just got their latest and they have this terrific article from the NY Times about this State Supreme court judge in Brooklyn who "gets it" and who has been dismissing foreclosure cases left and right because the banks just didn't have the right to foreclose and every single case was riddled with errors and what-have-you, etc., etc. I wish EVERY state had a judge like him on our side. He's a hero!!! Here's the link to the story: The Foreclosure Judge Who Gets It | The Consumer Warning Network Sally |
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| | #52 (permalink) |
| Senior Member Join Date: Mar 2008
Posts: 642
Nominated 0 Times in 0 Posts TOTW/F/M Award(s): 0 | Re: Article: Stop Foreclosure Wolves Latest article by Mortgage Wars author. Book flying off shelves! If anyone goes through her recommended process, please share! The good, bad and ugly! HOMEOWNERS: THE WAR GAMES HAVE BEGUN By Iris Martin Author of Mortgage Wars September 11, 2009 HUFF POST Homeowners across the nation have locked and loaded and are launching their mortgage wars. Sales of my new book, Mortgage Wars: How to Fight Fraud and Reverse Foreclosure are thriving among homeowners and attorneys alike. We have even taken over the airways, advertising the book on Monday night football! The book was requested for sale at the annual conference of the California Bar Association. More attorneys are being trained up, and California attorney Walter Hackett is in the process of announcing an institute for lending practices to help attorneys gear up faster. Lenders are besieged with mortgage audits, qualified written requests and predatory lending complaints. As a result, many lenders are postponing foreclosure sales time and again, and some states, like Florida and Ohio have become virtually, no foreclosure zones. The war games have begun and now it's time for the predatory lenders, brokers and foreclosure consultants to sweat. The Fed is weeding out the predators who promise loan mods and can't deliver after devouring huge fees. The tide is turning, as it must, if the largest lenders, like Chase, Citibank, Wells Fargo and the like, are to transform their predatory schemes against innocent homeowners. There has been so much progress since my book has hit bookshelves. Just ask forensic expert Marie McDonnell, who is offering a full securitization analysis for $1,500 dollars. She maps every transaction in the securitization daisy chain and prepares an expert report to demonstrate to the judge how the lender has no legal standing to foreclose. She is also available as an expert witness at trial. Or ask California attorney, Walter Hackett, who challenges the sanctity of a deed of trust when there has been no trust in the mortgage transaction. Or California attorney, Jeff Schwartz, who incorporates a lack of fiduciary duty claim into some of his well deserving complaints. Or ask Ohio attorney Dan McGookey, who just reversed a foreclosure action due to the lender not owning the loan and note. His pleadings are becoming legendary. Rock on, Dan! I receive daily calls from homeowners confused about the mortgage war plan of attack, and many have been incredibly misinformed. Some have committed bankruptcy fraud and didn't know it, making themselves vulnerable to criminal charges. So here is the skinny on what to do and not do in your own mortgage war. The DOs: 1. Get a mortgage audit. For only $499.00, you can go to Mortgage Wars and order one. Our evidentiary audit has been designed by attorneys. It examines TILA and RESPA violations, fraud and illegal securitization. You will receive your report after two week upon collecting all the documents. 2. Second, if your audit warrants it, you can file a legal complaint. We can help you find a qualified attorney from our network, or from their networks. The good ones are always in contact with each other. 3. Your new best friend attorney will take the audit data and interview you at length. Based upon your responses, your attorney will prepare a legal complaint detailing the facts of your case and appropriate causes of action. You should not pay more than $2,500 for this service, including court filing fees. On that note, you should not pay more than $275 per hour for legal assistance, as that is the going national rate. 4. Your attorney will determine whether to file your complaint in state or federal court. TILA violations are heard in federal court, as are RESPA claims. However, many attorneys I chat with believe that predatory complaints involving other causes of action, such as fraud and lack of fiduciary duty, are best heard in state court. Your attorney can educate you on what's best for you in your state. 