Showing posts with label Foreclosures. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Foreclosures. Show all posts

Wednesday, October 10, 2012

Foreclosure - TalkShoe - Call - Maine Exposed Wednesday at 9:00 PM EST


This conference call will be on some of the latest developments in foreclosure. You can join by computer, or by phone, or by both. If you have speakers and a microphone, or headset, you can download the Pro version of Talkshoe in advance of the call and talk using voip. If using your computer, you will be able to text into the call.


Monday, September 17, 2012

FORECLOSURE - MERS TITLES ARE FRAUD


State court ruling deals blow to U.S. bank mortgage system
An Occupy Wall Street demonstrators pastes tape and signs to a foreclosed property in the East New York section of Brooklyn in New York City December 6, 2011. REUTERS/Mike Segar

Fri Sep 14, 2012 7:04pm EDT
(Reuters) - The highest court in the state of Washington recently ruled that a company that has foreclosed on millions of mortgages nationwide can be sued for fraud, a decision that could cause a new round of trouble for the nation's banks.
The ruling is one of the first to allow consumers to seek damages from Mortgage Electronic Registration Systems, a company set up by the nation's major banks, if they can prove they were harmed.
Legal experts said last month's decision from the Washington Supreme Court could become a precedent for courts in other states. The case also endorsed the view of other state courts that MERS does not have the legal authority to foreclose on a home.
"This is a body blow," said consumer law attorney Ira Rheingold. "Ultimately the MERS business model cannot work and should not work and needs to be changed."
Banks set up MERS in the 1990s to help speed the process of packaging loans into mortgage-backed bonds by easing the process of transferring mortgages from one party to another. But ever since the housing crash, MERS has been besieged by litigation from state attorneys general, local government officials and homeowners who have challenged the company's authority to pursue foreclosure actions.
A spokeswoman for MERS said the company is confident its role in the financial system will withstand legal challenges.
The Washington Supreme Court held that MERS' business practices had the "capacity to deceive" a substantial portion of the public because MERS claimed it was the beneficiary of the mortgage when it was not.
This finding means that in actions where a bank used MERS to foreclose, the consumer can sue it for fraud. If the foreclosure can be challenged, MERS' involvement would make repossession more complicated.
On top of that, virtually any foreclosed homeowner in the state in the past 15 years who feels they have been harmed in some way could file a consumer fraud suit.
"This may be the beginning of a trend," says Elizabeth Renuart, a professor at Albany Law School focusing on consumer credit law.
The company's history dates back to the 1990s, when banks began aggressively bundling home loans into mortgage-backed securities. The banks formed MERS to speed up the handling of all the paperwork associated with recording the filing of a deed and the subsequent inclusion of a mortgage in an entity that issues a mortgage-backed security.
MERS allowed the banks to save time and money because it permitted lenders to bypass the process of filing paperwork with the local recorder of deeds every time a mortgage was sold.
Instead, banks put MERS' name on the deed. And when they bought and sold mortgages, they just recorded the transfer of ownership of the note in the MERS system.
The MERS' database was supposed to keep track of where those loans went. The company's motto: "Process loans, not paperwork."
But the foreclosure crisis revealed major flaws with the MERS database.
The plaintiffs in the Washington case, homeowners Kristin Bain and Kevin Selkowitz, argued that the problems with the MERS database made it difficult, if not impossible, to determine who really owned their loan. It's an argument that has been raised in numerous other lawsuits challenging the ability of MERS to foreclose on a home.
"It's going to be very easy for consumers to say they were harmed because it's inherently misleading," says Geoff Walsh, an attorney with the National Consumer Law Center. If consumers can't identify who owns their loan, then they don't know whom to negotiate with, and can't even be certain of the legitimacy of the foreclosure.
In a statement, MERS spokeswoman Janis Smith noted that banks stopped using MERS' name to foreclose last year. She added that the opinion will "create confusion" for homeowners in the state of Washington while the trial courts consider its effect on pending cases.
Meanwhile, MERS is attempting to remake itself. The company has a new chief executive and a new branding campaign. In Washington D.C. federal lawmakers have recognized the need to create a national mortgage-recording database that would track all U.S. mortgages. MERS is lobbying to build it.
The case is Bain (Kristin), et al. v. Mortg. Elec. Registration Sys., et al., Washington Supreme Court, No. 86206-1.
(Editing by Dan Wilchins and Prudence Crowther)

Thursday, September 13, 2012

Foreclosure --- GOOD NEWS - DEBT FORGIVENESS STARTING FROM WGS

THIS IS A GRAND ANNOUNCEMENT AND A GOODY!

