Home builders lobby weakens drywall legislation

By Joaquin Sapien, ProPublica 

Chinese drywall

Chinese drywall

Last week, federal lawmakers trumpeted the passage of the Drywall Safety Act of 2012 as a bipartisan victory for thousands of homeowners harmed by contaminated drywall.

“This is a bill about protecting American families — their health and financial well-being,” said Rep. Scott Rigell, R-Va., the measure’s primary sponsor in the House. “It is up to Congress to ensure that preventative standards are in place so no American family is faced with the hardship and heartache from contaminated drywall ever again.”

But the bill doesn’t actually set preventative standards. (more…)

Secret Documents Show Weak Oversight of Key Foreclosure Program

By Paul Kiel, ProPublica  

The Obama administration launched its main program to prevent foreclosures in the spring of 2009 with $50 billion and abundant promises. What the Home Affordable Modification Program, or HAMP, lacked — and wouldn’t have for years — was effective oversight of the big banks that were crucial to the program’s success. (more…)

Foreclosure Fail: Study Pins Blame on Big Banks

By Paul  Kiel, ProPublica 

Over the past several years, we’ve reported extensively on the big banks’ foreclosure failings. As a result of banks’ disorganization and understaffing — particularly at the peak of the crisis in 2009 and 2010 — homeowners were often forced to run a gauntlet of confusion, delays, and errors when seeking a mortgage modification. (more…)

Fort Lauderdale’s historic Shippey House receives a two-week reprieve from demolition

By Karla Bowsher, BrowardBulldog.org

The Shippey House with its front porch detached. PHOTO: Karla Bowsher/Broward Bulldog

 

One of Fort Lauderdale’s oldest homes has been granted another 14 days of existence after a three-year fight over the property’s fate.

On Tuesday, city commissioners unanimously agreed to spare the decrepit but historic Judge Shippey House.

Local preservationists have fended off the property’s demolition since a New York-based company purchased it in foreclosure in 2008. They now have until the commission’s next meeting on July 5 to establish a nonprofit organization and a plan to raise an estimated $190,000 needed to relocate and restore the structure, city spokesperson Chaz Adams said.

The Shippey House, which no longer has a foundation, currently rests on thick metal beams in Fort Lauderdale’s oldest neighborhood, Sailboat Bend.

“It seems like it’s some old house – oh, geez, it’s crumbling – but this is the kind of thing that defines a community,” said Alysa Plummer, president of the Sailboat Bend Civic Association. “The Judge Shippey House is a contributing structure to the Sailboat Bend Historic District.”

The house, at 215 SW Seventh Ave., is named after its first resident and Broward’s second judge. Fred Shippey served as county judge from 1920 until he resigned due to illness in 1933.

One of the last historic homes left on Southwest Seventh Avenue, the Shippey House will find a permanent home just a few blocks down the street if its supporters can raise enough money in time.

The civic association hopes to relocate the Shippey House to Cooley’s Landing, a public city park that borders the New River at the west end of the Riverwalk Linear Park. The Riverwalk Trust supports their plan, trust executive director Eugenia Duncan Ellis said in a letter sent to the city commission last week.

After its relocation and restoration, the house will serve as office for the trust and other uses.

Fort Lauderdale Mayor Jack Seiler likes the plan.

“As one of Fort Lauderdale’s oldest homes, the Shippey House represents a link to Fort Lauderdale’s rich history. The idea proposed by the Sailboat Bend Civic Association to relocate the home to Cooley’s Landing and restore the structure would enhance the west end of our Riverwalk and enable this community asset to be preserved for future generations,” Seiler told Broward Bulldog.

Jacquelyn Scott, a Fort Lauderdale resident of 43 years, is spearheading the fundraising effort. A real estate agent with ReMax Preferred, Scott involved the Broward-based real estate company as well as ReMax corporate, located in Denver.

ReMax Preferred agreed to accept Shippey House donations in their escrow account until a 501(c)(3) nonprofit  group is established. Company CEO and general counsel Paul Caillaud wrote to John Himmelberg Jr., the attorney for the Shippey House’s current owner, CVM 1 REO, LLC, to request time to raise funding to move the house.

Himmelberg declined comment.

Caillaud also got the support of ReMax corporate, which will be sponsoring a fundraiser with the Florida Panthers and motivational speaker Tom Ferry at the Bank Atlantic Center in Sunrise. No date for that event has been set.

The Sailboat Bend Civic Association estimates that it will cost $32,000 to relocate the house and $158,000 to restore it.

