Scams

October 16, 2007

Palm Springs Real Estate News

Lookout for scams!  Scammers seem to be targeting homeowners.  This is especially true for people struggling with mortgage payments.  An increasing amount of people are struggling with an increasing mortgage payment.  So, scammers come out promising to resolve all of their mortgage issues.  As it turns out, these scammers are creating so many more problems for homeowners.  I want you to beware of the potential fraud.  I’m in the business of helping people and it really hits a sore spot with me when I hear about the frauds.  Please beware of anyone you hire to assist you.  This goes for anyone you do business with.  Remember these simple tips before you hire anyone:

1.  Check for licensing.  The state of California offers a listing and status of all licensed contractors.  This includes, real estate agents, all types of contractors and even health care providers.  See the State of California Licenses

2.  Check references.  Ask for references.  Contact several references and be sure to get their experiences.  Make sure you go the extra step and actually contact previous clients.

3.  Check companies credentials by visiting our local Better Business Bureau.  

The following article is an article by Les Christy of CNNMoney.  It is packed full of good information.  

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Foreclosure fallout:
Rescue scams

Scammers are taking advantage of mortgage holders at their most vulnerable – when they’re about to lose their homes.
By Les Christie, CNNMoney.com staff writer


August 24 2007: 3:18 PM EDT
NEW YORK (CNNMoney.com) — Jennifer Falke and her family had been in their Columbus, Ohio, home for nearly 12 years when they hit a rough patch in 2006. Falke was out of work and fell behind on the mortgage.
Falke said a flood of mailings and flyers then arrived at her door promising help from foreclosure rescue companies claiming to act as an intermediary between her and her lender to keep her from losing her home.
According to Falke, the company she contacted, Foreclosure Assistance Solutions (FAS), simply took her money and did nothing for her. And by delaying a workout with her lender, it made getting back on track harder and more expensive.
“I called the company, thinking it was the best thing I could do,” she said. “They told me they could help. But one of the first things they said was, ‘Don’t call your mortgage company. If you do they’ll tack on fees.’”
For a $1,200 payment, according to Falke, FAS claimed it would handle everything, including calls to the lender, but she charges it did nothing.
“Every time I got enough together to pay off the arrears, they would say the amount had increased.” Falke received an income tax refund that she wanted to put toward a payment. But according to her, FAS said her mortgage company said it wasn’t enough.
“Then they stopped answering my calls. I would leave a message every day,” Falke said. “One day, they told me, ‘We’re dropping your case’ and hung up on me.”
Only then did she call her lender. Falke found out the payoff was less than what FAS had told her – $2,600 instead of $3,500. And then she learned that the bank had dealt with many cases like hers.
“To prey on people at one of the most vulnerable points in their lives is despicable,” said Ohio Attorney General Mark Dann, who filed suit earlier this month against six foreclosure rescue companies, including FAS, who he claims snared Ohio residents in their webs.
FAS did not return a phone message asking for comment.
As foreclosure rates rise, evidence from other parts of the country indicates the number of rescue scams may be increasing. According to Alison Preszler, a spokeswoman for the Council of Better Business Bureaus, the BBB for Clearwater, Florida, received 508 complaints about local foreclosure rescue companies in the past three years with 322 coming just within the last 12 months.
Charlotte, North Carolina’s BBB office reported last year that two foreclosure rescue companies were operating; today the count is 15 and six have already had legal actions taken against them. Twenty-one new companies began operations this year in Cleveland.
According to Dann, the most common form of foreclosure rescue scam in Ohio is like the one Falke claims was used on her. A scammer takes an up-front fee, usually $1,000 or more, to solve the victim’s foreclosure problems, and then does little or nothing, pocketing the money.
Dann said victims are often low-income minorities, the elderly or immigrants in poor neighborhoods, but anyone can be targeted.
The most vulnerable members of society often make the easiest marks. A client of Jessica Attie of South Brooklyn Legal Services, was a mentally ill woman with a $60,000 mortgage balance that carried an interest rate of more than 10 percent. She was falling behind on payments, had few other resources and wanted to reduce her payments.
Attie said a scam artist convinced her client to sign over her title while he cleared up the arrears. She could rent the home for six months, and then he would sell it back to her. Instead, according to Attie, the scammer resold the house and absconded with more than $400,000.
Michael Sichenzia knows mortgage rescue scams from the inside out; in 2002, he was convicted and served hard time for mortgage fraud at the Attica Correctional Facility in New York State. Today he’s an investigator for the Deerfield Beach, Florida law firm, Glinn Somera & Silva and chief operating officer of Dynamic Consulting Services, specializing in financial fraud.
According to Sichenzia, the most common foreclosure rescue scam has always been “equity stripping.”
“The scammer promises to save the home by taking title,” he said, “renting it to the owner and selling it back sometime later. Instead, he strips the equity by charging excessive fees, doing phony renovations and not making the mortgage payments.”
Sometimes the home owner is fully aware that the title is changing hands, counting on the promise to be able to redeem it later. But other times the scammer tricks the owner.
“The signing over of title is buried in an avalanche of paperwork or in the language of the contracts,” said Sichenzia.
Duane Legate, who runs Housebuyernetwork.com, which arranges short sales for homeowners in trouble and also offers foreclosure prevention advice, said, “There’s only a handful of legitimate companies out there, ones that really do try to help clients. The rest are just looking for a quick payoff.”
According to Legate, the scammers are multiplying so rapidly that there’s even a company that sells foreclosure rescue Web sites, complete with testimonials from smiling, satisfied clients.
Here are some of the tactics that scammers are known to use:

