should extend moratoriums on home foreclosures to all states, including
Michigan, rather than just those states with judicially supervised
foreclosures.
· Lenders that have initiated moratoriums
should insure that they actually prevent foreclosures rather than just
evictions subsequent to foreclosures.
· The Federal
Housing Finance Agency, which oversees Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac,
thereby controlling a major portion of mortgages subject to foreclosure
in the U.S., should review its procedures for proper compliance and
also consider initiating a foreclosure moratorium
At the
same time, Conyers announced plans to investigate mortgage lenders to
learn more about their foreclosure practices, including paperwork
violations and false affidavits, and ascertain what can be done to
protect homeowners from possible abuses. As part of this effort,
Conyers is asking the Federal Housing Finance Agency – the federal
agency charged with overseeing Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac – to ensure
that they abide by the law, to consider initiating a moratorium, and to
conduct an audit of their actions. In addition, Conyers will be calling
upon the DOJ’s Executive Office for U.S. Trustees to investigate the
extent to which false affidavits have been filed in bankruptcy cases by
lenders seeking to foreclose on debtor’s homes.
Thus far, only
three lenders – Ally Financial (parent of GMAC Mortgage), Bank of
America, and JP Morgan Chase – have ceased post-foreclosure enforcement
actions in 23 states that have court- controlled foreclosure
proceedings: Connecticut, Florida, Hawaii, Illinois, Indiana, Iowa,
Kansas, Kentucky, Louisiana, Maine, Nebraska, New Jersey, New Mexico,
New York, North Carolina, North Dakota, Ohio, Oklahoma, Pennsylvania,
South Carolina, South Dakota, Vermont, and Wisconsin. Even those
lenders appear to have only ceased evictions, while they continue to
engage in foreclosures, which take title from homeowners.
At this
point Michigan and 26 other states are not on the moratorium list for
these lenders, purportedly because they have a non-judicial foreclosure
process. However, without judicial oversight, the possibility of abuse
can be even greater in these states. As a result, elected state
officials in non-judicial foreclosure states such as California,
Colorado, Texas, Massachusetts, and Maryland have recently asked lenders
to suspend their foreclosures.
Widespread concern about
documentation abuses in the mortgage industry is not limited to state
officials. Yesterday, House Speaker Nancy Pelosi and other members of
the California congressional delegation called on the Justice
Department, the Treasury Department, and the Federal Reserve to
investigate large mortgage lenders’ handling of delinquent mortgages,
mortgage modifications, and foreclosures. Additionally, Senators Robert
Menendez (NJ) and Al Franken (MN) called on the Government
Accountability Office to investigate the role of federal government
entities charged with overseeing the mortgage lending industry to
determine how they allowed lenders’ misconduct to occur without
detection for so long. Also, Members of Congress from Maryland and
Arizona – two non-judicial foreclosure states - called on large lenders
to halt foreclosures in their states.
“It makes little sense to
limit the moratoriums to judicial foreclosure states when many of the
same errors and paperwork flaws likely plague non-foreclosure states,”
said Conyers. “When the very same lenders that ignored the rules which
helped get us into the real estate bubble are placed in charge of the
foreclosures that are exacerbating the problem, locking millions of
Americans in a financial trap they cannot escape from, we have a
situation that is spiraling out of control and cries out for
intervention.”
“Given the depth of the financial calamity in
Michigan and other states, the huge number of foreclosures, and the
chain reaction of problems involving foreclosures that has impacted
communities and individuals, I would urge home mortgage lenders to cease
their foreclosure activities,” said Conyers. “Rather than spending
their time running mass production foreclosure mills, the lenders should
be working with individuals to keep families in their homes and
restructure their loans.”
“Home foreclosures affect individual
families and devastate entire communities,” said Congresswoman
Kilpatrick. “For home foreclosures to proceed under false pretenses is
patently unwarranted and unfair. I am proud to join one of the founders
of the CBC and Chairman of the House Judiciary Committee in this
clarion call for justice, fairness, and equality to Michiganders and all
Americans.”
###
Where Are Congressional Republicans On The Calls For A Foreclosure Moratorium?
