Category Archives: Help with foreclosure

The Foreclosure Law Center

The Foreclosure Law Center established in the downtown of Philadelphia is considered to be the best place help with foreclosure in the nation. This is because of its veteran legal team. Almost everyone who is part of the legal team holds high qualification and long practical experience in the niche.          The Foreclosure Law Center

The lawyers are known for their commitment for the clients. They don’t leave any stone unturned to make sure that their clients should be provided high quality legal assistance. They promise their clients to put the best input in their case, but they don’t promise them to win the case, as the result of the case depends upon various factors that come into the light during the proceedings of the case. Before accepting any case, lawyers study the file and then clearly inform what they think about the decision of the case. They don’t hide anything in order to take case, as they don’t want to play with their own prestige.

The Foreclosure Law Center has established a free legal consultation center too, in which legal professionals assist advice seekers without charging any money. Interestingly, callers have to even pay nothing for making calls because the law firm has provided them a toll free number.

The Foreclosure Law Center claims to have an excellent track record that is the result of unparalleled services provided by its lawyers.  To know about this law center and its services in detail, you can visit its website that is theforeclosurelawcenter.com.

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The Foreclosure Law Center, P.C.—Help with foreclosure begins here.

Currently there are about 1,497,222 homeowners in need of foreclosure help in the U.S., according to RealtyTrac.

In February 2012, a $25 billion settlement with the five major lenders in the country was supposed to help turn the crisis around.

In a recent Huffington Post article, Anna Cuevas talks about the blame game going on between the lenders and the government, but in the end, the homeowner is the one suffering the consequences.

“Regardless of the blame game, it is homeowners who have paid the highest price in trying to save their homes,” Cuevas said. “They face ongoing frustration in dealing with servicers while they implement their programs, time delays, lost paperwork, and stress.”

Everyday homeowners attempt loan modifications on their own with their lenders. Legal representation can greatly increase the odds of having a successful mortgage modification.

The Foreclosure Law Center, P.C. has worked for 8 years in representing homeowners nationwide and has thousands of success stories.  The Foreclosure Law Center, P.C. reviews and testimonials.

We provide help with foreclosure when you need it the most. Going it alone ends here.

To learn more about our loan modification process and Forensic Loan Audit, refer to The Foreclosure Law Center, P.C. website, or call our free consultation center, 24 hours, at 1-888-600-5505.

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North Jersey Sees a Dramatic Spike in Foreclosures

Between May 2011 and May 2012, foreclosures reportedly jumped 86 percent in North Jersey, according to RealtyTrac, a California-based foreclosure market-watch company.

“Foreclosure activity is picking up in New Jersey, after being all but frozen as mortgage servicers dealt with accusations of abuses in their rush to evict homeowners,” said Kathleen Lynn, in a NorthJersey.com article.

Since October 2010, when the robosigning scandal blew up, foreclosure proceedings have slowed dramatically.

Meanwhile, foreclosure rates have been increasing and the scandal has created backlog in providing foreclosure help in NJ and throughout the country.

Foreclosure lawyers can help with foreclosure, help minimize the backlog, and help get homeowners back on their feet.

The Foreclosure Law Center, P.C. offers help with loan modifications and Deed in Lieu negotiations for homeowners nationwide.

If you or someone you know is in need of foreclosure help, call us today for a free consultation. 1-888-600-5505.

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Wells Fargo Accused of Discrimination Against Minority Foreclosures

Tuesday, The National Fair Housing Alliance, a group of nonprofit housing advocates, filed a discrimination complaint against Wells Fargo.

The complaint is against San Francisco-based Wells Fargo and Co. and Wells Fargo Bank with the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development, according to The Washington Post.

The claims allege the bank is neglecting foreclosed properties in Latino areas and paying better attention to foreclosed homes in white neighborhoods, as reported by Fox News.

The Federal Fair Housing Act requires all banks, investors, servicers and other parties to market and maintain homes without regard to race or ethnicity.

In lieu of the recent $25 billion settlement, Wells Fargo is now, not only accused of unlawfully placing homeowners from Mortgage Default into Foreclosure, and other unlawful foreclosure help practices, but also discriminating against specific groups of homeowners.

The group began investigations in 2010 on more than 200 properties in: Philadelphia, Washington, Atlanta, Baltimore, Dallas, Dayton; Ohio, Miami and Fort Lauderdale and Oakland; Calif.