“The commission agreed that it would be a good thing and that they were in favor of it as long as they didn’t have to contribute financially,” Scott said after Tuesday’s city commission meeting. “So the onus is on us.”

For those who would like to learn more about the house or Judge Shippey, check out the colorful history that local civic activist Cal Deal  has compiled and published on his site, Fort Lauderdale Observer.

 

 

Plans for the Ireland’s Inn site on Fort Lauderdale beach bog down despite city’s big giveaway

By Dan Christensen, BrowardBulldog.org

Ireland's Inn

In July, 2008, as the economy was tanking, the Fort Lauderdale City Commission gave away a block of North Ocean Boulevard to the owners of the former Ireland’s Inn. The idea was to promote development of a towering, tax-generating five-star beachfront resort known as Fairwinds.

Nearly three years out, with the economy heading south again, Fairwinds continues to exist only on paper. City tax collections on the 4.6 acre site are down. And the distinctive tall, pink shell that once housed the popular Ireland’s Inn – a building the Broward Trust for Historic Preservation has called an “outstanding example of Mid-Century Modern architecture” – has deteriorated into an eyesore.

The planned redevelopment of the Ireland’s Inn property has proved to be little more than a bag full of unfulfilled hopes. But for the owners who were the beneficiaries of the city’s largesse, including the Ireland family, the property transfer amounted to a gift that united their two parcels of land and added millions to the value of their property.

“Lillian, this is for you,” then-Commissioner Cindi Hutchinson said before voting “yes” to the deal on July 1, 2008, according to the Sun-Sentinel. Lillian Ireland, who built Ireland’s Inn with her husband in the 1960s, had died a few months earlier at 101.

Last year, the Ireland family and their partners at Miami’s Fortune International Realty, cashed out. They flipped the unified property, including more than a half-acre of once publicly-owned roadway, for $27.1 million to a company owned by Miami condo developer Jorge Perez and Miami Dolphins owner Stephen Ross.

The vacated roadway is about one-ninth of the property that was sold. One-ninth of the sale price is about $3 million. The city got zero money.

The family and Fortune International retain a partnership interest in the Fairwinds project, according to the Daily Business Review.

The city could not sell the property because it did not own the right-of-way, which will remain public until several required improvements by the developers are made. But commissioners had the authority to give it away if they wanted to.

A quick profit on once public land

The sellers were free to turn a quick profit on the public land they got for free because Fort Lauderdale imposed no deed restrictions at the time of the giveaway on any future sale, county property records show. The city’s only requirement was that prior to development a few minor improvements be made to streets, sidewalks, lighting, landscaping – as well as the installation of a “removable beachwalk.”

“We didn’t get anything at all,” said Commissioner Charlotte Rodstrom, who represents the area and was the lone vote against the land giveaway and the PUD rezoning in 2008. “Why was it approved? It had a lot had to do with giving back to a family that had been in Fort Lauderdale for generations.”

Miranda Lopez, a board member with the nearby Dolphin Isles Homeowners Association who opposed the project and vacating the street, agreed.

“We as a neighborhood were able to get a boardwalk on the eastern part of the property. It was not because the city asked for it, but because we asked for it,” Lopez said.

Broward Bulldog asked planning officials in writing, through a city spokesman, why the city did not address the possibility that the property might be sold at the time the land was “vacated” by including restrictions in the transfer deed. Such restrictions could be written to have allowed the city to retain control over who owns the property and plans they might have to modify the project.

“The city has no authority over the disposition of property not owned by the city,” said spokesman Chaz Adams. “The new owners of the property are required to follow the same terms and conditions set forth in the approved development agreement.”

The new owners have yet to make their intentions clear. No permits have been pulled. No modifications to the project have been sought.

The developers have plenty of time to chart a new course should they want to. A pair of Senate bills that were approved in 2009 and 2010 extend the deadline them to apply for and be granted a permit until well into 2014, according to Adams.

Neither Perez, the chairman of Miami-based Related Group of Florida, nor Andy Mitchell, Lillian Ireland’s grandson-in-law and the president of Fairwinds on the Ocean LLC, responded to requests for comment.

Hurricane Wilma inflicted significant damage on Ireland’s Inn in 2005. The hotel, considered by Broward’s historic trust to be an important example of Broward’s “signature architectural style,” closed in 2007.

The so-called mega-development proposed for the Ireland’s Inn site includes 164 hotel units, 128 multi-family units, 14,610 square feet of restaurants, a 17,431 square foot spa, 7,215 square feet of ballroom and board rooms and 2,280 square feet of retail space.