Over the weekend, Bank of America was forced to follow its Wall Street brethren JP Morgan Chase and Ally Financial in implementing a foreclosure moratorium, after evidence emerged that thousands of foreclosure filings a month were okayed by “robo-signers”: employees who weren’t verifying very basic information on the foreclosure forms. In Florida alone, “a recent sample of foreclosure cases in the 12th Judicial Circuit of Florida showed that 20 percent of those set for summary judgment involved deficient documents.”
But some banks where potential problems have emerged — including Wells Fargo, the second largest mortgage servicer in the country — have not suspended foreclosures. This has led a cadre of lawmakers — including a bipartisan group of state Attorneys General — to call for a foreclosure moratorium and investigations into the potentially fraudulent bank practices that are resulting in families losing their homes. Here’s a list of lawmakers who have already spoken out:
– House Speaker Nancy Pelosi (D-CA) and 30 other Democratic members of California’s congressional delegation.
– Sens. Al Franken (D-MN), Jeff Merkley (D-OR) and Robert Menendez (D-NJ).
– Gov. Martin O’Malley (D-MD), Rep. Elijah E. Cummings (D-MD), and Rep. Gabrielle Giffords (D-AZ).
– Attorneys General Greg Abbott (R-TX), Richard Blumenthal (D-CT), Martha Coakley (D-MA), John Suthers (R-CO), Jerry Brown (D-CA), Beau Biden (D-DE), and Douglas Gansler (D-MD).
Conspicuously absent from this list are any congressional Republicans. This really isn’t surprising though, when you consider the way in which they have done Wall Street’s bidding since the housing crisis first gained steam.
Congressional Republicans, remember, regurgitated industry talking points when it came to mortgage cram-downs (which could have kept many troubled borrowers out of foreclosure), pressured bailed-out banks to not compromise with Democrats on anti-foreclosure measures, and then advocated that the Obama administration pull the plug on its own foreclosure prevention efforts, leaving homeowners to the mercy of the banks.
Sorting out the potentially thousands of homeowners who may have been improperly foreclosed upon is going to be a monumental task, as is reorganizing the process to ensure that no more homeowners are improperly thrown out of their homes. This is about more than simply those homeowners: it’s about upholding the rule of law and due process. A moratorium and investigations are more than warranted, and it’d be nice to hear something other than crickets from one of America’s two major political parties.
eric seiger
<b>News</b> just in: Joan Sutherland has died - Slipped disc
News just in: Joan Sutherland has died. Dame Joan Sutherland, the dominant opera soprano after Maria Callas, has died at her home in Switzerland, her record company has announced. She was a month short of her 84th birthday. ...
Probably Bad <b>News</b>: Transformer FAIL - Epic Fail Funny Videos and <b>...</b>
epic fail photos - Probably Bad News: Transformer FAIL.
Good <b>news</b> for European shoppers as Amazon.co.uk cuts delivery fees
A year ago, Amazon.co.uk introduced free delivery for orders in Ireland, the first country outside the UK where shoppers could benefit from the ...
eric seiger
· Lenders
should extend moratoriums on home foreclosures to all states, including
Michigan, rather than just those states with judicially supervised
foreclosures.
· Lenders that have initiated moratoriums
should insure that they actually prevent foreclosures rather than just
evictions subsequent to foreclosures.
· The Federal
Housing Finance Agency, which oversees Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac,
thereby controlling a major portion of mortgages subject to foreclosure
in the U.S., should review its procedures for proper compliance and
also consider initiating a foreclosure moratorium
At the
same time, Conyers announced plans to investigate mortgage lenders to
learn more about their foreclosure practices, including paperwork
violations and false affidavits, and ascertain what can be done to
protect homeowners from possible abuses. As part of this effort,
Conyers is asking the Federal Housing Finance Agency – the federal
agency charged with overseeing Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac – to ensure
that they abide by the law, to consider initiating a moratorium, and to
conduct an audit of their actions. In addition, Conyers will be calling
upon the DOJ’s Executive Office for U.S. Trustees to investigate the
extent to which false affidavits have been filed in bankruptcy cases by
lenders seeking to foreclose on debtor’s homes.