5. Your attorney will also determine whether to demand a jury trial. The attorneys I know are split on this one: some believe a jury would side with a fellow homeowner. However, some cities may have jurors who cannot follow the proceedings, particularly with regard to technicalities in the securitization process. Your attorney will determine which choice is right for you. 6. Once your complaint is filed and served, your attorney can begin discovery after only a few days. Discovery takes the form of written demands for information from your lender, including who owns your loan and note. If your lender refused to answer, it can be compelled to do so by the court. Your attorney will also depose representatives from your lender or brokerage, and other parties with knowledge. Not a bad idea to search for whistle blowers who worked for your lender in sunnier times. 7. You will also get a trial date at a hearing known as a case management conference. Your trial date most likely will be scheduled many months in the future. 8. Your attorney can also begin settlement discussions with your lender. These take the form of a reduction in interest rate and principal balance. Just ask Florida attorney, Dawn Rapoport how lenders are responding, now that the number of plaintiffs is dramatically increasing. 9. Your judge, by the way, may very likely order you to meet with a negotiator or mediator to settle your case. Most judges do not want their courtroom crowded by enraged homeowners engaging in mortgage war. This is also a time to get a better deal from your lender in exchange for dropping your lawsuit. In my opinion, this is the only way to get a decent loan modification. 10. If you live in a non-judicial state, and your lender attempts to foreclose before your trial, your attorney will have to obtain a TRO, or temporary restraining order from the judge. The judge will have to be convinced that you will be irreparably harmed by the foreclosure, and that you stand a good chance to win at trial. This is a very good time to have Marie McDonnell prepare a report for the judge regarding who owns your loan and note. You may find you already own your home free and clear and don't know it yet. 11. After obtaining the TRO, you will have to go back to court to obtain an injunction to stay the foreclosure pending outcome of your trial. The judge may demand that you post a bond to stop the bleeding for your lender. There is a new cottage industry sprouting in the bond business, and many companies are providing bonds using real estate as collateral. However, you cannot use the subject property as collateral. 12. You may receive several settlement offers pre-trial. Let your attorney determine which one is best for you. Or you may just roll the dice and take your war to the courtroom. 13. If you decide to go to court, your attorney may demand a portion of your settlement in exchange for litigating your case. This arrangement, called a contingency agreement, allows you to defer your considerable legal costs until the end of the trial. If you get nothin', your attorney gets nothin' as well. 14. If you don't like the outcome of your trial and there were process errors, you may decide to appeal. This may also require the posting of a bond. 15. Or you may prevail, and win your mortgage war. It's happening more and more every day. Here is my list of DON'Ts when waging your mortgage war: 1. Don't go pro per. There is nothing wrong with having an attorney write, file and serve a pro per complaint. This may save you money on the front end. After the complaint is served, your defendants, which should include all parties you have a beef with, such as your appraiser, broker, lender, title agent, servicer, trustee and beneficiary, have thirty days to respond. They generally respond with a "demur" which is an attack on your complaint. 2. Don't go to court by yourself. You will need an attorney to oppose the demur in writing and at a hearing. Don't' play Perry Mason and think you can waltz into court and get the result that you want. Judges do not like pro per litigants, as they are ill-trained in courtroom procedure and etiquette. You may score a sympathetic judge, but sooner or later the lender's attorneys will eat your alive. Don't have a fool for a client, or go into battle without a loaded weapon. 3. Don't believe that bankruptcy is the answer to your mortgage hell. Lender's attorneys will request a lift of stay in a New York minute. They often get it, and you lose your home. File a predatory claim first. You can always succumb to filing bankruptcy. So don't believe predatory attorneys who tell you that your only hope is to file bankruptcy without interviewing skilled predatory lending litigators. 