“Bank-owned homes in white communities were treated in a “far superior manner,” the complaint alleges , The Washington Post. Those homes were 33 percent more likely to be marketed with a professional “For Sale” sign than homes in black or Hispanic communities.”

Homeowners who need help with foreclosure and to restructure their mortgages are not out of luck. The Mortgage Forensic Audit can uncover Mortgage Fraud and be used as legal leverage to retrieve the modification you need to save your home.

Call The Foreclosure Law Center today, for a FREE consultation. 1-888-600-5505

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Bank of America—Foreclosure Rental Pilot Program

Last week, Bank of America began its new pilot program that allows those who need help with foreclosure to begin renting and stay in their homes.

The pilot will include, total, about 1,000 homeowners from Arizona, New York and Nevada who will then transfer the title of their homes back to BofA and have their mortgage debt forgiven.

“The homeowners can rent the homes for up to three years at or below their area’s market rental rate. The rental payments will be less than the borrowers’ mortgage payments, the bank said in a Yahoo News article. And they will not have to pay property taxes or homeowner’s insurance.”

The program is a Deed in Lieu of foreclosure, in which the homeowner in Mortgage Default transfers the title of their home to the bank, only; in this case, they are allowed to begin renting the same property.

Foreclosure surged across much of the nation last month, the foreclosure fraud settlement was finalized, and this seems to be an attempt for Bank of America to make up for its reported fraudulent practices along with many other lenders throughout the U.S.

Soon we will see the outcome and if the program will stick and be offered to the many other hurting homeowners in need of Mortgage Rescue.

Call The Foreclosure Law Center today, for a FREE consultation. 1-888-600-5505

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Economic recovery would probably go smoother without Ed DeMarco

“The single largest obstacle to meaningful economic recovery is a man who most Americans have probably never heard of, Edward J. DeMarco,” said Peter S. Goodman, Business Editor at The Huffington Post.

Ed DeMarco is director of the Federal Housing Finance Agency (FHFA) where he oversees all Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac activity. His refusal on principal reductions has caused uproar and thoughts that he does not have the best interest of homeowners in need of help with foreclosure in his agenda.

Homeowners are heading into mortgage default left and right and property values are plummeting, leaving much of the country in need of mortgage rescue.

DeMarco’s refusal on principal reductions “has ensured that tens of millions of borrowers remain “underwater,” Goodman said.

Elijah E. Cummings, of the 7th congressional district in Maryland, seems to share Goodman’s views on a smoother economic recovery without DeMarco.

The foreclosure fraud settlement is predicted to barely help a fraction of those in need of help with foreclosure. DeMarco isn’t helping make any progress either. What’s the next step forward?

Call The Foreclosure Law Center today, for a FREE consultation. 1-888-600-5505

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Federal Reserve adds eight additional banks to the foreclosure fraud settlement

Monday, the Federal Reserve announced that it plans to fine eight additional companies in the foreclosure fraud settlement, as reported in The Washington Post.

The financial firms—EverBank, Goldman Sachs Group, HSBC Holdings PLC, PNC Financial Services Group, MetLife, OneWest Bank, SunTrust Banks and U.S. Bancorp are the companies in talks of being added to the settlement and fined, in addition to the five largest banks already named.

“Suzanne G. Killian, a senior associate director at the Federal Reserve, called the fines ‘appropriate’ during a congressional hearing in Brooklyn, N.Y.,” according to The Washington Post.

Each day more and more companies are being found guilty of preying on innocent homeowners in mortgage default and wrongfully putting them into foreclosure, while not necessary.

Help with foreclosure does not need to come from the bank firsthand. Having a foreclosure lawyer by your side and the results of a Mortgage Forensic Audit can be used as leverage to restructure mortgages with lenders.

Call The Foreclosure Law Center today, for a FREE consultation. 1-888-600-5505

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Robosigning ‘sweatshop’

There are millions of backlogged foreclosures currently in the U.S.

Last year, claims of robosigning, unlawful signing of documents, were uncovered and then just recently a settlement with the major banks, and those in need of help with foreclosure, was finalized to make right for all of the deceptive practices uncovered.

Talks about fraudulent mortgage practices might have never totally summed up the actual extent of how many documents were being signed each day.