  • Saturation marketing: They learn of mortgage delinquencies through published reports and proceed to bombard the owners with phone calls, flyers and posters.
  • Exploiting trust: Scammers build trust by acting sympathetic and solicitous; many owners can’t believe they would lie to their faces.
  • Isolating owners: Scammers assure victims that they’ll handle everything. They tell them not to call their lenders nor seek legal advice.
  • Outright fraud: Scammers have homeowners sign blank papers and fill them in afterward or they sneak the paperwork through without telling victims what they’re signing.
  • Affinity marketing: Especially among minorities and sometimes evangelical church congregations, a scammer builds trust based on a common ethnicity or religion.

According to Dann, you should never trust anyone who has contacted you, unsolicited, offering to help. “There are no boundaries to entry for any entrepreneurial criminal to get into these scams.”
The best thing to do is to call your lender and try to work out a plan. If in doubt, get in touch with your state attorney general’s office. It can put you in touch with a Housing and Urban Development-approved free credit counseling service that will do you a lot more good than fee-based rescue services.
Jennifer Falke was able to work out a settlement with her bank. She’s back to work and current with her mortgage payments, but she is out the $1,200 she paid to FAS.

“The ingenuity of people who would rather cheat than work hard is unending,” said Dann. 

 If you would like more information the our local cities or the local real estate market, please contact Nancy Hankin at Nancy@NancyHankin.com. ”In the people business since 1965″


Desert Happenings

October 12, 2007

Palm Springs and the Coachella ValleyWhat happens when you think of the words: Retirement, Vacation Home, Leisure, Fun and Relocation? For many, these words are synonymous with moving to the beautiful Palm Springs California Desert, known as the Coachella Valley. Palm Springs represents only one of the cities in the desert. There are a total of nine cities which form the Coachella Valley. The other cities which make up this area are: Palm Desert, Desert Hot Springs, Cathedral City, Rancho Mirage, Indian Wells, La Quinta, Indio and Coachella. Each with its own personality!

To this day, many still refer to the desert as Palm Springs because it’s been known worldwide as “The Land of the Stars and Presidents.” Many streets are named after Presidents, Movie Stars, Singers and Dancers.  It is not uncommon to see celebrities enjoying a cup of coffee, a meal, or shopping in the desert with their friends and families. The Coachella Valley has also greatly benefited by their generosity.