FORECLOSURE DEBT FORGIVENESS HAS STARTED.

I am getting several reports, some of which has been posted on chat rooms ----- That foreclosure folks have been and are getting letters that there mortgages are getting paid in full by the WORLD GLOBAL SETTLEMENTS. In short DEBT FORGIVENESS has started!   WOW!

Don't know the details yet and waiting for more information. When I get it --- it be posted here!


Now let me see --- wasn't Debt Forgiveness part of the NESARA PLAN ---- nay --- couldn't be that this Nesara thing is for real!!!

Monday, July 30, 2012

Foreclosure - California Homeowners Sue MERS, Banks, Servicers, TRUSTS, Robo-Signers in Monster Lawsuit

California Homeowners Sue MERS, Banks, Servicers, TRUSTS, Robo-Signers in Monster Lawsuit

29 July 2012
Way too many to list and name but see the entire Complaint below. Courtesy of Court House News Scribd © 2010-12 FORECLOSURE FRAUD | by DinSFLA. All rights reserved. www.StopForeclosureFraud.com
Read the full story

Friday, July 6, 2012

Foreclosure - Lawsuit claims foreclosure proceedings led to father's fatal heart attack


Lawsuit claims foreclosure proceedings led to father's fatal heart attack

by TERESA WOODARD
WFAA
Posted on July 5, 2012 at 10:29 PM
GRAND PRAIRIE - Jo Engel still cries when someone says his name. Her husband Harry was her everything, for 56 years.

"I'll try to not cry about it, but I'll never get over him," she said.

Their daughter, Debra, said her father was the glue that held them all together. And their home wasn't just a home.

"It was our security," she said.

As her parents aged a fixed income forced them to cut back, so after living in their Grand Prairie home for 22 years, a letter offering a lower refinancing rate sounded attractive. They say they went to see a JP Morgan Chase employee in person to discuss it, and he told them in order to qualify for the program, they had to skip a mortgage payment. So they did.

"They relied on that," said attorney Chris Ash. "They did exactly what they were instructed to do, missed a payment, followed instructions to the letter."

Ash said the Engels paid a lower mortgage for about a year before other letters started arriving in their mailbox, and knocks on the door began.

The family said the letters said JP Morgan Chase was kicking them out of the refinancing program. Late fees and penalties were adding up.

Foreclosure proceedings began, and the Engels say eviction was even threatened.

"When he got those letters, he just changed," Debra said.

Harry Engel repaid what he could, but on July 1, 2010, he suffered a sudden heart attack and died. He was 79 years old, but was in good health, Debra said.

The Engels blame his death on JP Morgan Chase. They filed a lawsuit against the company.

"He wasn't sick," Debra said. "He couldn't take the stress. The stress of it just killed him."

A spokesman for Chase reviewed the lawsuit, saying "There are serious factual inaccuracies in the filing, but we are not going to comment because it is ongoing litigation."

He added, "We have not completed any foreclosure on the property. We work with homeowners across the country to help them to avoid foreclosure whenever possible."

E-mail twoodard@wfaa.com

Tuesday, June 19, 2012

FORECLOSURE -- HOMEOWNER FIGHTS BANK OF AMERICA FOR ILLEGAL EVICTION


Here’s what happened to Lilly when she came back from Germany (her son, thankfully, emerged from his coma). She found a ‘FOR SALE’ sign in the yard and a new lock on the front door. Her house had been completely emptied; the furniture acquired over years, the Purple Heart her son had earned when he was shot during an earlier tour in Iraq: all gone. Bank of America had illegally and fraudulently sold her house to Fannie Mae only days after she’d left the country. And, they’d thrown all of her belongings in the city dump.

