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P.O. Box 5707, Riverside, CA 92517
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Loan modification scammers prey on underwater homeowners [Press Version]
By ft Editorial Staff • Aug 9th, 2010 • Category: Press Page
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Most homeowners who bought or refinanced after 2001 during the superheated years of the Millennium Boom are in precarious financial straits – their homes being underwater with negative equities and their family balance sheets in the red, insolvent. Since then the economy has crashed and home values plummeted; the low tier is probably near bottom and the high tier has begun its descent at a rapid pace.
To add insult to injury, many negative-equity owners are now falling victim to the operations of unscrupulous loan modification services who demand and collect advance fees then perform little to no services. The scam typically goes like this: a loan modification company charges an underwater homeowner an upfront fee to negotiate a modification of their existing loan with their lender. After the homeowner advances the funds, the individual receiving the funds does nothing beyond laugh all the way to the bank, having effectively stolen the fee from the homeowner.
In order to protect consumers, the California Department of Real Estate (DRE) recommends the following:
- when a lender records a notice of default (NOD), no loan modification service may collect any advance fees from the homeowner, even if they have a real estate license or are an attorney;
- when an NOD has not been recorded, a modification service may charge an advance fee if the homeowner enters into an agreement explaining the services and costs. However, the DRE must approve the agreement being used. Advance fees must be placed in a trust account and can only be disbursed when the services have been rendered.
In light of such schemes, the federal Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD) is funding $79 million in grants to HUD-approved housing counseling agencies and to state housing finance agencies around the country, an increase of $21 million from last year. $55 million will be allocated to comprehensive counseling, $14.5 million for supplemental funding for mortgage scams and mortgage modifications and $9.5 million for reverse mortgages.
These agencies provide homeowners with free counseling services covering how to:
- avoid foreclosure;
- avoid mortgage scams;
- purchase or rent a home;
- improve credit scores; and
- qualify for a reverse mortgage.
These types of scams had been a continuous problem in California until the legislature passed and the governor signed Senate Bill 94 in October 2009. The new law ended advance fees for loan modification services and requires consumers to be notified of the free services offered from nonprofit government-approved agencies.
California agents can help get this information out to distressed homeowners through FARM letters and other interaction with the neighborhoods they know or are involved in. These HUD-financed non-profit agencies perform modification services at no charge, in advance or otherwise. The Federal Housing Administration and the Hope Alliance can answer questions and help homeowners with loan modification services for no charge.
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Copyright © 2012 by the first tuesday Journal Online - firsttuesdayjournal.com;
P.O. Box 5707, Riverside, CA 92517
Readers are encouraged to reproduce and/or distribute this article.
Copyright © 2012 by first tuesday Realty Publications, Inc. Readers are encouraged to reprint or distribute this information with credit given to the first tuesday Journal Online — P.O. Box 5707, Riverside, CA 92517.
ft Editorial Staff is the writing staff comprised of legal editor Fred Crane and writer-editors Connor P. Wallmark, Giang Hoang-Burdette, Bradley Markano, Jeffery Marino, Mary Balash, Carrie B. Reyes and Sarah Cantino.
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