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7 Reasons Why Real Estate Options Are Ideal for Beginner and Advanced Investors
Copyright 2005 Alex Nghiem Whether you are an advanced real estate investor or just getting started, real estate options can be an ideal investment technique. A real estate option is a way to control a property without owning it and it locks in...

Creative Real Estate Investment
An example of creative real estate investment? When I was young, I had a job that paid $3.40 an hour, and I somehow saved enough to buy my first piece of real estate - 2 acres near where I lived. It cost $3,500. I spent a few hours removing brush,...

Making Money in Real Estate - Tax Lien Investing Tips and Risks
In my last article I gave a brief introduction to what tax liens are and talked about how you can earn huge returns by invest ing in tax lien certificates and tax deed sales. But it's one thing to know that investing in tax liens can make...

Real Estate Terms - From Condominiums to Deeds of Trust
When buying or selling a property, it always helps to have a basic understanding of real estate terms. In this on going series of articles, we take a look at definitions starting with "condominium." 1) Condominium - A type of ownership in real...

The Art of Condo Conversions in the Real Estate Investors Market
Real estate investing has many areas of diversification including Condo Conversion investing which is an inexpensive way to get involved in highly appreciating markets without laying out a lot of cash and while having a tenant rent the property to...

 
Fraud in real estate, are you being victimized? - Part I

Rip off artists appear in all shapes and sexes. They usually are nice looking, well dressed and very smooth talkers. They, in conversation, tell you about a financial killing they made, or are in the middle of closing. Then they change the subject. A really smooth talker never asks or suggests you invest. They wait until you beg and plead with them to let you in on their great deal. At this point you are HAD. That means, " your goose is cooked and you are invited to the feast, because you are the main course." The logical question is how do you know, before you lose your money that you are going to be ripped off? The answer is independent research, and lots of it.

Find a friend, a friend's friend who is an "expert" in the specific field you are thinking of investing. Ask lots of questions and listen to him. Ask him or her how to make sure you are protected. In the years, 1990 to 1995, eight people I know paid the same real estate trainer over $5,000 each to show them how to buy real estate for "NO MONEY DOWN." The trainer claimed she got results. Not one of the students, all of who got to know each other, after years of trying, ever bought a property for "No Money Down."

Recently the same trainer is offering to get her students 100% financing on real estate, even with bad credit. The MARK (the name for a con artist's pigeon) thinks he is paying for an education. The education is that you are $5,000 poorer and you have the name of a loan company that will charge you 8.5% on a 1st Mtg. and 11% on a 2nd mtg. I will tell you how to find such a lender yourself and it will only cost you a phone call.

See an attorney or an accountant to review the deal, especially the paperwork. I have seen contracts that if you just read it yourself, word for word and thought about what it said you would run like a wolf is chasing you. He is. One simple real estate contract allowed the con man to take the money out of the joint account before he did the repair work. He took the money and never did any work. Never release money until you have everyone's signature on the paperwork and your adviser has read the whole contract, word for word. If you cannot afford an attorney, do not do the deal. It is better to not make a profit than to loose what you already have. "A fool and his money are soon parted." Don't be the fool.

Get to know this person. Who are his friends? Who does he work with? What does the real estate commissioner or the "Better Business Bureau." Have on him? Ask for the names of people who have already invested with the "con artist", made their profit, and are out of the deal. Do not ask a person who has gotten in but hasn't gotten out. Multilevel people love to have you talk to people that have just gotten into the group, just before you.

One of smoothest people around was a securities investment adviser in Santa Barbara. He got hundreds of people to invest with him because hundreds of people had already invested with him. None of them did the level of homework they should have. The few people, who did do independent research, smelled a rat and didn't invest. Many of his investors have lost their whole life's savings; the rest just lost a lot of money, but will recover. If you think I am trying to scare you, then you are absolutely right. "Money should come in rapidly and be spent very slowly." See "Fraud in Real Estate - part II"




About the Author
Willard Michlin is an Investor, Business Broker, California Real Estate Broker, Accountant, Financial Distress Consultant, Well known Public speaker and Administrative/Business Consultant. He can be contacted at his Ventura, California office by calling 805-529-9854 or by e-mail at kismetrei@earthlink.net See other article by Willard at http://www.kismetgroup.com

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