So like David confronting impossible odds, she stood up and fought. She moved back in, fought the eviction in court, and replaced her furniture with donations from her church. When the Sheriff’s deputies came in January 2012 to evict her, Lilly won a stay of eviction. Then in April she found a judge who finally recognized that she had been robbed by Wall Street bankers and let her legally possess her home again.

The fight has cost her, though. Fighting the Sheriff’s deputies gave her a slipped disk. The stress caused her a heart attack. She’s gone to the hospital six times and is facing yet another surgery. She’s on disability. But she’s outraged that the banks can break the law, steal her house, throw away everything she’s ever owned, ruin her health without facing any consequences whatsoever.

She’s headed back to court to force Bank of America and Fannie Mae to give her title to the house free and clear and make them pay damages.

Sunday, March 18, 2012

Foreclosures - MERS Ruling in Michigan Leaves Title Companies Hesitant on REO Sales

The Rumor Mill News Reading Room 

MERS Ruling in Michigan Leaves Title Companies Hesitant on REO Sales
Posted By: watcher51445
Date: Sunday, 18-Mar-2012 12:01:22
MERS Ruling in Michigan Leaves Title Companies Hesitant on REO Sales
05/16/2011 By: Carrie Bay
Enter your email to receive Daily Email Updates:
The Michigan Court of Appeals has ruled that Mortgage Electronic Registration Systems, Inc. (MERS) does not meet the requirements under state statute to foreclose by advertisement.
As a quasi-judicial state, Michigan recognizes both judicial foreclosures that go through the courts and “foreclosure by advertisement,” which gives creditors’ the right to foreclose after they post a notice of the default in a newspaper for four consecutive weeks when the mortgage includes a power of sale clause.
The appellate court ruled the latter is not a valid function of MERS because the company does not own any interest in the debt.
The judgment does not apply to judicial foreclosures conducted by MERS, but observers warn the court’s decision could void thousands of foreclosure actions in the state, including properties that have already been sold to new buyers.
The Detroit Free Press says it’s received reports from local Realtors that title companies are canceling closings on some bank-owned homes in light of the appellate court’s ruling.
MERS issued a statement following the decision, saying, “Title companies should not have any concerns about closing loans with MERS as the mortgagee.”
But the risks raised in the chain of title and the legal standing now provided to homeowners who have been non-judicially foreclosed on by MERS have local agencies
thinking twice about insuring the title on a bank-owned home in which MERS was involved.
According to Randall S. Miller, Esq., of the law firm Randall S. Miller & Associates in Bloomfield Hills, Michigan, “Title underwriters are taking a very conservative stance on the issue and will not insure any property that was foreclosed in the name of MERS to be insured at REO sale unless the foreclosure was performed prior to 2005.”
Miller explained that Michigan has a five-year statute of limitations period in which to bring litigation challenging a foreclosure.
In addition, Miller says the consensus of local experts is that any property where redemption has expired, but has not been sold to a third party, will have to be re-foreclosed.
A daunting task considering the number of cases affected, but Miller says it pales in comparison to the additional lawsuits that will be filed if the properties are not re-foreclosed. He notes that there have been reports of at least three class action lawsuits filed immediately in the wake of the court’s decision, and Miller expects “hundreds if not thousands” more.
“The good news is that most, but not all, firms stopped foreclosing in the name of MERS approximately two years ago, so the number of potential issues had been preemptively diminished,” Miller said. “However, there are indications that some firms and lenders were continuing the practice, and now have to deal with the consequences.”
MERS was developed by the mortgage industry to keep track of the servicing rights on home loans. It was designed as a paperless property registry to facilitate the transfer of mortgages. The system is also used by communities to identify parties responsible for vacant properties.
Earlier this year, MERS published a proposed membership rule change, which states that lenders can no longer foreclose in MERS’ name but must obtain an assignment from MERS to move forward with a foreclosure action.
“[O]n a going forward basis, this decision does not impact the MERS business model or the ability of its members to foreclose on mortgages held by MERS as the mortgagee,” MERS said in a statement.
Author: Carrie Bay • Date: 05/16/2011 • Tags: Foreclosure, REO, Technology, MERS, Randall S. Miller & Associates • Category: Foreclosure, Government, REO, Technology • Users: Agents & Brokers, Attorneys & Title Companies, Investors, Lenders & Servicers, Service Providers

