NY Times Features Brooklyn A Mortgage Fraud Case
A March 8th New York Times article tells the story of Waver Brickhouse, who came to Brooklyn Legal Services Corporation A
("Brooklyn A," a program of Legal Services NYC) after losing her home
in a foreclosure rescue scheme.
Waver Brickhouse, gray-haired and soft-spoken, has come undone twice during the nation’s housing crisis.
In 2005, she fell behind on her mortgage payments and turned to a
so-called rescue firm, which, court papers allege, tricked her into
signing away the deed to her Brooklyn home. She says the company, Home Savers Consulting, secretly sold her home, with the help of a mortgage from IndyMac Federal Bank, and ran up huge new debts.Now broke, deeply embarrassed and facing the loss of her small row
house in the Brownsville neighborhood, Ms. Brickhouse, 69, faces a new
problem. She must convince the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation,
which last year took control of IndyMac, now insolvent, that her
mortgage payments should not include at least $150,000 tacked on by
fraud.To assume these new costs, she says, would break her in two.
“I’m going to drown in debt,” says Ms. Brickhouse, a retired city parks
department worker, shaking her head. “I feel like it’s just a matter of
time until I’m on the street with my children.”F.D.I.C.
officials say that they have no desire to put Ms. Brickhouse on the
street and that they want to work out affordable payment terms. But Ms.
Brickhouse’s lawyers say that the F.D.I.C.’s writ cannot extend to
holding her responsible for a fraudulently created mortgage, and they
have refused to disclose her finances until the agency drops its claim
for the $150,000.“Our position is that the mortgage with
IndyMac is toilet paper — it has no legal standing,” said her lawyer
Rick Wagner, litigation director with Brooklyn Legal Services
Corporation A. “The law for 200 years is that no title can arise from a
fraudulent act.”Ms. Brickhouse has sued Home Savers, and her
case underscores the conundrum facing the F.D.I.C. as it wades through
thousands of troubled mortgages it has inherited from failed banks,
40,000 from IndyMac alone.Tasked with renegotiating mortgages
and cautious about preserving taxpayers’ dollars, the F.D.I.C. has
tried to steer clear of making judgments about whether homeowners have
fallen victim to fraud.“Our position on stated income loans is
that a lot of people say that someone else was responsible for the
fraud,” Michael H. Krimminger, special adviser for policy in the office
of the F.D.I.C. chairman, said in an interview. “It’s much more
productive to get people to a position where they can stay in their
homes, and to do that we must be able to verify what a borrower can
afford.”But Ms. Brickhouse’s case has a persuasive ring to it,
not least because one of those engaged in the alleged fraud returned
her deed and swore out an affidavit describing the scheme. In December,
Mayor Michael R. Bloomberg invited Ms. Brickhouse to a press conference and vowed to forestall foreclosures in cases like hers.Her
story finds an echo in many working-class corners of New York City. The
company accused of victimizing her, Home Savers Consulting, has been
sued by homeowners in Brooklyn, Queens and Staten Island, and nearly
every case alleges a similar pattern of deception: An owner behind on a
mortgage turns in desperation to Home Savers, which secretly transfers
the deed to a “straw buyer” with good credit who qualifies for a
cash-out refinancing. Then, it is alleged, Home Savers drains the homes
of equity.Jessica Attie, co-director of the South Brooklyn Legal Services Foreclosure Prevention Project, estimates that Home Savers
extracted at least $5 million in equity from the homes of people in a
handful of her cases. Legal services lawyers have frequently forwarded
information on Home Savers to prosecutors, but no criminal cases have
been brought.
Click here to read the full New York Times article, "Mortgage Fraud case poses Federal Quandary."
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