Thus far, only
three lenders – Ally Financial (parent of GMAC Mortgage), Bank of
America, and JP Morgan Chase – have ceased post-foreclosure enforcement
actions in 23 states that have court- controlled foreclosure
proceedings: Connecticut, Florida, Hawaii, Illinois, Indiana, Iowa,
Kansas, Kentucky, Louisiana, Maine, Nebraska, New Jersey, New Mexico,
New York, North Carolina, North Dakota, Ohio, Oklahoma, Pennsylvania,
South Carolina, South Dakota, Vermont, and Wisconsin. Even those
lenders appear to have only ceased evictions, while they continue to
engage in foreclosures, which take title from homeowners.
At this
point Michigan and 26 other states are not on the moratorium list for
these lenders, purportedly because they have a non-judicial foreclosure
process. However, without judicial oversight, the possibility of abuse
can be even greater in these states. As a result, elected state
officials in non-judicial foreclosure states such as California,
Colorado, Texas, Massachusetts, and Maryland have recently asked lenders
to suspend their foreclosures.
Widespread concern about
documentation abuses in the mortgage industry is not limited to state
officials. Yesterday, House Speaker Nancy Pelosi and other members of
the California congressional delegation called on the Justice
Department, the Treasury Department, and the Federal Reserve to
investigate large mortgage lenders’ handling of delinquent mortgages,
mortgage modifications, and foreclosures. Additionally, Senators Robert
Menendez (NJ) and Al Franken (MN) called on the Government
Accountability Office to investigate the role of federal government
entities charged with overseeing the mortgage lending industry to
determine how they allowed lenders’ misconduct to occur without
detection for so long. Also, Members of Congress from Maryland and
Arizona – two non-judicial foreclosure states - called on large lenders
to halt foreclosures in their states.
“It makes little sense to
limit the moratoriums to judicial foreclosure states when many of the
same errors and paperwork flaws likely plague non-foreclosure states,”
said Conyers. “When the very same lenders that ignored the rules which
helped get us into the real estate bubble are placed in charge of the
foreclosures that are exacerbating the problem, locking millions of
Americans in a financial trap they cannot escape from, we have a
situation that is spiraling out of control and cries out for
intervention.”
“Given the depth of the financial calamity in
Michigan and other states, the huge number of foreclosures, and the
chain reaction of problems involving foreclosures that has impacted
communities and individuals, I would urge home mortgage lenders to cease
their foreclosure activities,” said Conyers. “Rather than spending
their time running mass production foreclosure mills, the lenders should
be working with individuals to keep families in their homes and
restructure their loans.”
“Home foreclosures affect individual
families and devastate entire communities,” said Congresswoman
Kilpatrick. “For home foreclosures to proceed under false pretenses is
patently unwarranted and unfair. I am proud to join one of the founders
of the CBC and Chairman of the House Judiciary Committee in this
clarion call for justice, fairness, and equality to Michiganders and all
Americans.”
###
Where Are Congressional Republicans On The Calls For A Foreclosure Moratorium?
Over the weekend, Bank of America was forced to follow its Wall Street brethren JP Morgan Chase and Ally Financial in implementing a foreclosure moratorium, after evidence emerged that thousands of foreclosure filings a month were okayed by “robo-signers”: employees who weren’t verifying very basic information on the foreclosure forms. In Florida alone, “a recent sample of foreclosure cases in the 12th Judicial Circuit of Florida showed that 20 percent of those set for summary judgment involved deficient documents.”
But some banks where potential problems have emerged — including Wells Fargo, the second largest mortgage servicer in the country — have not suspended foreclosures. This has led a cadre of lawmakers — including a bipartisan group of state Attorneys General — to call for a foreclosure moratorium and investigations into the potentially fraudulent bank practices that are resulting in families losing their homes. Here’s a list of lawmakers who have already spoken out:
– House Speaker Nancy Pelosi (D-CA) and 30 other Democratic members of California’s congressional delegation.
– Sens. Al Franken (D-MN), Jeff Merkley (D-OR) and Robert Menendez (D-NJ).
– Gov. Martin O’Malley (D-MD), Rep. Elijah E. Cummings (D-MD), and Rep. Gabrielle Giffords (D-AZ).
– Attorneys General Greg Abbott (R-TX), Richard Blumenthal (D-CT), Martha Coakley (D-MA), John Suthers (R-CO), Jerry Brown (D-CA), Beau Biden (D-DE), and Douglas Gansler (D-MD).