Saturday, March 3, 2012

Foreclosure - I stopped the sheriff

I stopped the sheriff: Activists prevent eviction of man from Laois home

Ben Gilroy, from Freedom From All Debt, and Pat Dunne, the deputy sheriff, argue outside the home in Laois.
Ben Gilroy, from Freedom From All Debt, and Pat Dunne, the deputy sheriff, argue outside the home in Laois.
Image: Screengrab via YouTube.
A GROUP OF housing activists and an independent TD prevented an attempted eviction of a man from his home in Laois yesterday.
A collection of housing groups and the People Before Profit TD Joan Collins were in Mountrath to prevent the deputy sheriff, accompanied by the gardaí, from evicting a man from his home, arguing that their actions were not constitutional.
It was the first such case of People Before Profit, Freedom From All Debt, the Defend Our Homes League, Its Not Our Debt and the Anti-Eviction Task Force coming together to defend a home from repossession.
Collins told TheJournal.ie that it won’t be the last: “The main aim is that there will be no evictions or repossessions of family homes in Ireland.”
Lee Wellstead, 47, was facing eviction from his home having lost in his battle against Ulster Bank in the Commercial Court, the Laois Nationalist explains.
He had bought the three-bedroom property on four acres of land in Knockanina - near Mountrath and Castletown - in 2003 for €80,000 and then acquired a top loan on the mortgage of €30,000. Having failed to keep up with repayments, the bank pursued him and was granted a repossession order last year, the paper reports.
Collins said she heard about Wellstead’s story and travelled to Laois with the other groups to help him defend his home.
In the video entitled ‘Constitution Halts Sheriff’ Ben Gilroy from Freedom from All Debt argues with the deputy sheriff, Pat Dunne, that it is unconstitutional for him to attempt to evict Wellstead from his home.
After a lengthy argument the sheriff and the accompanying garda officers depart:
“We’re trying to work on two fronts,” Collins told TheJournal.ie “We’re defending people from evictions but we’re also going to put our own bill through the Dáil in relation to homeowners and to help them when they are in distress with their mortgage.”
The story was first flagged by Politics.ie and has been written about by the NAMA Wine Lake blog today. It notes that some 600 properties are repossessed each year according to the latest figures from the Central Bank.
Collins said they hoped yesterday’s successful blocking of the eviction can raise awareness of their campaign: “What he wanted to do is highlight that people will stand with these people facing eviction if people ask us to do it.
“Some people are particularly ashamed of letting people know what they’re going through. They are fearful that they are in debt and people knowing about it. We’re trying to get the word out so people can know that we will stand with them if they are evicted.”
Collins said that in Wellstead’s case, the sheriff will now have to seek another order for eviction and added: “We’ll be back down again if he does do that.”
“These banks gave out these loans in full knowledge that people were strapped and now they’re saying we’re going to take them back and they’ll be forced into social housing. But there’s no room on the social housing list for these people to be accommodated,” she added.

Sunday, February 26, 2012

Foreclosure - MERS is DEAD, ILLEGAL by NY Court

Date: Mon, Feb 20, 2012 at 6:53 AM
Subject: MERS is DEAD -


Attached is the Memorandum of Law that puts the FINAL NAIL in the BIG BANKS!
Feb. 16, 2011    
                                                                                                         

United States Bankruptcy Judge Robert Grossman has ruled that MERS's business practices are unlawful.   He explicitly acknowledged that this ruling sets a precedent that has far-reaching implications for half of the mortgages in this country. MERS is dead. The banks are in big trouble. And all foreclosures should be stopped immediately while the legislative branch comes up with a solution.

For some weeks I have been arguing that MERS is perpetrating foreclosure fraud all across the nation. Its business model makes it impossible to legally foreclose on any mortgaged property registered within its system -- which includes half of the outstanding mortgages in the US. MERS was a fraud from day one, whose purpose was to evade property recording fees & to subvert 5 centuries of property law. Its chickens have come home to roost.