The acquisition of the roadway, which cuts through the property between Northeast 22nd and 23rd Streets, was critical to the project. Without it, the site was not large enough to qualify for rezoning under the city’s controversial Planned Urban Development (PUD) ordinance – a path to build so-called “unique or innovative development” not otherwise allowed under traditional zoning standards.

Soft hearts and lobbyists

Commissioner Rodstrom said that in addition to the “tug at the heartstrings” of commissioners by the Ireland family there were “about six teams” of lobbyists representing Fairwinds as it sought city approval. She said they included Fort Lauderdale attorney Robert Lochrie.

The project also had the strong support of nearby residents of the Lauderdale Beach Homeowners Association, to the north of the site. They even turned out at City Hall in large numbers when it was time for a vote, according to the Sun-Sentinel.

But conditions have changed since 2008, and Rodstrom says the commission would not approve the road giveaway or the Fairwinds resort project today. She called it, “too massive.”

Hutchinson, a force in making the Fairwinds deal happen, is no longer on the commission. In January, she was arrested on 11 charges of public corruption. State prosecutors have alleged Hutchinson received thousands of dollars in gifts and services from other developers in exchange for her favorable vote on their projects.

The city’s PUD ordinance is also in limbo for a year after a backlash against overdevelopment by more than a dozen neighborhood associations across the city. A task force will study the nine-year-old ordinance and recommend changes.

Residents like Miranda Lopez, whose Dolphin Isles neighborhood is west of A1A and south of Oakland Park Boulevard, say it is time to change the way the city does business with developers to protect local residents.

“It was a mistake to give away the road,” she said. “They could have asked for a trade of some kind. But they didn’t because the city has always favored the developers.”

 

 

Wall Street quietly creates a way to profit from homeowner distress

Large bank, hedge fund bundle small tax debts into private investments

By Fred Schulte
Huffington Post Investigative Fund

When Florida retiree Gladys Walker fell behind in paying taxes on her modest Pompano Beach home, she had no idea one of America’s biggest banks and a major Wall Street hedge fund engaged in frenzied bidding for the right to collect her debt—all $768.25 of it.

“I just couldn’t come up with the money,” said Walker, 67, a former hotel worker who makes do on a monthly Social Security check.

Barely more than a year after a taxpayer bailout of major financial institutions, Bank of America and the hedge fund, Fortress Investment Group, spotted a fresh money-making opportunity – collecting the tax debts of tens of thousands of people like Walker. The bank and hedge fund can add interest charges and fees, and they bundled the debts as securities for investors.

In late May and early June, proxies for the two institutions quietly bought hundreds of millions of dollars in homeowners’ property tax debts in Florida by bidding at a series of online auctions held by county tax collectors. They didn’t use their names but donned multiple other identities, dominating the auctions and repeatedly bidding on the same parcels – in the case of Walker’s small home, more than 8,000 times.

Then, in September, Bank of America’s securities division packaged $301 million worth of the tax liens it and Fortress had acquired into bonds pitched privately to major investors. The anticipated return – estimated at between 7 to 10 percent – is possible because buyers of tax debts can assess a panoply of interest charges and other fees. When the debt goes unpaid long enough, the liens buyer can seize properties through foreclosure.

Because the bonds were sold privately, there’s no public record indicating who purchased them, the prices paid, or the anticipated return. Moody Investment Services spokesman Tom Lemmon said the type of offering, known as a tax lien securitization trust, is fairly uncommon. Bank of America, he added, may make additional offerings in future years.

A Bank of America spokesman, while otherwise declining comment, said that the bank and Fortress had not acted together in bidding in the auctions.

Bank of America spokesman William Halldin said by email: “Our bids were made independent of any other organization. Any suggestion that they weren’t independent is simply incorrect.”

Fortress, which is headed by former Fannie Mae chief Daniel Mudd, had no comment.

The Florida securities deal illustrates how financial institutions, including some beneficiaries of federal bailout dollars, are actively creating new ways to profit from the financial distress of homeowners. Acting as surrogate tax collectors, they can help local governments quickly and efficiently bolster their budgets by tens of millions of dollars and in some cases find new owners for dilapidated property. Miami-Dade County, for instance, took in more than $374 million in June 2009 from the sale of about 60,000 property tax liens.

Yet no one is looking out for property owners who suddenly find themselves in debt to the new Wall Street taxman. The growing $5 billion tax lien market goes largely unwatched and unregulated because rules haven’t kept pace with the industry’s flourishing growth in economic hard times, the Huffington Post Investigative Fund has found in a review of the industry.