Conspicuously absent from this list are any congressional Republicans. This really isn’t surprising though, when you consider the way in which they have done Wall Street’s bidding since the housing crisis first gained steam.
Congressional Republicans, remember, regurgitated industry talking points when it came to mortgage cram-downs (which could have kept many troubled borrowers out of foreclosure), pressured bailed-out banks to not compromise with Democrats on anti-foreclosure measures, and then advocated that the Obama administration pull the plug on its own foreclosure prevention efforts, leaving homeowners to the mercy of the banks.
Sorting out the potentially thousands of homeowners who may have been improperly foreclosed upon is going to be a monumental task, as is reorganizing the process to ensure that no more homeowners are improperly thrown out of their homes. This is about more than simply those homeowners: it’s about upholding the rule of law and due process. A moratorium and investigations are more than warranted, and it’d be nice to hear something other than crickets from one of America’s two major political parties.
eric seiger
<b>News</b> just in: Joan Sutherland has died - Slipped disc
News just in: Joan Sutherland has died. Dame Joan Sutherland, the dominant opera soprano after Maria Callas, has died at her home in Switzerland, her record company has announced. She was a month short of her 84th birthday. ...
Probably Bad <b>News</b>: Transformer FAIL - Epic Fail Funny Videos and <b>...</b>
epic fail photos - Probably Bad News: Transformer FAIL.
Good <b>news</b> for European shoppers as Amazon.co.uk cuts delivery fees
A year ago, Amazon.co.uk introduced free delivery for orders in Ireland, the first country outside the UK where shoppers could benefit from the ...
eric seiger
eric seiger
eric seiger
<b>News</b> just in: Joan Sutherland has died - Slipped disc
News just in: Joan Sutherland has died. Dame Joan Sutherland, the dominant opera soprano after Maria Callas, has died at her home in Switzerland, her record company has announced. She was a month short of her 84th birthday. ...
Probably Bad <b>News</b>: Transformer FAIL - Epic Fail Funny Videos and <b>...</b>
epic fail photos - Probably Bad News: Transformer FAIL.
Good <b>news</b> for European shoppers as Amazon.co.uk cuts delivery fees
A year ago, Amazon.co.uk introduced free delivery for orders in Ireland, the first country outside the UK where shoppers could benefit from the ...
eric seiger
· Lenders
should extend moratoriums on home foreclosures to all states, including
Michigan, rather than just those states with judicially supervised
foreclosures.
· Lenders that have initiated moratoriums
should insure that they actually prevent foreclosures rather than just
evictions subsequent to foreclosures.
· The Federal
Housing Finance Agency, which oversees Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac,
thereby controlling a major portion of mortgages subject to foreclosure
in the U.S., should review its procedures for proper compliance and
also consider initiating a foreclosure moratorium
At the
same time, Conyers announced plans to investigate mortgage lenders to
learn more about their foreclosure practices, including paperwork
violations and false affidavits, and ascertain what can be done to
protect homeowners from possible abuses. As part of this effort,
Conyers is asking the Federal Housing Finance Agency – the federal
agency charged with overseeing Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac – to ensure
that they abide by the law, to consider initiating a moratorium, and to
conduct an audit of their actions. In addition, Conyers will be calling
upon the DOJ’s Executive Office for U.S. Trustees to investigate the
extent to which false affidavits have been filed in bankruptcy cases by
lenders seeking to foreclose on debtor’s homes.
Thus far, only
three lenders – Ally Financial (parent of GMAC Mortgage), Bank of
America, and JP Morgan Chase – have ceased post-foreclosure enforcement
actions in 23 states that have court- controlled foreclosure
proceedings: Connecticut, Florida, Hawaii, Illinois, Indiana, Iowa,
Kansas, Kentucky, Louisiana, Maine, Nebraska, New Jersey, New Mexico,
New York, North Carolina, North Dakota, Ohio, Oklahoma, Pennsylvania,
South Carolina, South Dakota, Vermont, and Wisconsin. Even those
lenders appear to have only ceased evictions, while they continue to
engage in foreclosures, which take title from homeowners.