Wall St. wanted to transform America's housing sector into the world's biggest casino and needed to undermine property rights to make it easier to run the scam. The payoffs were bigger for lenders who could induce homeowners to take mortgages they could not possibly afford. The mortgages were packaged into securities sold-on to patsy investors who were defrauded by the "reps and warranties" falsely certifying the securities as backed by top grade loans. In fact the securities were not backed by mortgages, and in any case the mortgages were sure to go bad. Given that homeowners would default, the Wall St. banks that serviced the mortgages needed a foreclosure steamroller to quickly and cheaply throw families out of the homes so that they could be resold to serve as purported collateral for yet more gambling bets. MERS -- the industry's creation -- stepped up to the plate to facilitate the fraud.

The judge has ruled that its practices are illegal. MERS and the banks lose; investors and homeowners win.

Here's MERS's business model in brief. Real estate property sales and mortgages are supposed to be recorded in local recording offices, with fees paid. With the rise of securitization, each mortgage might be sold a dozen times before it came to rest as the collateral behind a mortgage backed security (MBS), and each of those sales would need to be recorded. MERS was created to bypass public recording; it would be listed in the county records as the "mortgagee of record" and the "nominee" of the holder of mortgage. Members of MERS could then transfer the mortgage from one to another without all the trouble of changing the local records, simply by (voluntarily) recording transactions on MERS's registry.
A mortgage has 2 parts, the "note" and the "security" (not to be confused with the MBS) or "deed of trust" that is usually just called the "mortgage". The idea behind MERS was that the "note" would be transferred from seller to purchaser, but the "mortgage" would be held by MERS. In fact, MERS recommended that the "note" be held by the mortgage servicer to facilitate foreclosures, but in practice it seems that the notes were often lost or destroyed (which is why all those Burger King Kids were hired to Robo-sign "lost note affidavits").
At each transfer, the note & mortgage are supposed to be "assigned" to the new owner; MERS claimed that because it was the "mortgagee of record" and the "nominee" of both parties to every transaction, there was no need to assign the "mortgage" until foreclosure. And it argued that since the old adage is that the "mortgage follows the note" and that both parties intended to assign the notes (even if they did not get around to doing it), then the Bankruptcy Court should rule that the assignments did take place in some sort of "virtual reality" so that there is a clear chain of title that allows the servicers to foreclose.

The Judge rejected every aspect of MERS's argument. The Court rejected the claim that MERS could be both holder of the mortgage as well as nominee of the "true" owner. It also found that "mortgagee of record" is a vague term that does not give one legal standing as mortgagee. Hence, at best, MERS is only a nominee. It rejected MERS's claim that as nominee it can assign notes or mortgages -- a nominee has limited rights and those most certainly do not include the right to transfer ownership unless there is specific written instruction to do so. In scarcely veiled anger, the Judge wrote:

"According to MERS, the principal/agent relationship among itself and its members is created by the MERS rules of membership and terms and conditions, as well as the Mortgage itself. However, none of the documents expressly creates an agency relationship or even mentions the word "agency." MERS would have this Court cobble together the documents and draw inferences from the words contained in those documents."

Judge Grossman rejected MERS's arguments, saying that mere membership in MERS does not provide "agency" rights to MERS, and agreeing with the Supreme Court of Kansas that ruled "The parties appear to have defined the word [nominee] in much the same way that the blind men of Indian legend described an elephant -- their description depended on which part they were touching at any given time."

He went on to disparage MERS's claim that since in legal theory the "mortgage follows the note", the Court should overlook the fact that MERS separated them. He stopped just short of saying that by separating them, MERS has irretrievably destroyed the clear chain of title, although he hinted that a future ruling could come to that conclusion:

"MERS argues that notes and mortgages processed through the MERS System are never "separated" b/c beneficial ownership of the notes and mortgages are always held by the same entity. The Court will not address that issue in this Decision, but leaves open the issue as to whether mortgages processed through the MERS system are properly perfected and valid liens. See Carpenter v. Longan, 83 U.S. at 274 (finding that an assignment of the mortgage without the note is a nullity); Landmark Nat'l Bank v. Kesler, 216 P.3d 158, 166-67 (Kan. 2009)   ("[I]n  the event that a mortgage loan somehow separates interests of the note & the deed of trust, with the deed of trust lying with some independent entity, the mortgage may become unenforceable")."

