Foreclosure Bailout Mortgages

No items matching your keywords were found.

Foreclosure Bailout Mortgages
foreclosure bailout mortgages
foreclosure bailout mortgages
foreclosure bailout mortgages
foreclosure bailout mortgages

Foreclosure Scams

The increase in foreclosures has resulted, predictably, in a surge in the number of scamsters pretending to want to help homeowners in need. Here are some of the scams to be aware of:

  • The Bailout: The homeowner is led to believe that by signing over title to the house he or she can remain as a renter and buy the house back over time. The terms of the buyback are impossible to meet and the homeowner loses possession. The scam artist ends up with the property.
  • Equity Skimming: A "buyer" approaches you with an offer of help. He will pay off your mortgage but you must move out and deed the property to him. The buyer puts a tenant in the property and collects the rents. But he does not make any mortgage payments and allows the lender to foreclose.
  • The Bait and Switch: Homeowners are led to believe that they are signing documents to bring the mortgage current. Instead, they are actually turning over their ownership of the property to the scam artist.
  • High Powered Help:Companies promoted as heroes to homeowners charge large and excessive fees to save the property. They perform very little work and the home is lost anyway.

How do you avoid one of these scams?

First, never be pressured to sign a contract. Take your time. If it is such a good service they will offer it tomorrow, despite their pressure to sign today. Suggest that you must have your lawyer review it (even if you don't have a lawyer). If the person says a lawyer wouldn't understand this or wouldn't approve of it - you know you are dealing with a scam artist.

Second, never sign away your ownership to the property. People who put you in this position are only maneuvering to take away your home.

Third, never make a mortgage payment to anyone but the lender. If the scam artist suggests that they will pay the mortgage be assured that they will not.

Fourth, do not sign any document with blanks or lines that are not filled in. Scamsters will later add language to your detriment.

Finally, always seek the counsel of a good, local lawyer. Their job is to protect you from ever being scammed in these ways. And in this current environment there are plenty of scams to know about and avoid.

About the Author

Garrett Sutton, Esq. is a corporate attorney and is the author of “Own Your Own Corporation” and other titles in the Rich Dad Advisor series. His firm forms and maintains corporations, LLCs and other entities and may be reached at http://www.corporatedirect.com.

To get a FREE copy of Garrett's book, "What to Know Before you Incorporate" log onto http://www.corporatedirect.com

A sobering question on the Record foreclosures and FAnnie Freddie bailout?

Ok, the record foreclosures is mostly blamed on a subprime loan crisis....

Fannie and Freddie did not make subprime loans. Their loans according to their lending criteria went to people who were fully checked out and make enough to buy the houses they were buying, and they also offered none of those extremely low start rate mortgages starting at 1% rate etc....

So, if that is the case, why did Fannie and Freddie loan potfolios become problematic to the point where a bailout was needed?

Is there more to the causation of the foreclosure crisis than merely people getting bad loans????
strange how no one ever mentions the economy for some very strange reason.

lol

The economy is in a meltdown....and all sorts of indicators are pointing in the wrong direction and no one is saying that the economy is even partially responsible.

This whole thing is a huge ponzi scheme from I can tell. Gave loans to people that can't afford it and then the loans went many hands as guarantee securities. We shouldn't be bailing out irresponsible people they need to suffer and learn there lesson instead of being rewarded.

Mortgage Modification Plano - Shock Facts Revealed!

This entry was posted in Foreclosures and tagged , , , , , . Bookmark the permalink.

Comments are closed.