At this
point Michigan and 26 other states are not on the moratorium list for
these lenders, purportedly because they have a non-judicial foreclosure
process. However, without judicial oversight, the possibility of abuse
can be even greater in these states. As a result, elected state
officials in non-judicial foreclosure states such as California,
Colorado, Texas, Massachusetts, and Maryland have recently asked lenders
to suspend their foreclosures.
Widespread concern about
documentation abuses in the mortgage industry is not limited to state
officials. Yesterday, House Speaker Nancy Pelosi and other members of
the California congressional delegation called on the Justice
Department, the Treasury Department, and the Federal Reserve to
investigate large mortgage lenders’ handling of delinquent mortgages,
mortgage modifications, and foreclosures. Additionally, Senators Robert
Menendez (NJ) and Al Franken (MN) called on the Government
Accountability Office to investigate the role of federal government
entities charged with overseeing the mortgage lending industry to
determine how they allowed lenders’ misconduct to occur without
detection for so long. Also, Members of Congress from Maryland and
Arizona – two non-judicial foreclosure states - called on large lenders
to halt foreclosures in their states.
“It makes little sense to
limit the moratoriums to judicial foreclosure states when many of the
same errors and paperwork flaws likely plague non-foreclosure states,”
said Conyers. “When the very same lenders that ignored the rules which
helped get us into the real estate bubble are placed in charge of the
foreclosures that are exacerbating the problem, locking millions of
Americans in a financial trap they cannot escape from, we have a
situation that is spiraling out of control and cries out for
intervention.”
“Given the depth of the financial calamity in
Michigan and other states, the huge number of foreclosures, and the
chain reaction of problems involving foreclosures that has impacted
communities and individuals, I would urge home mortgage lenders to cease
their foreclosure activities,” said Conyers. “Rather than spending
their time running mass production foreclosure mills, the lenders should
be working with individuals to keep families in their homes and
restructure their loans.”
“Home foreclosures affect individual
families and devastate entire communities,” said Congresswoman
Kilpatrick. “For home foreclosures to proceed under false pretenses is
patently unwarranted and unfair. I am proud to join one of the founders
of the CBC and Chairman of the House Judiciary Committee in this
clarion call for justice, fairness, and equality to Michiganders and all
Americans.”
###
Where Are Congressional Republicans On The Calls For A Foreclosure Moratorium?
Over the weekend, Bank of America was forced to follow its Wall Street brethren JP Morgan Chase and Ally Financial in implementing a foreclosure moratorium, after evidence emerged that thousands of foreclosure filings a month were okayed by “robo-signers”: employees who weren’t verifying very basic information on the foreclosure forms. In Florida alone, “a recent sample of foreclosure cases in the 12th Judicial Circuit of Florida showed that 20 percent of those set for summary judgment involved deficient documents.”
But some banks where potential problems have emerged — including Wells Fargo, the second largest mortgage servicer in the country — have not suspended foreclosures. This has led a cadre of lawmakers — including a bipartisan group of state Attorneys General — to call for a foreclosure moratorium and investigations into the potentially fraudulent bank practices that are resulting in families losing their homes. Here’s a list of lawmakers who have already spoken out:
– House Speaker Nancy Pelosi (D-CA) and 30 other Democratic members of California’s congressional delegation.
– Sens. Al Franken (D-MN), Jeff Merkley (D-OR) and Robert Menendez (D-NJ).
– Gov. Martin O’Malley (D-MD), Rep. Elijah E. Cummings (D-MD), and Rep. Gabrielle Giffords (D-AZ).
– Attorneys General Greg Abbott (R-TX), Richard Blumenthal (D-CT), Martha Coakley (D-MA), John Suthers (R-CO), Jerry Brown (D-CA), Beau Biden (D-DE), and Douglas Gansler (D-MD).
Conspicuously absent from this list are any congressional Republicans. This really isn’t surprising though, when you consider the way in which they have done Wall Street’s bidding since the housing crisis first gained steam.
Congressional Republicans, remember, regurgitated industry talking points when it came to mortgage cram-downs (which could have kept many troubled borrowers out of foreclosure), pressured bailed-out banks to not compromise with Democrats on anti-foreclosure measures, and then advocated that the Obama administration pull the plug on its own foreclosure prevention efforts, leaving homeowners to the mercy of the banks.
