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Informative Articles

Home Loans and Mortgages – Time to Consolidate Loans?
Home equity loans and lines of credit are useful tools for homeowners. They allow the homeowner to borrow against the value of his or her home for all kinds of purposes – home improvement, debt consolidation, vacations, and more. The loans, backed...

Quiz: How Much Do You Know About Credit Scoring?
Before you get a mortgage for the first time, or refinance your existing mortgage, lenders run a credit check. Lenders use a scoring system to decide whether or not you are a good candidate for a loan, and even what rate you will qualify for....

Refinance After Bankruptcy – Bad Credit Refi Lenders
Refinancing your home mortgage following a bankruptcy may put extra cash in your pocket to help finance large home improvement projects and lower your monthly mortgage payments. On the other hand, the bankruptcy may ruin any chances of securing a...

Things to consider regarding mortgages
Make payments on your mortgage early, paying extra if you're allowed. Not only does this reduce the total debt that you owe on your home, but it increases your equity and looks good on your credit report. You should also pay down or pay off...

WHEN IS IT RIGHT TO REFINANCE?
With "everyone" talking about the historically low mortgage rates you are ready to decide if it "pays" to refinance. The "rule of thumb" supplied by mortgage companies is that if you can reduce your interest rate by 1% it is usually profitable. But...

 
Deed Theft Criminals Get More Aggressive at Stealing Your Home


Deed theft is an increasingly popular crime in the real estate industry. It usually works like this: A company will post signs around town offering to "help" those facing debt problems that might lead to foreclosure. Representatives of the company meet with the homeowner and offer to take over the payments for a year or so while the owner gets his or her finances in order. The company urges the owner to sign over the property to the company, with the understanding that after a year or so, the owner may buy the property back. It seldom, if ever, works that way. Once the property is signed over, the company often evicts the former owner and sells the property at a profit. The owner gets nothing.
This scam has been working well for years, but apparently isn't efficient enough for some crooks. In a new twist, some clever criminals have found a better way. Now, instead of pretending to help, the crooks just forge the owner's name on a quitclaim deed and file it with the county. A quitclaim deed is a statement from a property owner that he or she no longer wishes to maintain any interest in the property. That document specifies who will take over ownership.
In some places, the thief will have the document notarized by an accomplice. In others, the thief will simply take advantage of an overworked or inattentive notary public before filing the document with county clerks who usually don't bother to check if the document is legitimate. In either case, the result is the same. The thief now "owns" the property and is free to sell it or refinance it. Usually, once having done so, the thief and the money disappear. Under the right circumstances, this can even happen without the real owner even realizing that it has happened.
This type of theft is becoming more and more prevalent in hotbeds of mortgage fraud such as the Southeastern United States. Law enforcement agencies are often at a loss as to how to follow up on this crime, as they often will have little more to go on than a name on a document, which may not even be real. In the meantime, clerks and notaries public are being urged to scrutinize such documents more carefully. Deed theft and mortgage fraud are serious problems that are costing Americans hundreds of billions of dollars annually.

About The Author

©Copyright 2005-06 by Retro Marketing. Charles Essmeier is the owner of Retro Marketing, a firm devoted to informational Websites, including http://www.homeequityhelp.net, a site devoted to information regarding home equity lending.

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