That would mean not only the end of MERS, but also the end of the banks holding unenforceable mortgages because they were not, & cannot be, "perfected". MERS & the banks screwed up big time, and there is no "do over" -- there is no valid lien on the property, so owners have got their homes free and clear.
There have been numerous court rulings against MERS -- including decisions made by state supreme courts. What is significant about the US Bankruptcy Court of New York's ruling is that the judge specifically set out to examine the legality of MERS's business model. As the judge argued in the decision, "The Court believes this analysis is necessary for the precedential effect it will have on other cases pending before this Court". In the scathing opinion, Judge Grossman variously labeled MERS's positions as "stunningly inconsistent" with the facts, "absurd, at best", and "not supported by the law". The ruling is a complete repudiation of every argument MERS has made about the legality of its procedures.

What is particularly ironic is that MERS actually forced the judge to undertake the examination of its business model. The case before the judge involved a foreclosed homeowner who had already lost in state court. The homeowner then approached the US Bankruptcy Court to argue that the foreclosing bank did not have legal standing because of MERS's business practices. However, by the "Rooker-Feldman" doctrine (or res judicata), the US Bankruptcy Court is prohibited from "looking behind" the state court's decision to determine the issue of legal standing. Hence, Judge Grossman ruled in the bank's favor on that particular issue.

Yet, MERS's high priced lawyers wanted to push the issue and asked for the Judge to rule in favor of MERS's practices, too. So while MERS won the little battle over one foreclosed home, it lost the war against the nation's homeowners. The Judge ruled against MERS on every single issue of importance. And it was MERS's stupid arrogance that brought it down.

As I predicted 2 weeks. ago, MERS would be dead within weeks. Judge Grossman has driven the final stake through its black heart. The half of America's homeowners whose mortgages are registered at MERS have been handed a "get out of jail free" card. Wall St. has no right to foreclose on their property. The tide has turned. It won't be easy, but homeowners in those states with judicial foreclosures now have Judge Grossman on their side. Those in the other states (just over half) will have a tougher time because they can lose their home before they ever get to court. But the law is still on their side -- foreclosure by members of MERS is theft -- so class action lawsuits may be the way to go.

MERS is dead, but can the banks survive? There are two separate issues. First, there are the "reps and warranties" given by the mortgage securitizers (Wall St. investment banks) to the investors (pension funds, GSEs, PIMCO, and so on). We now know that a quarter to a third of the mortgages bundled to serve as backing for the securities did not meet stated quality. Worse, we also know that the banks knew this -- they hired third parties to undertake "due diligence" to check quality. This was not done to protect the investors, rather, the purpose was to strengthen the bargaining position of the securitizers, who were able to reduce the prices paid for the mortgages. Now, the investors are suing the banks for restitution--forcing them to cover the losses and buy-back the bad mortgages at original price. To add insult to injury, even the NYFed is suing them. That is a lot like having your parents sue you for their inadequate parental oversight of your behavior.

The second issue is that the mortgages backing the securities were supposed to be placed in Trusts (affiliates of the securitizing banks), with the Trustee certifying not only that the mortgages met the reps and warranties but also that the documents were up to snuff and safely locked away. We know they were not. As mentioned above, MERS told the servicers to hold the notes, and many or most of them were destroyed or lost. Further, the notes were separated from the mortgages -- making them null and void. In any case, they are not at the Trusts. This means the MBSs are not backed by mortgages, meaning the MBSs are unsecured debt. MERS's business model ensures that. So, again, the banks must take back the fraudulent securities -- paying off the investors.

What can Wall St. do? Well, I suppose the "help wanted" signs are already up at MERS and Wall St. banks: "Needed: Burger King Kids to Robo-sign forged quasi-professional-looking docs". The problem is that even with tens of thousands of Robo-Kids, Wall St. will not be able to pull off a vast criminal conspiracy on the necessary scale. Think about it: 60M mortgages, each sold ten times, means 600 million transactions and assignments that have to be forged. MERS's documentation was notoriously sloppy, relying on voluntary recording by members. The Robo-Kids would have to go back through a decade of records to manufacture a paper trail that would convince now-skeptical judges that there is a clear chain of title from the first recording in the public record through to the foreclosure. It ain't going to happen.