Fund raising events, celebrity golf tournaments, and gala affairs contribute handsomely to many of the non-profit organizations in the Valley. A few of these are:  The Betty Ford Treatment Center for alcohol and drug abuse, which has helped many who could not afford treatment on their own; the Barbara Sinatra Children’s Center for Abused Kids which has never turned away a child because they could not afford counseling; the Desert Aids Project which has provided medicine, counseling and shelter to those in need; and Shelter from The Storm which has provided shelter and counseling to abused mothers and their children over the years. All of this is because of the generosity of the affluent who live in this area and give back to this area as well. Walter Annenberg has been one of the largest contributors, and his contribution to this area has help to make this one of the best areas in the country for medical attention.

In 1995 there were approximately 200,000 people living in this land of Paradise. In 2006 the population had grown to over 330,00, and it is expected to double that figure by 2010.  One of the attractions to the desert, in addition to enjoying summer all winter long, is the deserts proximity to other areas.

Residents and visitors can be skiing in just 1.5 hours from the desert floor in the Big Bear Mountains. Or they can visit Lake Arrowhead, a beautiful village, oftentimes referred as “The Alps of Southern California,” which is nestled in the San Bernardino Mountains. The beautiful Pacific Ocean and its many well-known towns that hug the coastal line are only a two hour drive from the desert. Las Vegas and Phoenix are also a four hour drive from the desert.

The desert offers “Big City” amenities in a “Small City” atmosphere. Many of those who have moved to this “land of paradise,” have moved here to escape the smog and the traffic which is so much a part of Los Angeles, Orange and San Diego counties. Many “snowbirds,” from all over the United States, Canada and Europe have also discovered the desert, and they make this their “winter home.”  In spite of the population doubling at this time, the cities and the County of Riverside have worked diligently to be a “step ahead” of the infrastructure, to ensure residents of ample roads and highways, so as not to create the traffic jams so prevalent in other areas of California.

 Population Increase in 2006 as compared to 2000: 

  • Cathedral City             50,632             increased by 18.7%
  • Coachella                    30,764             increased by 35.4%
  • Desert Hot Springs      19,386             increased by 16.9%
  • Indian Wells                  4,781             increased by 25.3%
  • Indio                           66,118             increased by 34.6%
  • La Quinta                    35,145             increased by 52.5%
  • Palm Desert                49,280             increased by 19.7%
  • Palm Springs               45,731             increased by 6.8%
  • Rancho Mirage           16,416             increased by 23.0%

A most exciting recent addition to the Valley is the new California State University, San Bernardino-located centrally on the Palm Desert campus, and the University of California, Riverside’s Richard J. Heckmann International Center for Entrepreneurial Management’s campus.  College students, as well as adults, have only a few miles to travel to meet many of their educational needs. Due to these extensions, many businesses are now flocking to this area as well.

There is an abundance of activities to keep you busy and to hold your interest in the desert. As of 2006, there were 121 golf courses in the desert, and more to come. Tennis and hiking are also popular sports in this area. If you like shopping, some of the most well known stores, elite boutiques and discount stores are located throughout the Valley. Point of interest are the Palm Springs Air Museum, the Palm Springs Children’s Hands On Museum and the Palm Springs Desert Museum, to name a few. The Living Desert is also a great area to visit. Or you may be tempted to ride the Palm Springs Aerial Tramway to the top of the San Jacinto mountains.  If Hot Air Ballooning excites you, that’s available as well. If you enjoy gaming, there are five near-by casinos, and more to in the “planning  stage.” You can easily find these activities and more at www.PalmSpringsHomesAndEstates.com

To learn more about this great area, I encourage you to visit www.MovingToPalmSprings.com where you can read about the rich history of the Coachella Valley, to search the local Multiple Listing Service for housing to meet your needs, and to find out “what’s happening” in this unique Valley. You’ll also be able to see maps of the area, temperatures, find out where to golf, play tennis or visit the many spas in this area. Perhaps you, too, will be able to Enjoy Summer All Winter Long!

 

Contact Nancy Hankin for more information.  Nancy@NancyHankin.com www.PalmSpringsHomesandEstates.com