Business Insider decided to put some numbers along with the allegations and figure out just how many documents were being signed each day.

The results?

Let’s just say the headline of the article includes a “sweatshop” reference.

“One Bank of America manager claimed she sign nearly 68,000 documents (93 per day) and notarized 1,390 over a two year period,” as reported in the Business Insider article.

Also, an Ally employee admitted he “routinely signed 400 affidavits per day and up to 10,000 per month, certifying that he had personal knowledge of the facts when he did not and without reviewing the supporting documentation referenced in them.”

“Auditors found notaries would sign off on documents before they were even cleared by affiants (workers who sign an affidavit and attest to its truthfulness before a notary),” according to Business Insider.

In addition to the what were described as “disturbing findings”, Citi did not even have a process for signing foreclosure documents until November 2009 and BofA allegedly outsourced foreclosure documents to law firms for review but nonlawyers would often forget the attorney’s signatures.

“One attorney’s signature appeared on five separate foreclosure documents–each in different handwriting,” reported Business Insider.

Robosigning is not the only form of deceptive foreclosure practices that has gone on in the last several years. There are 335 civil law violations that might have been violated when your documents were drafted.

The Mortgage Forensic Audit can be used to uncover these predatory lending practices.

These deceptive practices have wrongfully placed people in mortgage default, throughout the country, in foreclosure and caused major backlog throughout the states.

Foreclosure lawyers can help decrease the backlog and keep homeowners, in their homes, where they should be.

Call The Foreclosure Law Center today, for a FREE consultation. 1-888-600-5505

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Official Foreclosure Fraud Settlement Break Down

“How far does $26 billion go”?

Reporters at ProPublica and the rest of the country (especially those in need of help with foreclosure) have been wondering that question since the settlement became final last month.

Last week details and terms of the agreement became final.

“Bank of America, Citigroup, Ally Financial (formerly GMAC) and JPMorgan Chase are on the hook for billions, which will be divvied up among penalties paid to the federal and state governments, direct payments to homeowners wrongfully foreclosed upon and credits to the banks for providing “consumer relief,”’ according to ProPublica.

Here’s the breakdown as provided by Cora Currier in ProPublica:

$1.4 billion: total direct payments from the settlement to homeowners who were wrongfully foreclosed upon between 2008 and 2011.

750,000: foreclosed homeowners expected to qualify.

$2,000: estimated average payout.

3.8 million: total foreclosures between 2008 and 2011.

25 percent: expected increase in foreclosures in 2012. That would mean about 1 million foreclosures, up from 804,000 last year, partly as a result of banks clearing a backlog held up by the settlement proceedings.

$3 billion: total for which banks can be credited for offering refinancing to underwater homeowners who owe more than their homes are worth. (There are questions about exactly how the credits will work and why the banks are being given incentives rather than punishment.)

$17 billion: total from the settlement that banks can be credited for offering loan modification ($10 billion) and other forms of “consumer relief” ($7 billion) for underwater borrowers — counted separately from the refinancing incentives.

$11.1 millionunderwater mortgages in the U.S.

$717 billionnegative equity from those underwater mortgages.

3 million: estimated underwater mortgages owned or guaranteed by government-controlled Fannie Mae or Freddie Mac, which are not covered by the settlement.

5 percent: portion of the country’s underwater mortgages that might qualify for modification under the settlement, according to a Brookings Institute estimate. (Officials have put the number closer to 10 percent.)

$10.9 billion: Bank of America’s total outlay in the settlement, more than any other bank.

$2 billion: Bank of America’s fourth-quarter 2011 profit.

$1 billion: settlement of allegations that Bank of America passed bad loans on to the Federal Housing Administration to insure. A government audit, made public with the settlement, showed similar patterns at other banks.

$6 billion: amount that the FHA paid in insurance claims on defaulted mortgages handled by the five banks between 2008 and 2010.

60-200: documents signed daily by different individual loan processors working for Bank of America, according to the government audit.

12-18 inches: height of the stacks of documents one Bank of America employee signed “without a review.”

$1 million: fine to be levied on the banks for each violation of the terms of the overall settlement, escalating to $5 million for repeat violations. (Exactly how fines will be tallied is still unclear.)

Call The Foreclosure Law Center today, for a FREE consultation. 1-888-600-5505

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