4. Don't play any tricks with having others take a piece of your home and then they declare bankruptcy. Whoever invented this illegal practice, ain't doing homeowners a world of good. Especially when those homeowners are facing bankruptcy themselves and have already defrauded the court. 5. Don't put your home in the hands of loan mod companies. I get calls every day from foreclosed homeowners who were told their loans were being modified and there was nothing to worry about. If this has happened to you, sue the loan mod company, or file a malpractice complaint against your loan modification attorney. The only thing that will stop your foreclosure is a signed settlement from your lender or an order signed by a judge. If you are one of the few that has gotten a loan modification on your own, make sure it is good for you. If not, sue the bastards. 6. Don't deny your mortgage hell. If you are in delinquency or default, it is time to get moving. God helps those who get help themselves. I get many calls from homeowners whose foreclosure sale is imminent, and there isn't much that can be done. Preparing and filing a legal complaint is required before you can seek a temporary restraining order. All this takes time. Good attorneys are swamped with clients. Plan in advance to save your home. 7. Don't attempt a loan modification on your own. Attorneys tell me war stories that set my hair on file. How the banksters use every trick in the book to trap the homeowner into an unaffordable profile. This gives the lender even more ammunition to foreclose, especially because it has "cooperated" with the Obama plan. 8. Don't drive your auditor and attorney crazy with all hours phone calls. Yes, you have every right to panic, and the threat of losing the roof over your head is a terrifying possibility. But you must control your anxiety so that your helpers can do their jobs. Constant demands for reassurance and advice only makes them want to avoid contact with you. 9. Don't prematurely give up and turn in keys for cash. If you have been told by a reputable attorney that you have a strong case, persevere and fight on. The bank is not your mother or father. If your lender has violated laws, there are legal remedies at your disposal. But only if you use them. 10. Don't rush or second guess the process. Every case is different, depending on a unique set of facts. Even attorneys disagree on various approaches to a complaint. It takes time and effort to research the law and what causes of action and motions are working. Mortgage war is a marathon, not a sprint. 11. Don't get discouraged. You will have good days and bad days. It helps to meditate instead of awfulize. You will sleep better at night when you are sure you are following the best plan of attack for saving your home and waging war against your predatory lender and broker. I hope this helps answer some of your questions. I do try to call everyone who contacts me through our website Mortgage Wars. I am truly blessed to have chatted with so many smart, and justifiably, enraged homeowners in the throes of their mortgage wars. If you have a reaction to the book or have a question, feel free to e mail me. And give yourselves kudos for pioneering this war. It is only when the courts are overwhelmed with predatory lending lawsuits that the state and federal government may follow the steps of Ohio and force arrogant predatory lenders to prove that they have standing before filing a foreclosure action. So, in the spirit of celebrity chef Bobby Flay, Ohio, keep doing what you're doin'. And the rest of America? Ask yourself this: Are you ready for a mortgage throw down? |
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| | #53 (permalink) |
| Senior Member Join Date: Aug 2009 Location: Americas Hometown
Posts: 66
Nominated 0 Times in 0 Posts TOTW/F/M Award(s): 0 | Thank you SOOOOO much for this !!!! It has made my day!! This could be the start of something big. We all have to be proactive. Do not sit back and get walked all over. Fight! |
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| | #54 (permalink) |
| Senior Member Join Date: Feb 2009
Posts: 1,307
Nominated 0 Times in 0 Posts TOTW/F/M Award(s): 0 | Re: Article: Stop Foreclosure Wolves Great post Irish Gal! Keep em coming. I really got to pick up this book. Moe should start selling them and make a few bucks on them to help support this site. |
