“Threatening possible criminal and civil prosecution, Attorney General Edmund G. Brown Jr. [Wednesday] ordered 386 mortgage foreclosure consultants to post $100,000 bonds and register with his office. He also ordered more than two dozen companies to justify suspicious loan modification claims made in “slick advertising,” online and through the mail.”
Posts Tagged ‘jerry brown’
CA AG Brown threatens loan modification outfits
August 13, 2009Jerry Brown going after homeowner scams
March 31, 2009Addressing the growing wave of loan modification services that promise but don’t deliver assistance to homeowners burdened by mortgage payments they can no longer afford, the California Attorney General promised in hearings held in Southern California to aggressively target these companies especially those advertising on television.
CA AG arrests mortgage modification scam artists
March 23, 2009California’s Attorney General Jerry Brown recently announced the two arrests:
Attorney General Brown today filed 49 felony charges Orange County Superior Court against Mary Alice Yraceburu, 45, of Riverdale and Marianne Curtis, 67, of Costa Mesa.
Yraceburu was arrested today in Fresno County and Curtis was arrested today in Orange County on the following charges:
– 24-counts of grand theft;
– 25-counts of violations of California’s foreclosure consultant statutes;
– One special allegation that the total value of theft was over $65,000;
– One special allegation that the total value of theft was over $100,000;
Both women are convicted felons who have served time in state and federal prisons.
The two women operated a company called Foreclosure Freedom, which sent hundreds of fliers to Californians promising help in stopping the foreclosure of their homes. The fliers read: “FINAL NOTICE – Respond only to this notice immediately.” This is similar to First Gov scam, which the Attorney General stopped late last year.
When homeowners called the number on the flyer, they were told their mortgages could be renegotiated to a lower monthly payment. Victims, however, were required to pay thousands of dollars in up-front fees and were instructed not to contact their lenders.
Victims were assured the company had “private lenders and specialists exclusive to their company who are very experienced in the options and methods used to renegotiate home loans,” yet neither of the women who operated the company had real estate licenses, legal training, or any experience in the home mortgage market.
Investigators found no evidence of any successful loan modifications and most of the victims were either forced into bankruptcy or lost their homes to foreclosure.