Struggling California homeowners warned against phony foreclosure 'audits' - CDPE

Struggling California homeowners warned against phony foreclosure 'audits' 

cbuck@sacbee.com

Published Tuesday, Feb. 23, 2010

State officials warned struggling homeowners Monday about a new variation on loan-modification scams: "forensic loan audits."

Under the dubious service, homeowners are enticed to pay upfront fees for an audit of their mortgage loan, purportedly to determine their lender's compliance with state and federal laws. It's pitched as a way homeowners gain leverage in the loan-modification process.

In reality, the audits do nothing to help those facing foreclosure, according to state Attorney General Jerry Brown's office.

"It's the latest phony foreclosure-relief 'service' by an industry that continues to be long on promises and short on results," said attorney general spokesman Evan Westrup. "It's another way to get homeowners in distress to pay for services that ultimately aren't helping or providing the relief they need."

Brown's office partnered with the state Department of Real Estate and the State Bar in the warning.

Real Estate Department spokesman Tom Pool said ads offering "forensic loan audits" to distressed homeowners have appeared on TV, radio and in print. Last year, the Real Estate Department investigated more than 2,000 instances of loan-modification scams. Of those, nearly 350 individuals and businesses were ordered to halt illegal activity, according to the attorney general's office.

If you've been scammed, contact the attorney general's office at (800) 952-5225. You can also file a complaint online at: www.ag.ca.gov/consumers.php. or www.dre.ca.gov. For more information on loan-modification fraud, visit www.ag.ca.gov/loanmod.

Here's additional advice from the attorney general's office:

• Don't pay up-front fees. By law, foreclosure consultants are prohibited from collecting money in advance of providing services.

• Don't ignore letters from your lender or loan servicer.

• Don't transfer title or sell your house to a "foreclosure rescuer." This scam convinces homeowners they can stay in their home as renters and repurchase the home later. It also could be part of a fraudulent bankruptcy filing. A scammer can evict you and take your home.

• Don't make mortgage payments to anyone except your lender or loan servicer. Fraudulent consultants often keep the money for themselves.

• Never sign a document without reading it. Homeowners have unknowingly signed documents that transferred their home ownership to someone intent on evicting them.

© Copyright The Sacramento Bee. All rights reserved.

 

This is a great article that the Sacramento Bee recently published. We feel that education is key in this market with so many scams going on out there. We hope that you found this article useful.

 
Jennifer & Gary Ricco CDPE, PSC
Keller Williams VIP Properties
25124 Springfield Court Suite 100
Valencia, Ca 91355
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