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| | #55 (permalink) |
| Senior Member Join Date: Dec 2008 Location: Paso Robles, California
Posts: 1,371
Nominated 0 Times in 0 Posts TOTW/F/M Award(s): 0 | Re: Article: Stop Foreclosure Wolves IG thank you, thank you, thank you!!! The above Attorney I have been saving to retain is Walter. After a couple meeting with him he is one of the good guys!! Can't wait to afford to turn him loose on my lender!! It was so nice to read an excellent post and confirm what I knew in my heart, Catherine |
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| | #56 (permalink) |
| Senior Member Join Date: Mar 2008
Posts: 642
Nominated 0 Times in 0 Posts TOTW/F/M Award(s): 0 | Re: Article: Stop Foreclosure Wolves Yes, good news indeed! I'm looking forward to reading about successfully won cases that are in the works now. THIS is exactly what the lenders have tried to sabotage since the mass pred lending was uncovered. They've enjoyed thus far their vicitms' poverty status, which cut off any recourse for them. Well, now it seems like some attorneys are remembering what they actually went to law school for, to fight for all Americans, not just corp and rich Americans. Well, maybe |
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| | #57 (permalink) |
| Senior Member Join Date: Jan 2008
Posts: 243
Nominated 0 Times in 0 Posts TOTW/F/M Award(s): 0 | Re: Article: Stop Foreclosure Wolves Awesome post! I want to see more publicity given to Iris Martin's book so that more people will go out and buy it and apply what they've learned from it to fight back. Maybe it will get the attention of our state and federal legislators as well, who for the most part have ignored what's happening under their very noses. I for one would like to see the U.S. Supreme Court take this very issue on, and maybe issue a ruling forbidding all predatory lenders from ever foreclosing on homeowners IF it could be shown that the mortgages in fact were designed to victimize the borrowers from the get-go, as mine was. Anybody know of any rumblings about maybe something like this going all the way to the top?? I sure would like to know...... Sally |
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| | #58 (permalink) | |
| Founder Join Date: Aug 2007 Location: Southern California
Posts: 16,887
Nominated 0 Times in 0 Posts TOTW/F/M Award(s): 0 | Re: Article: Stop Foreclosure Wolves Hello everyone! Please do not shoot the messenger. Most people know that I am a speaker of the truth and a born skeptic. I have just seen too much snake oil and BS in my life to not call things the way they are. Just to clue some members in, I started the loan audit industry years ago. Long before this book came out. Yes, I was the first audit company in the world in 2007. Mortgage Audit - Forensic Loan Document Review | LoanWorkout.org http://www.nytimes.com/2008/07/13/business/13mail.html Mortgage servicers sucking loans dry? | The Real Deal | New York Real Estate News I am sorry, but I am not going to promote a book that misleads homeowners and a lady that really has NO REAL WORLD experience. My attorney book sounds just like this Iris lady's and it seems like much of what she talks about is what I have written about for two years on my blogs, forums and books. Yes, some people can sue, but the MAJORITY of homeowners are screwed and have no legal recourse verse their lender. Any lawyer worth their salt and is not in this for money will tell you that. The banks have lobbied for years before this mortgage crisis to change and restrict new laws. To make it so when these loans went bad, homeowners could do little to sue. The Truth in Lending Act helps very little people (has to be primary residense, a refinance and within 3 years) now because most people cannot tender (refinance) a new loan under TILA because they are too underwater or late on their mortgage. This is the sad reality I have found. I know because I have owned and audit company and have done more audits and have spoken to more attorneys then I can count. There are no free and clear mortgages happening anywhere in the world. I have yet to locate anyone who has one or is even close to one. So, really for many homeowners, buying this is $15 a pop snake oil and then the hard sell on a $499 audit and $x,xxxx attorney comes in. Here is # 1 and 2 for her book and I am sure she is connected to her network in a monetary way. Meaning she probably gets money on audits and attorney referral which is illegal. Quote:
Who is she and why is this lady "qualified" to write this book? Can someone answer that one?
