May 26, 2021

There are two things that are absolutely true. You can prove it by doing the work yourself.

The first is that if you do a Google search in which your primary search criteria is expressed as “foreclosure fraud,” the only response you will get will be cases involving fraud committed by anyone but a bank. If a bank did it, it does not get reported, or if it is reported it is quickly scrubbed out of the Internet. You might also be shown the website address of companies offering “help” which may or may not be funded and controlled by the investment banks on Wall Street.

The second thing is that the media is continuing to put out reports of declining foreclosures even while they are increasing and will shortly start increasing at an exponential rate. We all know this is happening because the moratoriums from COVID-19 are already expiring or are all set to expire. The reason is that the Wall Street investment banks don’t want anyone to think that this is an emergency until long after the emergency has begun and there is no time to do anything about it.

What you need to do about it is to do your own homework. I personally have been lead counsel and the number of cases in which the homeowner has won. I have been consulting counsel in thousands of cases in which the homeowner has won or been awarded a very satisfactory settlement.

So the question for homeowners and prospective lawyers for homeowners is whether they are simply going to believe Twitter and Facebook or if they are going to dig deeper and discover that they can most likely save the home and probably obtain damages and attorney fees.

So far, Wall Street is winning the media battle. Most people believe that the transactions with homeowners are loans and that the homeowners who don’t make a scheduled payment are deadbeats, deserving of Foreclosure and maybe worse. And by most people I include the homeowners themselves who essentially talk themselves into defaulting on a fraudulent and illegal claim that has no merit in law, conscience, or ethics. By doing that, they are making it that much harder for homeowners who are willing to confront fraudulent foreclosures. They’re also committing financial suicide.