Housing Scams & How To Find Real Foreclosure Help

backofhouse

The housing rescue packages created by the Obama administration is offering up $75 billion to help troubled homeowners to get new or refinanced loans, and that’s drawing a lot of attention. Unfortunately the plan  has caught the eyes of scam artists who are looking to prey on those who are most vulnerable at this time. 

Mortgage rescue scams have hit an all time high even though the number of mortgages being issued have declined. The FBI is currently investigating some 2,000 cases of fraud. That’s up 400% from just five years ago.

The FTC has also been hard at work reviewing the online & print advertising of companies offering loan modification or foreclosure services.  They have uncovered over 70 companies running suspicious ads.  The FTC currently has 5 civil cases filed including one against a company who spent over 9 millions dollars on advertising in one year alone. 

According to FTC Chairmann Jon Leibowitz, “These companies are kicking people when they’re down, charging enormous upfront fees and sabotaging homeowners who could be getting help for free. These companies are giving people false hope. They are shameless, as well as opportunistic.”

If you are a troubled homeowner CNN money’s contributer Lee Christie suggests that you ask these five questions before hiring anyone.

How much does the service cost? “You should never pay a nickel for foreclosure-prevention counseling,” said Austin King, a spokesman for the community organizer Acorn. “The companies that charge for this service are profit driven, not mission driven, and they can charge up to a couple of thousand dollars for doing an hour’s work.”

Organizations like Acorn, which has offered foreclosure counseling for 20 years, provide expert, HUD-certified caseworkers at no charge to homeowners. They’re paid with funds from the government, private foundations and lenders

How long has the organization performed foreclosure-prevention counseling? Longer, of course, is better. Counselors should be fully up to speed on how to handle the particular problems of their clients. Each case may be unique, but experienced counselors can apply what they’ve learned to other particular cases.

Not every organization has been handling foreclosure problems as long as Acorn, but if they just got into the field a few months ago, they may not yet be fully up to speed.

Does the counselor have a direct pipeline your servicer’s mortgage-modification department? Many foreclosure counselors have established working relationships with the mortgage-mitigation specialists at the lenders. These are the people authorized to offer workouts to defaulting mortgage borrowers.

If counselors are already talking to a servicer several times a week, they know what the servicer requires and what workouts are likely to be offered. Counselors also may have established personal relationships that they can leverage to negotiate on your behalf.

Of course, almost any firm trying to win your business will say they have a direct contact. So get specific. Ask if they have a written agreement with your servicer; many have put pledges to work with foreclosure counselors down on paper. You can also ask if they work with a specific person at the servicer, someone who would have the authority to make decisions on your account.

Do they have an “in” with a decision maker who can override the mortgage mitigation department?Some foreclosure counselors have a servicer’s VP for mortgage mitigation on speed dial. If they can’t get a desired outcome from the people they usually deal with, they can call the higher-ups and sometimes get them to override decisions.

Does the counselor stay with you every step of the way? Often once a client is assigned a caseworker, that person sticks with the borrower throughout the foreclosure prevention process.

That’s important. One of the problems that defaulting borrowers have in dealing directly with lenders is they tend to get bounced around from one mortgage mitigation specialist to the next. Filtering everything through a single counselor can save time, which is often in short supply for at-risk borrowers.

Keep in mind that even with the right counselor on your side, there are no guarantees for success.

“Not everyone should stay in the house,” said Marietta Rodriguez, director of National Home Ownership Programs for the community organizer NeighborWorks America.

Counselors, according to her, must ask themselves whether it is in the best financial interest of the borrower to hang on to a home. In some cases, people have to choose “the least amount of collateral damage,” she said. That can mean borrowers stop trying to keep homes they simply can’t afford under any viable plan and leaving homeownership behind

Published in:  on April 8, 2009 at 11:36 PM Comments (1)

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  1. Thanks for the tips. There are some good lessons learned.


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