__________________ Moe Bedard Founder LoanSafe.org "America's #1 Home Loan Forum" LoanWorkout.org "America's # Loan Modification Blog" Get My FREE Loan Modification E-Book | Please donate to LoanSafe.org | Loan Modification Training For Attorneys | Rate Your Mortgage ServicerThe comments by me and the materials available at this web site are for informational purposes only and not for the purpose of providing legal advice. Most of the information you find here is easily available on the internet. You should contact your attorney to obtain advice with respect to any particular issue or problem. The opinions expressed at or through this site are the opinions of the individual author and may not reflect the opinions of the firm or any individual attorney. Please Read our Privacy Policy and Legal Disclaimer Here. | |
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| | #59 (permalink) | |
| Senior Member Join Date: Mar 2008
Posts: 642
Nominated 0 Times in 0 Posts TOTW/F/M Award(s): 0 | Re: Article: Stop Foreclosure Wolves Quote:
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| | #60 (permalink) |
| Senior Member Join Date: Jun 2009
Posts: 91
Nominated 0 Times in 0 Posts TOTW/F/M Award(s): 0 | Re: Article: Stop Foreclosure Wolves Thank you Moe. I am one that bought her book and there is good info in it. But, am I going to plop down $499 for an audit? No. And no one else should. Although I have not finished the book I think it has some good info in it, but it should be used for that info only and research our own loans. Thank you for bringing out what I was suspicious about when I read the "selling" info earlier. |
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| | #61 (permalink) | ||
| Founder Join Date: Aug 2007 Location: Southern California
Posts: 16,887
Nominated 0 Times in 0 Posts TOTW/F/M Award(s): 0 | Re: Article: Stop Foreclosure Wolves Hey thanks everyone. I truly am not here to throw her under the bus or anyone and I know Faith is just trying to find good info and share with other members. I have just seen soooooooooo many of these so called experts, books and blogs to make my head spin. This is ALL I do, 14 hours a day and there are countless mortgage wars books and blogs out there. I know everyone has got to make a buck these days and some do it a bit more cleverly than others. Iris Martin has great packaging, nice website, catchy fighting songs to get you motivated and a whole lot of what I call "false hope" to squeeze the first $15 out of people and then hopefully another $499 etc.... You look one to two layers deep under the surface and you find very little substance, background, history or evidence that this is the real deal. She never worked for a bank, a lawyer, done umpteen audits herself, sold mortgages etc. In my book (which is for attorneys) I go much deeper in the audit and the facts. Quote:
Quote:
__________________ Moe Bedard Founder LoanSafe.org "America's #1 Home Loan Forum" LoanWorkout.org "America's # Loan Modification Blog" Get My FREE Loan Modification E-Book | Please donate to LoanSafe.org | Loan Modification Training For Attorneys | Rate Your Mortgage ServicerThe comments by me and the materials available at this web site are for informational purposes only and not for the purpose of providing legal advice. Most of the information you find here is easily available on the internet. You should contact your attorney to obtain advice with respect to any particular issue or problem. The opinions expressed at or through this site are the opinions of the individual author and may not reflect the opinions of the firm or any individual attorney. Please Read our Privacy Policy and Legal Disclaimer Here. | ||
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| | #63 (permalink) |
| Senior Member Join Date: Aug 2009 Location: Americas Hometown
Posts: 66
Nominated 0 Times in 0 Posts TOTW/F/M Award(s): 0 | Re: Article: Stop Foreclosure Wolves Thanks Moe for bringing us down to reality !! What about the youtube video about EMC? from the ex employee? Also, I fall into those parenthesis you mentioned. |
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| | #64 (permalink) |
| California Attorney Join Date: Mar 2009 Location: Southern California
Posts: 73
Nominated 0 Times in 0 Posts TOTW/F/M Award(s): 0 | Re: Article: Stop Foreclosure Wolves Having been a practicing attorney in this field for several years I can attest that Moe was one of the pioneers with the auditing. Frankly, no one else was even talking about it when he was doing it. In today's climate, i have some advice regarding this in general. Getting an audit, then an attorney is the wrong order. If you think you have a case, find a lawyer. Then if the lawyer wants an audit, he/she can either do one, or refer you somewhere that may be able to do one. Personally, I have people bring me audits they paid large amounts of money for and then ask me to file the suit based on their audit. The perception that hiring a lawyer is sort of like a fast food drive through. Its not, and should not be treated as such. Another tip - if you are hiring lawyer, make sure he has experience in the area. You can generally look up his cases with the respective courts. For example, someone could look up me in Federal Court in the 9th circuit as well as the various county courts. They will see numerous filed cases and the various stages of each case. Seems to me this may be a good way to check in on who you may want to retain. I know its difficult these days to discern who is there to help and who is just trying to make a buck. Perhaps some of the best advice is the old addage of "if it sounds too good to be true...."
