- follow:
- followers:908
Mary M. LeDoux Lake Charles, LASaxon reduced my interest and increased my principle by over $10,000. I had to agree to the "Modification" or lose my ... Read more |
Lloyd D Knoxville TnOOPS the bank could've been making that rent money for 2 years,instead they make me lose everythig ecept my ... Read more |
Jason L. - TNI never really thought of myself as anyone other than someone who would make his monthly mortgage payments until the ... Read more |
Joy Carter Minor, Moss Point, MSEarly January 2011, I received a call that my home was being entered by people without my permission. The ... Read more |
Rocky & Brenda C. Cave Creek ArizonaAs we seek legal counsel (we're pleading for Terry Goddard's help – he only stepped down from his AG post ... Read more |
Michael H. Quay Pahoa, HII am still in shock and it seems like a nightmare! ONLY THREE PAYMENTS behind and I also had ... Read more |
Andrea Allan 254 Lyons Plains Rd. Weston, CT.I've lost my business, my home, and am in debt. Also PHH sent in negative 9 times to Experian ... Read more |
Larry Bradshaw, Fort Myers, FloridaThis appears to be clear and convincing evidence of a “conspiracy to commit fraud” (cover up), a fraudulent act ... Read more |
Melissa Ramont, La Mesa, CAOk, so my situation is not as devastating as some of the other stories I've seen and heard. But it ... Read more |
Bob Cape Coral, FLI called and complained and a week later I had keys sent to me for the new locks. They ... Read more |
Ron B. - PennThe whole 8 months of this was just a circus of lost papers, noone at BAC working from the ... Read more |
Last 2 tweets from shamethebanks:
Bea Garwood has been bracing for foreclosure since May, but she says she's been told three times to expect a sheriff's sale in the next month and it still hasn't happened.
"We really at this point do not know where we are in the process," said Garwood, who lives in Pinckney, Mich. with her husband. "We have no clue. We haven't even heard from Chase bank in three weeks."
The Garwoods may have had a lucky spin in the game that industry analyst Sean O'Toole calls "Foreclosure Roulette."
Banks don't want to recognize losses by having to put homes on the market at foreclosure-sale prices, but they don't want to encourage borrowers to quit making payments either, so, O'Toole believes, they randomly foreclose on some people to prevent widespread "moral hazard." The rest are left hanging with the help of the government's "extend and pretend" approach to the collapse of the housing bubble.
"We just don't have the political appetite to bail homeowners out," said O'Toole, CEO of ForeclosureRadar.com. "On the other hand, we don't have the political appetite to kick them out."
Last year the Garwoods tried to modify the mortgage on their Pinckney, Mich. home under the Obama administration's Home Affordable Modification Program, which is supposed to put eligible borrowers into a three-month trial period before making the modification "permanent" for five years. The Garwoods' trial period dragged on for nine months before they received a letter of rejection in March. They've been waiting anxiously since then for the day they will finally lose their house.
It may be a while. The average foreclosure now takes 469 days, according to Lender Processing Services, whereas it took 319 days at the beginning of 2009. Many industry analysts say that is due to the Troubled Asset Relief Program, HAMP, and federal accounting-rule changes....
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2010/09/01/foreclosure-roulette-bank_n_699672.html
| < Prev | Next > |
|---|