While federal officials have recently tightened regulations to protect consumers from a variety of debt collection tactics, private tax collectors aren’t on their radar. Meanwhile, many county tax officials say they simply lack the manpower to police the sales and collection process more closely.

“There’s an opportunity for sophisticated investors to come in and make a lot of money until the law is able to catch up. That’s the reality of what’s been happening,” said Robert Lawless, a law professor at the University of Illinois and expert on consumer credit issues.

Government officials often don’t even know who their new tax collection partners are. Many buyers of liens hop from state to state participating in fast-paced, online auctions without revealing their connections to Wall Street or registering their operations, even though the process grants them special foreclosure rights. In some instances, tax lien buyers have used drop boxes and empty offices as their addresses.

Officials routinely conduct millions of dollars in tax-sale business with limited liability companies that give little clue to their owners’ identities. All that’s required to get in is cash—in recent years a very big pile of it—and a tax identification number, which a buyer can apply for online.

“The regulations probably have not kept up with the technology as much as they should,” said W. Dale Summerford, Gadsden County (Fla.) tax collector. “There’s always something new you can’t keep up with.”

In Florida and other states in previous years, authorities occasionally have alleged other bidders in tax sale auctions may have colluded. In one such scheme in Florida eight years ago, more than a dozen firms paid more than $604,000 to settle civil allegations they fixed bids by acting together to keep interest rates high. Some collectors argue that online auctions, in which thousands of bidders sign on, are less likely to be tainted, however.

Many laws governing tax lien sales were written decades ago in hopes that they would encourage investors whose restoration of delinquent buildings would return them to the tax rolls. But some urban planners and legal experts question whether those laws now make sense, given today’s distressed property values and economic hard times. After all, buyers of homes that have greatly declined in value have less incentive to fix them up.

Communities might be worse off. John Pottow, a commercial law expert at the University of Michigan, predicts growth in private sales of tax liens will “result in a lot more foreclosures.” County tax collectors traditionally might have been more forgiving of citizens, and willing to work out debt repayment terms rather than see people forced out of their homes. “Banks won’t care about that,” said Pottow.

Some consumer advocates react more viscerally. They said they were dismayed to hear that institutions such as Bank of America, rescued by taxpayers, have rushed to cash in on homeowners in tax trouble. The bank accepted and later repaid more than $45 billion in taxpayer bailout money.

Even so, “if they are profiting off people in distress, it certainly isn’t consistent with what large banks say they do,” said John Rao, an attorney with the National Consumer Law Center in Boston.

In Florida, where tax-lien sales are the nation’s busiest, several tax collectors said they were unaware until a reporter called that Bank of America and Fortress had snared such a large cache of property liens using corporate aliases, or that the bank and hedge fund later pooled the debts to create a new investment opportunity for Wall Street.

Homeowners like Walker have no idea, either. Rather than risk losing their homes, most debtors eventually pay, along with penalties and interest, to the usual county tax collectors, who then forward the money to investors who own the lien. Walker said she took out a new mortgage to secure a roof over her head.

A Thriving Trade

While sales data and corporate filings show that banks and hedge funds often capture the lion’s share of the market, many other players are being drawn to tax lien investing. The allure includes the potential in some states to charge property owners as much as 18 percent interest and a slew of other fees. Tax lien holders can foreclose in as little as six months in some states, though others give homeowners more time to climb out of debt.

Some entrepreneurs, promising healthy returns and low risk, are reselling government-issued tax lien “certificates” on the Internet, adding another wrinkle to the nation’s ongoing property foreclosure debacle. Some websites suggest they are selling the home itself rather than the legal authority to collect a debt on it. People often don’t understand the difference, said Sam McClelland, deputy tax collector in Florida’s Pinellas County. “The Internet has opened all this up,” he said.

In other investment pitches, late night television and web-based promoters promise everyday folks quick riches through courses in how to build wealth off the tax lien trade—sometimes by misrepresenting the prospects, according to federal regulators.

The Federal Trade Commission, which has no direct oversight of the tax lien industry, has taken action under general consumer fraud statutes. The agency is suing tax sale promoter John Beck Amazing Profits, LLC, a fixture on late-night television. More than 600,000 consumers have purchased Beck’s lessons, according to the lawsuit. The agency alleges that customers initially pay $39.95 a month, but those fees can escalate to $4,000 on average—some three times that much—for more course material and other advice in how to purchase homes for what Beck says are “pennies on the dollar.”