__________________ Nathan Fransen Attorney Fransen & Molinaro Law Firm (951) 520-9684 www.loanlaw.net Disclaimer: The comments by me are for informational purposes only and not for the purpose of providing legal advice. NO ATTORNEY-CLIENT RELATIONSHIP IS CREATED. You should contact your attorney to obtain advice with respect to any particular issue or problem. |
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| | #65 (permalink) |
| Senior Member Join Date: Jun 2009
Posts: 91
Nominated 0 Times in 0 Posts TOTW/F/M Award(s): 0 | Re: Article: Stop Foreclosure Wolves That's the best advice to keep in mind. There are many jacklels out there waiting to take advantage of people that are looking for help or that are in desparate mode. |
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| | #66 (permalink) |
| Senior Member Join Date: Dec 2008 Location: Paso Robles, California
Posts: 1,371
Nominated 0 Times in 0 Posts TOTW/F/M Award(s): 0 | Re: Article: Stop Foreclosure Wolves Wanted to say thank you too Moe for the reality check. With has horrible has my loan servicer is I feel the need for an Attorney who is well aware of the BS they do to homeowners, but my only expectation of the outcome honestly? A fair loan modification for the life of the loan. I've worked hard for this house and paid a lot in payments for it. Spending a small chunk of change compared to what I have put into it to save it seems fair to me since a good Attorney can beat them at their game and even in that it's a maybe. Faith in them and up above |
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| | #67 (permalink) |
| Senior Member Join Date: Mar 2009
Posts: 71
Nominated 0 Times in 0 Posts TOTW/F/M Award(s): 0 | Re: Article: Stop Foreclosure Wolves Hey everybody, I was just out looking for her book and couldn't find it at Borders or Barnes and Noble. I came home to see if I got the name wrong and read all of the recent posts. Sure glad I did! I did kind of wonder why a Psychologist was writing a book on mortgages and the meltdown. By the way, did anyone see the show on CNBC last night called "House of Cards"? What an eye opener! Sharona |
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| | #68 (permalink) |
| Senior Member Join Date: Mar 2008
Posts: 642
Nominated 0 Times in 0 Posts TOTW/F/M Award(s): 0 | Re: Article: Stop Foreclosure Wolves Ok, IMO she's a pop psychologist capitalizing off of the foreclosure crisis. Trying to make her mark during this crisis, w/ a book, etc. I tried to post a pic of her, but couldn't. Those of you who bought the book know what she looks like. If you haven't seen her, she's "cougarish" (if ya know what I mean AUTHOR ADVISES DUMP YOUR MORTGAGE, TRANSFORM YOURSELF By Bob Tourtellotte April 15, 2009 REUTERS LOS ANGELES - Iris Martin is not a banker, real estate lawyer or mortgage broker. She is a former psychotherapist specializing in transformative psychology. Martin, who worked in the White House with former U.S. president Bill Clinton and was a member of Pennsylvania Governor Ed Rendell's finance committee, said when she first read about the mortgage foreclosure crisis last year, she saw an opportunity for people to take charge of a bad situation and, by doing so, transform themselves. So Martin has written a book, "Mortgage Wars," which tells people how to fight back against predatory lenders looking to foreclose. She documents legal cases in which others have fought and won their homes' titles free and clear. Martin admits that not everybody can prevail against a lender, but she passionately argues that many people can if they know how. She spoke to Reuters about the book and how to cope with foreclosure. Q: How does a self-described former psychotherapist who spent 30 years specializing in transformational psychology get involved in the real estate market? A: "I was reading about what was happening to homeowners, and no one was screaming about the psychological damage being done ... I started talking to people who were going through foreclosure and the emotion was a combination of terror, self-hatred, anxiety. It's equal to divorce and can lead to a complete breakdown of the family, or worse, because it deals with people's basic need for safety and security." Q: You say, "when I started reading about," when was that? A: "A year ago, exactly. I went online and found a case, Andrews v. Chevy Chase Bank, which is in the book. The judge rescinded Andrews loan, and now they have their house free and clear ... Doing this can take the form of being current on a mortgage but knowing your payment will adjust upward, so you offensively attack your lender. Or, it can be stopping a foreclosure sale