Sorting out the potentially thousands of homeowners who may have been improperly foreclosed upon is going to be a monumental task, as is reorganizing the process to ensure that no more homeowners are improperly thrown out of their homes. This is about more than simply those homeowners: it’s about upholding the rule of law and due process. A moratorium and investigations are more than warranted, and it’d be nice to hear something other than crickets from one of America’s two major political parties.
eric seiger
eric seiger
<b>News</b> just in: Joan Sutherland has died - Slipped disc
News just in: Joan Sutherland has died. Dame Joan Sutherland, the dominant opera soprano after Maria Callas, has died at her home in Switzerland, her record company has announced. She was a month short of her 84th birthday. ...
Probably Bad <b>News</b>: Transformer FAIL - Epic Fail Funny Videos and <b>...</b>
epic fail photos - Probably Bad News: Transformer FAIL.
Good <b>news</b> for European shoppers as Amazon.co.uk cuts delivery fees
A year ago, Amazon.co.uk introduced free delivery for orders in Ireland, the first country outside the UK where shoppers could benefit from the ...
eric seiger
eric seiger
<b>News</b> just in: Joan Sutherland has died - Slipped disc
News just in: Joan Sutherland has died. Dame Joan Sutherland, the dominant opera soprano after Maria Callas, has died at her home in Switzerland, her record company has announced. She was a month short of her 84th birthday. ...
Probably Bad <b>News</b>: Transformer FAIL - Epic Fail Funny Videos and <b>...</b>
epic fail photos - Probably Bad News: Transformer FAIL.
Good <b>news</b> for European shoppers as Amazon.co.uk cuts delivery fees
A year ago, Amazon.co.uk introduced free delivery for orders in Ireland, the first country outside the UK where shoppers could benefit from the ...
eric seiger
<b>News</b> just in: Joan Sutherland has died - Slipped disc
News just in: Joan Sutherland has died. Dame Joan Sutherland, the dominant opera soprano after Maria Callas, has died at her home in Switzerland, her record company has announced. She was a month short of her 84th birthday. ...
Probably Bad <b>News</b>: Transformer FAIL - Epic Fail Funny Videos and <b>...</b>
epic fail photos - Probably Bad News: Transformer FAIL.
Good <b>news</b> for European shoppers as Amazon.co.uk cuts delivery fees
A year ago, Amazon.co.uk introduced free delivery for orders in Ireland, the first country outside the UK where shoppers could benefit from the ...
eric seiger
<b>News</b> just in: Joan Sutherland has died - Slipped disc
News just in: Joan Sutherland has died. Dame Joan Sutherland, the dominant opera soprano after Maria Callas, has died at her home in Switzerland, her record company has announced. She was a month short of her 84th birthday. ...
Probably Bad <b>News</b>: Transformer FAIL - Epic Fail Funny Videos and <b>...</b>
epic fail photos - Probably Bad News: Transformer FAIL.
Good <b>news</b> for European shoppers as Amazon.co.uk cuts delivery fees
A year ago, Amazon.co.uk introduced free delivery for orders in Ireland, the first country outside the UK where shoppers could benefit from the ...
how to lose weight fast big seminar 14
big seminar 14
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<b>News</b> just in: Joan Sutherland has died - Slipped disc
News just in: Joan Sutherland has died. Dame Joan Sutherland, the dominant opera soprano after Maria Callas, has died at her home in Switzerland, her record company has announced. She was a month short of her 84th birthday. ...
Probably Bad <b>News</b>: Transformer FAIL - Epic Fail Funny Videos and <b>...</b>
epic fail photos - Probably Bad News: Transformer FAIL.
Good <b>news</b> for European shoppers as Amazon.co.uk cuts delivery fees
A year ago, Amazon.co.uk introduced free delivery for orders in Ireland, the first country outside the UK where shoppers could benefit from the ...
big seminar 14
With the rise of homes going into foreclosures, there are many buyers who are looking into listings, almost on a daily or weekly basis. These buyers are people who want to buy homes at below market prices, whether to live in or to invest in and make a profit someday. A website, www.foreclosureradar.com, offers foreclosure listings and up to date information available in California.
