Tag Archives: foreclosure help

Beware of Foreclosure Scams

  • A company/person asks for a fee in advance to work with your lender to modify, refinance or reinstate your mortgage. They may pocket your money and do nothing to help you save your home from foreclosure.
  • A company/person guarantees they can stop a foreclosure or get your loan modified. NO ONE can make this guarantee to stop foreclosure or modify your loan. Legitimate, trustworthy HUD-approved counseling agencies can assist you with options and facilitate communication with your mortgage company.
  • A company/person advises you to stop paying your mortgage company and pay them instead. Despite what a scammer will tell you, you should never send a mortgage payment to anyone other than your mortgage lender. If you have trouble making your monthly payment, contact your mortgage lender.
  • A company pressures you to sign over the deed to your home or sign any paperwork that you haven’t read or you don’t fully understand. A legitimate housing counselor should not and will not pressure you to sign a document of any kind.
  • A company claims to offer “government-approved” or “official government” loan modifications. These may be scam artists pretending to be legitimate organizations approved by, or affiliated with the government. Check to be sure by contacting your mortgage lender directly  to learn more about government programs for which you may qualify.
  • A company/person you don’t know asks you to release personal financial information. Check to be sure you are speaking with a legitimate company/person by contacting your mortgage lender directly
  • If you are facing foreclosure go online to the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development Click Here

    Need Help?
    Call John J. O’Dell
    Real Estate Broker
    530-263-1091

    Why Not Walk Away From My House?

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    I wrote earlier that we should not walk away from your house if you are upside down on your mortgage. I’ve changed my mind. If you lost your job or had a great reduction in income for whatever reason, the banks don’t seem to care. I’ve read and seen were they’ll stall until you have used up your savings, made the very last payment you can and than foreclose on your home. 

     Here’s a portion of a great article on the subject of walking away from your home that appeared in the SF Chronicle:

    “Go ahead. Break the chains. Stop paying on your mortgage if you owe more than the house is worth. And most important: Don’t feel guilty about it. Don’t think you’re doing something morally wrong.

    That’s the incendiary core message of a new academic paper by Brent T. White, a University of Arizona law school professor, titled “Underwater and Not Walking Away: Shame, Fear and the Social Management of the Housing Crisis.”

    White argues that far more of the estimated 15 million American homeowners who are underwater on their mortgages should stiff their lenders and take a hike.

    Doing so, he suggests, could save some of them hundreds of thousands of dollars that they “have no reasonable prospect of recouping” in the years ahead. Plus the penalties are nowhere near as painful or long-lasting as they might assume.

    “Homeowners should be walking away in droves,” according to White. “But they aren’t. And it’s not because the financial costs of foreclosure outweigh the benefits.” Sure, credit scores get whacked when you walk away, he acknowledges. But as long as you stay current with other creditors, “one can have a good credit rating again – meaning above 660 – within two years after a foreclosure.” 

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    “How does White’s 52-page manifesto go over with mortgage lenders? Predictably, not well. Officials at Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac – investors who fund the bulk of all new mortgages in the country – disputed White’s characterization of how quickly after foreclosure a walkaway borrower can obtain a new loan. It’s not three years, they said, it’s a minimum of five years, absent extenuating circumstances such as medical or employment problems that caused the foreclosure.”

    Remember, before you walk away from your home, check with your accountant and or a tax attorney.

    This is a great article, read the rest at San Francisco Gate

    So what do you think readers?

    Where to Get Honest Foreclosure Help

     

    George Adamson the man Who Lived With the Lions  See link at bottom of page to go Adamson's home page
    George Adamson the man Who Lived With the Lions See link at bottom of page to go Adamson's home page
     Here are places to get help if you or a friend are facing foreclosure.  There are so many scams out there now that it can be difficult to find legitimate help. Be careful of paying money up front in order to get help and some of the Internet advertising that says they guarantee that they can stop your foreclosure.

    Here’s a list of programs that are either operated by the U.S. government or have its seal of approval:

    • Call (888) 995-HOPE, the Homeowner’s HOPE Hotline to reach a nonprofit, HUD-approved counselor through HOPE NOW, a cooperative effort of mortgage counselors and lenders to assist homeowners.
    • The Controller of the Currency’s consumer information site for banking-related questions is www.helpwithmybank.gov

    Source: Controller of the Currency (04/21/2009)

    By the way, check out this site of George Adamson, The man who lived with the lions: