Foreclosure
Fraud
Mid America Financial Investment
Delores
Eicher, left, and Ivan Eicher were shocked to learn that the
loan documents they signed when they refinanced their home,
were actually a grant deed giving ownership of their home
to Mid America Financial Investment Inc.
A
court ruling saved them, but the Eicher's say too late.
(Nati
Harnik, Associated Press)

Some
states using legal measures
to protect homeowners
By
Josh Funk
Associated Press
Feb. 4, 2007
OMAHA,
Neb. — After Ivan Eicher lost his job, he and his wife
Delores fell several months behind on their house payments.
Facing foreclosure, they accepted an offer from a company
that promised to help them keep the home where they'd lived
for more than 20 years.
Without
realizing what they were doing, the couple ended up surrendering
ownership of their home.
"It
was just a really nice song and dance," Delores Eicher
said.
The
Eichers are among the thousands of people who fall each year
for offers that promise to help them avoid foreclosure but
that leave them with none of the equity they had built up
in their property. Their situation matches one of the three
common models of foreclosure fraud the National Consumer Law
Center has described in a report on the growing problem.
The number of foreclosures reported nationwide soared 42 percent
in 2006 to 1.26 million, according to RealtyTrac, an Irvine,
Calif., company that tracks foreclosures.
That
creates opportunities for more foreclosure fraud, although
the exact number of cases is difficult to determine because
they are generally lumped in with other kinds of fraud in
crime reports.
(WJFA Note: Most fraud victims report that
their efforts to get justice are rebuked or ignored, so no
report is ever made, thereby creating a false record of what
is happening because no one took a report.)
The
Eichers thought they were taking out a $1,700 loan to help
them pay the roughly $4,700 in back payments they owed on
their mortgage. They learned too late they had signed their
house over to Mid-America Financial Investment Corp. and agreed
to lease their home from Mid-America when they accepted that
loan.
Although the couple no longer owned their home, the mortgage
remained in their names, so they made their $554 payments
on the loan through Mid-America, along with monthly fees of
at least $100.
Elizabeth Renuart, a staff attorney at the National Consumer
Law Center who co-authored the report on foreclosure fraud,
said such schemes are popular in areas of the country where
home values have soared, but any homeowner who has been paying
down a mortgage for many years will have significant equity
and can become a target.
A second scheme described in the report involves consultants
charging high fees to help homeowners out of trouble but never
delivering the promised services. A third involves an agreement
where a homeowner knowingly signs over their home and agrees
to buy it back over time, but the terms of the agreement make
it nearly impossible for the homeowner to succeed.
The Eichers became part of a lawsuit against Mid-America in
2001. They eventually won the title to their home back after
the Nebraska Supreme Court ruled in 2005 that Mid-America
had defrauded them and 12 other homeowners in the Omaha area.
Scott Bloemer and Elaina Hollingshead, who operate Mid-America,
did not respond to The Associated Press' requests for comment.
Bloemer and Hollingshead defended their business practices
in court and argued that the paperwork the Eichers and others
signed spelled out what was involved in the deals. But the
courts ruled that Bloemer's and Hollingshead's testimony wasn't
credible.
Renuart
said foreclosure rescue agreements can be difficult to decipher — even
for an attorney.
"It's
hard to make heads or tails of these agreements," she
said.
That's one reason why at least eight states have adopted laws
designed to help protect consumers from the questionable practices
some foreclosure consultants use. Nebraska's Legislature is
considering adopting such legislation this year.
The laws vary, but generally all require the terms of these
agreements to be spelled out in writing and offer homeowners
a chance to cancel the agreements within a few days of signing
them.
Nebraska's proposed law is based on a Colorado law passed
last year.
For most of 2006, Colorado was the state with the highest
residential foreclosure rate in the nation, according to RealtyTrac.
Colorado had one new foreclosure filing for every 376 households
in December.
The Eichers and a dozen other homeowners who sued said they
never had a chance to read the Mid-America loan documents
before signing them because Bloemer and Hollingshead rushed
them through the process.
One
of the other people who successfully sued Mid-America, Steven
Starman, said he realizes now he should have read the documents
carefully instead of relying on oral explanations.
"I
made decisions based on what I was told," Starman said.
"They tell you what you want to hear."
Renuart
and groups that track foreclosures worry that many more Americans
could fall victim to fraud because the number of adjustable-rate
and interest-only mortgages taken out in recent years will
likely contribute to a jump in the number of foreclosures
when loan payments adjust upward.
RealtyTrac
said 109,652 homes across the nation entered some stage of
foreclosure in December, a nearly 9 percent drop from the
previous month but an increase of 35 percent from December
2005. The company reported a national foreclosure rate of
one new foreclosure filing for every 1,055 U.S. households.
The
Center for Responsible Lending issued a report in December
predicting 2.2 million foreclosures in the coming years among
homeowners with so-called subprime loans, which are loans
offered at rates higher than the prime rate and that are aimed
at people with poor credit ratings.
The
Eichers are now trying to sell their home because during four
years of litigation, the house developed a roof leak they
couldn't afford to fix. Their insurance company refused to
pay for the repairs after the lawsuit was settled, partly
because it had already paid Bloemer $1,080 to repair the roof,
which was never done.
The
Eichers did receive $1,080 as a result of the lawsuit, but
Delores Eicher estimates that the needed repairs might cost
more than $30,000 now. The couple moved out of their home
in November and hope someone will buy it before March, so
they can pay off the mortgage and possibly other debts as
part of a personal bankruptcy.
"We
just want to sell the house and get everything cleared," Eicher
said.
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