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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:
On a recent Friday morning, Wallace Farmer packed up and moved out of his Baltimore row house. After over a year of confusion and delays, JPMorgan Chase told Farmer that he made too much for a mortgage modification through the government's foreclosure relief program. That made no sense to Farmer -- he'd lost around $500 a month from two rental properties -- but he was done fighting. He recalls finally saying, "To hell with it."
Farmer is one of many homeowners who have given up on the government's mortgage modification program [3], which tries to help struggling homeowners by reducing their monthly payments. They say they're trapped in a bureaucratic nightmare, and even if they are offered a modification, it doesn't help enough. They stop sending checks and instead face foreclosure.
"I have been traumatized," says Farmer of his process trying to get help from Chase. "I couldn't get any closure. Nobody would tell me anything. They kept saying, 'It's in the mail. It's in the mail.'" Chase spokeswoman Christine Holevas says the bank was giving Farmer "assistance and advice about options" when he moved out.
Farmer's frustration at the delays and the runaround [4] are common among people trying to get help through the government program. More than three-quarters of the homeowners who responded to our questionnaire [5] said they did not trust their servicers to make a good-faith effort to evaluate them for a modification. The Treasury Department has acknowledged [6] that the stress and confusion of the process has caused some homeowners to give up.....
http://www.propublica.org/article/loan-mod-profiles-fed-up-giving-up
Based on the accounts of more than 350 homeowners, University of Arizona law professor Brent White recently wrote [7] that homeowners who make intentional decisions to stop paying their mortgages often feel "anxiety and hopelessness about their financial futures and anger at their lenders' and the governments' unwillingness to help."
When these homeowners take a look at the hard numbers of their finances, many say a modification isn't enough help. The delays can often push homeowners further into debt [8] because unpaid principal, interest and fees accrue during trial modifications. And nationally, one in five homeowners [9], like Farmer, are "underwater," meaning they owe more on their mortgages than their homes are worth. Farmer figured that, since he owes $101,000 more than the market value of his home, he'd essentially be renting for the next 20 years. "I cannot be burdened with that amount of negative equity," he says.
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