- Larry Delassus, of Hermosa Beach, California, lost his house two years ago after the bank thought he was behind on his property taxes but it was actually his neighbor
- Despite proving he was ahead of schedule on his mortgage and had paid his property taxes in advance, he still had to fight the bank in court
- The 62-year-old who suffered a rare blood-clot disorder, died of a massive heart attack in Torrance Courthouse on December 19, 2012, as he was fighting the shocking blunder
So first of all let’s get one thing straight. His neighbor probably was not indebted to Wells Fargo and therefore a declaration of default or “Notice of Default” from or on behalf of Wells Fargo would have been false, fraudulent and part of a RICO scheme even if it had been directed against the neighbor.
Second, the reason why the foreclosure was not simply withdrawn as an error is that it was no error and in all probability the foreclosure process was not directly controlled by Wells Fargo but rather through a labyrinth of sham conduits just so everyone could have plausible deniability.
Third the reason why foreclosure was pursued had nothing to do with the performance of any loan. The participants supporting the foreclosure were all in it to make a profit and had no interest nor intent to pay any party who actually owned the debt.
And fourth, the man died along with thousands of others, because of the stress of fighting for his home instead of his health.
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