Foreclosure Radar: Services Offered
Search of Foreclosure Listings: Foreclosure Radar provides a robust way of searching properties that are in foreclosure in California. There are over 30 search criteria to choose from to narrow down your search. The main search is subdivided into main categories such as: Location, Value & Equity, Property Details, Foreclosure Details, and Owner's Information. Furthermore, when you enter your search, it will either give map or list the results so that you can have an idea of the location and also the details on the property.
I've tried the free preview search of foreclosure listing in my area by entering my zip code, the minimum and maximum price range, number of bedrooms, number of bathrooms, and total square footage. The result showed a bird's eye view of foreclosures in and around my zip code. The results were color coded in red, blue, and green. Red is for bank owned homes, blue is for homes being auctioned, and green for pre-foreclosure homes.
Clicking into the map, which is powered by Google search, you can zoom into the area you desire. There is a map view, which shows the result in map style, a satellite view, and hybrid view which is sort of a combination of the first two. This preview doesn't give you the details which a subscription to the site would. But it is a good preview to get an idea of how the system should work. The result was instantaneous, even on a regular DSL.
Auction Tracking: Foreclosure Radar offers a service to track every foreclosure listing in California actively. This service is "almost" real-time as it gives an update on the status the day it changes or happens. This means no more waiting in the front of the banks or other local offices to get a list posted in regards to the properties on foreclosure.
Foreclosure Radar keeps the data fresh at all times, and sorts the list by date, time, and location of listings.
Foreclosure Software: Foreclosure Radar provides built-in software that allows a subscriber to keep track of the listings and manage records. This means the subscriber does not have to buy separate software to download. The software provides a means to manage deals, track status, and estimate profits. The tool provides a tool to help in organizing your records and listings in one place.
Market Analysis: Inclusive in the subscription is a free market analysis. This tool gives an investor, real estate professional, or a home buyer a statistical view sorted by state, county, or zip code. It's a valuable too for investors to compare and analyze the trends.
Foreclosure List and Data: Foreclosure Radar provides, not only the basic foreclosure listing, but in depth data that may be of value to the subscriber, such as: Notice of Default, Notice of Trustee Sale, Auction Updates, Bank Owned Data, Property Details, Ownership, Transaction History, Maps & Aerial Photos, as well as Zillows Zestimates (another website that provides prices of homes actively listed or sold in the same locations).
Foreclosure Radar is currently offering, aside from the preview, a 3-day free trial. If you sign up for a 3-day free trial they will ask for credit card information should you decide to keep the subscription will be billed $49.95 monthly subscription. But if you think this service is what you need there are ways to save by skipping the free trial period and availing of any of the following:
Quarterly $134.95 Savings of 10%
Biannually $249.95 Savings of 17%
Annually $449.95 Savings of 25%
The prices listed above are very reasonable considering you pay more than that to get some, not all, the information from different sources. Foreclosure Radar gives you to ability to save time, as it can be done in the comfort of your own home.
big seminar 14
<b>News</b> just in: Joan Sutherland has died - Slipped disc
News just in: Joan Sutherland has died. Dame Joan Sutherland, the dominant opera soprano after Maria Callas, has died at her home in Switzerland, her record company has announced. She was a month short of her 84th birthday. ...
Probably Bad <b>News</b>: Transformer FAIL - Epic Fail Funny Videos and <b>...</b>
epic fail photos - Probably Bad News: Transformer FAIL.
Good <b>news</b> for European shoppers as Amazon.co.uk cuts delivery fees
A year ago, Amazon.co.uk introduced free delivery for orders in Ireland, the first country outside the UK where shoppers could benefit from the ...
big seminar 14
<b>News</b> just in: Joan Sutherland has died - Slipped disc
News just in: Joan Sutherland has died. Dame Joan Sutherland, the dominant opera soprano after Maria Callas, has died at her home in Switzerland, her record company has announced. She was a month short of her 84th birthday. ...
Probably Bad <b>News</b>: Transformer FAIL - Epic Fail Funny Videos and <b>...</b>
epic fail photos - Probably Bad News: Transformer FAIL.
Good <b>news</b> for European shoppers as Amazon.co.uk cuts delivery fees
A year ago, Amazon.co.uk introduced free delivery for orders in Ireland, the first country outside the UK where shoppers could benefit from the ...
big seminar 14
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