Foreclosure Rescue Scams
Just Say No!
|
BEWARE!
If you have fallen behind on your mortgage or you are going through foreclosure, you may hear from someone offering
to save your home or fix your credit.
Watch out! This may be a scam!
You may be giving away your home without even knowing it.
Don’t sign anything until you can talk to a lawyer or reliable housing counselor.
|
You don’t have to fall prey to a scammer. You have other possible choices, including:
- Reinstatement (or negotiating another type of "workout" plan with your lender)
- Refinancing
- Chapter 13 bankruptcy
- Selling your home
You can get help with sorting out your options by asking for help from a
HUD-Approved or Certified Housing Counselor. For more details on these options, see:
Can I Save My Home from Foreclosure?
Another choice that you may face is one offered by a “rescue scammer”. No matter how good this sounds, just say NO!
|
How do I know who is trying to help and who is trying to cheat me? |
Here is how these scam artists work. A scammer will call you, visit you at home, send you an e-mail, or run an ad
in a newspaper or on the internet. The scammer will offer you a “great deal” to save your home. Typically, he will
tell you that he will pay off your loan for you, rent your home back to you for a few months, and then sell it back to
you later when you can afford it. Other “rescue scams” may work a little differently. But, in every case, you end up
losing your home and all of your “equity” to the scammer.
Look out for these danger signs
- The scammer urges you to sign papers without giving you the chance to read and understand them.
- The scammer gets you to sign blank documents, to be filled in later.
- The scammer promises you things that are not included in the written agreements.
- The scammer charges you large fees. (Read the papers and make sure you understand the costs!)
- The scammer does not give you written copies of your agreements.
- The scammer may offer to help you find an “investor” to buy and then lease your home back to you.
- The scammer promises to improve your credit.
- The scammer promises you solutions that seem too good to be true.
Trust your instincts. There are no quick, easy fixes. Contact a trustworthy advisor before giving in to tempting,
but false, promises.
|
Here’s how a typical rescue scam works |
A scam artist contacts you and offers to rescue you from foreclosure and to save your home. He promises to pay off
your mortgage or repair your credit. He has you sign some papers. You agree to pay him rent for 12 months. After that,
he will give you the chance to buy your home back from him. Then during the 12 months he evicts you. Or he sells your
home to a third party. He changes his mind about selling back to you. Or at the end of the 12 months (or 6 months),
you aren’t able to refinance and he keeps your home.
In the meantime, the scammer now owns your home and whatever “equity” you had. Say your home was worth $150,000 and
you still owe the bank $50,000. Your “equity” was $100,000. If you had sold your home for $150,000, you would still
have $100,000 after paying off your $50,000 loan. Even if the lender had foreclosed and sold it for a lower price,
you would probably get some of your “equity” back. But, if you fell for the rescue scam, you are left with NO home
and NO money. The scammer stripped your “equity” away from you.
If you are in trouble on your mortgage, you’re in a difficult spot. You are probably feeling scared. You may want to
keep your home at all costs. You may be worrying about where you will live if you lose your home. Rescue scam artists
know how desperate you are feeling. They are trying to prey upon you when you are feeling the most upset and helpless.
No matter how bad your situation seems, don’t fall for a rescue scam! You have other choices.
Contact a
Certified Housing Counselor now!
Get reliable advice before doing anything that may leave you worse off than you already are.
More information: Foreclosure Prevention Toolkit
|
Notice
© Pine Tree
Legal Assistance
June 2008
Sometimes the laws
change. We cannot promise that this information is always
up-to-date and correct. If the date above is not this year,
call us to see if there is an update.
We provide this
information as a public service. It is not legal advice.
By sending you this information, we are not acting as your lawyer.
Always consult a lawyer, if you can, before taking legal action.
Please review our full terms-of-use agreement
|
Help us make our site better.
Fill out our questionnaire.
It won't take long.
Click here.
Sorry, but we cannot
respond to website requests for help. If you believe
you have a legal problem we can help you with,
call us.
|
|