The only other hope is that Wall St. can call in its campaign contribution chips and get Congress to retroactively legalize fraud. That is what they do in those dictatorships that protestors are now bringing down in the Middle East. Is Washington willing to take that risk, just to please its Wall St. benefactors?

The court document is available here. It is terrific reading.

Saturday, February 11, 2012

Foreclosure --- Postponement Service Offered

Note - John is not connected to this nor gets any commission -- just doing this to help out. Your discernment is advised
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Guaranteed one to two year postponement of foreclosure - Guaranteed six month postponement of eviction - (shared with more than 70 worldwide Light Worker LIST HOLDERS)

***To homeowners at risk of foreclosure or eviction: (Share widely)

There is a service that guarantees at least one year of postponement of the foreclosure trustee sale, for pre-foreclosure people;  and if you are in the post-foreclosure category, the same service can guarantee at least six months of postponement of eviction.  In reality, even the post-foreclosure people could stay in their homes for a lot longer than six months . . . but this firm guarantees that much time.  It costs just $595, which is a lot less than most such services.

To have that much time before losing your home, is a great gift, because it gives you the time needed to win the house free and clear . . . whether through cancelation, recoupment, forensic audits, EFT (Electronic Funds Transfer), Treasury payoff, or whatever.  In fact if you could stay in your home well into 2013, surely by then all or most of the corrupt property-stealing banking empire of the dark age will have collapsed and been replaced by the new paradigm of peace and prosperity.

For pre-foreclosure people, this firm delays the foreclosure sale date guaranteed for 12 months, but their average client is in the program for 14 to 18 months, which shows that they under-promise and over-deliver.  This enables the homeowner to have valuable time to work on getting a long term permanent solution.

The firm was the first in the nation to provide trustee sale delay services, and has been providing this service for homeowners across the nation since 2004.  They have never lost a property to the bank while a client was in the program.  They have over 20+ years of experience in the real estate industry and their program is designed to achieve the necessary timeframe for working on CANCELING the foreclosure (or eviction).

A lot of the people you see out there today offering foreclosure delay programs either worked for this firm or were actually in their program at one time.  They know about 85% of what the firm does, but it's that other 15% of proprietary strategy that separates them from other such services.  That 15% of extra specialized knowledge is the expertise that is able to get clients the time they need.

The main method that is used is bankruptcy, however, BK need not be contradictory to the cancelation of the mortgage due to the fraud of the pretender lender, as some believe.  In fact, done correctly, BK can be the perfect vehicle for challenging the lender by making settlement contingent upon the lender producing the evidences needed to foreclose, such as jurisdiction, standing, the note, the existence of the loan, proper signatures, being holder in due course, and compliance with various other laws.  This can win the home free and clear.  By listing one’s property as an “unsecured” debt in the BK instead of secured, it also causes the lender to react by claiming that it IS SECURED.  This then puts them in a bind . . . because how are they going to prove that it is secured, when properly challenged?  They can be caught red handed making a false claim under penalty of perjury, which is a crime – a felony.  The homeowner WINS!

Some people have wondered, if somebody has already gone through a BK in the past, can they still be eligible for the program?  Yes -- but it depends how long ago they went through the BK and if they have a bar against them from filing.  In that instance this firm does have alternatives that they can do with title to be able to hold off the foreclosure.  They can go into that with the homeowner by phone on a case by case basis.

They need the following information from new applicants to get started.

1.           Full name of the client
2.           Complete address of the property in question.
3.           Social security number on the homeowner.  (if there are two people on title they just need one now)
4.           Copy of the notice of trustee sale, if there is one.
5.           Payment in the amount of $595.00.  (It can be deposited in their corporate account at Wells Fargo)

After receiving the information they will prepare the docs for signature and email them out with exact instructions of what to do.  Once the BK is filed, they will need a copy of it back,  and they will contact the trustee and stop the sale.  Once that is done the client is in their data base and they track any future sale dates and perform the necessary services to continue to stop the sale of the property until there is a long term solution in place.

If you are interested, let me know and I will pass on the appropriate details and contact info.


For World Enlightenment, Taansen