by filing a quiet title action if you don't get time for a loan modification." Q: What's the best psychological advice you can give to someone coping with a foreclosure? A: "Doing nothing is the worst possible psychological thing you can do ... So, you have to get off your butt and do two things: psychologically, calm down and understand there is absolutely light at end of tunnel and operationally, get in this process and take control of the situation." Q: Would you describe it as a self-help book? A: "Yes. There are a lot of books out about foreclosure, but none of them tell a homeowner how to keep your home, go to court, what the laws are and how the laws are on your side." Q: And how can this process "transform" people? Or does it truly transform them if they fight back? A: "Absolutely it does. We're talking about basic psychology. The biggest psychological investment you will make to a material object is to your home and when you combine that with your family, your entire identity is wrapped up in what happens when you go home." Q: So, it's transformative because it gives people a sense of self-empowerment? A: "It's taking on big brother. It's taking on authority figures. It's carving your way through a hopelessly confused legal system. It's claiming what is yours. It's your home." Q: The central question, which you mention, is that people need to first determine if their loan and mortgage securitization was done properly and legally. A: "I don't want to mislead people who have no predatory (lending) claim into believing they do ... There is a process to go through to find if you've been victimized. You need to get your loan audited, you need to go online and find (Securities and Exchange Commission) filings of your lender. |
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| | #71 (permalink) |
| Senior Member Join Date: Jun 2009
Posts: 49
Nominated 0 Times in 0 Posts TOTW/F/M Award(s): 0 | Re: Article: Stop Foreclosure Wolves Moe, you posted the following paragraph Yes, some people can sue, but the MAJORITY of homeowners are screwed and have no legal recourse verse their lender. Any lawyer worth their salt and is not in this for money will tell you that. The banks have lobbied for years before this mortgage crisis to change and restrict new laws. To make it so when these loans went bad, homeowners could do little to sue. The Truth in Lending Act helps very little people (has to be primary residense, a refinance and within 3 years) now because most people cannot tender (refinance) a new loan under TILA because they are too underwater or late on their mortgage. I my case the 3 years on a refi has expired so there is no recourse under TILA for getting a recision, correct? I am 3 years and 6 months after the closing of the refinance. With regards to not qualifying for a new loan, that would not have been as much a problem if the $140,000 I paid in interest over the 3 1/2 years was given back to me from Wachovia. I would not be underwater on the home and the loan amount would probably work with the lower loan if I used the $140,000 to get a lower loan amount. The other option is to buy a different house with the $140,000 to pay as a down payment. But I am not sure the recision would let me not get a new loan on the new house; that I could just walk away from the home with the payback of the interest paid. This would leave the home to the prior lender and owner to deal with. Can you clarify what the options are since others may not be past their 3 year limit to get a recision on a bad loan? I guess I am going to have to see if I can go after the Wachovia MAP mortagage modification since it is structured the same way the original Pick-a-payment variable rate loan from World Savings that has never had a recording of a deed change since World Savings was aquired by Wachovia which was aquired by Wells Faro; with impossible payment increase at the end of 5 years that resets the loan and caused all the buyers to default. Wachovia/Wells is heading for a major crisis again in 5 more years with the Wachovia Jumbo loans they are modifying under MAP that reset in 5 years. I would think this is a predatory mortgage practice worth a Class Action legal case. There is no way I could have qualified for this loan if I was new home buyer looking for a new home purchase. This is the same game they are forcing on those about to be foreclosed this year using MAP mortgage modifications, I believe this is an illegal practice of contracting with one party under duress. I am sure there are other ways this should be illegal other than violating TILA laws. Thanks, TNT101 |
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