“Despite their best efforts, consumers have been unable to buy homes for a few hundred dollars at tax sales or to quickly and easily earn substantial amounts of money,” FTC lawyers wrote in court filings. The suit is set for trial in California at the end of 2011.

Beck’s attorney, Larry C. Russ, said his client disputes the FTC’s allegations. He called Beck a “guru” of the tax lien business who is selling a “how to” book and courses to help other investors.

Veterans of the tax-lien trade acknowledge some abuses occur. But they argue that the sales of liens routinely help cash-strapped cities and counties efficiently collect millions of dollars in overdue taxes and other municipal bills. Homeowners can stay out of trouble by paying their taxes on time, they note, and for those who can’t, they offer what amounts to a loan, albeit one that can pile on high interest charges and fees.

Holding annual tax sales gets delinquent bills paid and “really makes a big impact” by generating new revenues that help pay for schools, said Mark L. Manoil, an Arizona lawyer and expert on the industry. By early next year, Maricopa County is likely to collect close to $100 million in property debts. “That’s pretty astonishing,” he said.

Revenue collectors add that some people would simply ignore their obligation to pay taxes without the threat of losing their homes, or paying steep interest to keep them. They say that publishing a list of delinquent properties in the local newspaper prior to the tax sale prompts a rush of last-minute payments.

Bidding Frenzy

Buying liens in the kind of volume traced to Bank of America and Fortress would once have been difficult. For years, small groups of local real estate investors typically bid on debt-laden parcels by holding up paddles. Auctions at county courthouses could take days.

These days many “tax sale” auctions flourish in cyberspace and attract sophisticated, anonymous buyers from anywhere in the world. In a matter of minutes, millions of dollars change hands through transactions that leave homeowners little more than unwitting pawns in a deal that, in effect, raises the prospect of losing their property over debts as small as a few hundred dollars.

In Florida, auctions in late May or early June stunned veterans with the ferocity of the bidding. In total, 67 counties sold off more than $1 billion in tax debt through auctions, about half of them online.

In Pinellas County, the St. Petersburg area, the tax sale used to draw 60 to 70 people. This year, the county processed 340 million electronic bids from tens of thousands of online bidders. Deputy tax collector McClelland said employees in his office were “shocked” to see 50,000 bids or more fly in on a property. At one point, the computers crashed under the strain and the auction had to be shut down temporarily, he said.

Yet for all the frenzy, there were not as many bidders as it appeared because a handful of deep-pocketed bidders—mostly tied to banks and hedge funds— dominated, a computer-assisted analysis of sales data by the Huffington Post Investigative Fund has found. Most of the liens were awarded to a small group of interests.

County auctioneers start the bidding at 18 percent interest, the highest rate homeowners can be charged on their debts under state law. Bidders compete by agreeing to accept a smaller interest rate, which for desirable properties in many counties often ends up falling all the way to .25 percent. Tax collectors argue that this competition helps homeowners because lower interest rates reduce the amount homeowners must pay to satisfy the debt.

Florida law also guarantees a minimum 5 percent penalty, even if investors have agreed to accept a smaller interest rate. In past years, many homeowners or their mortgage holders have paid off the debt within a few months. That means investors often wind up with a quick 5 percent over a short term, which many find attractive in a flat economy.

Big investors gain an edge in the auctions by creating multiple corporate identities, in some cases thousands of variations of the same name, which bid on the same parcel over and over. Computer software randomly assigns ties among the bidders, so those able to place the greatest numbers of bids at the lowest rate stand the best chance of winning a tie. In some counties, ties decide who gets most of the liens sold.

County officials contacted by the Investigative Fund said it was generally acceptable and legal under current rules for a single underlying investor to create multiple corporate entities to make thousands of bids on the same property.

Banks Deny Coordination

Bank of America and the Fortress hedge fund dominated this year’s auctions in Florida’s three most populous counties, Miami-Dade, Broward and Palm Beach using colorful aliases and similar bidding strategies, the Investigative Fund’s data analysis shows.

Bank of America bid mainly through thousands of variations of Bennu, LLC, named for a mythical Egyptian bird, and Ecru LLC., named for the French word for a brownish-white color. Both Bennu and Ecru typically bid .25 percent multiple times on the same parcels, auction records show. So did Fortress, which had 17 identities with names like Citrus Capital, LLC, which used thousands of bid numbers. Such bidding had the effect of driving the interest rate down to the bare minimum; in Florida, that meant the winning bidders immediately can assess a 5 percent penalty.

On May 25, just after 10 a.m., the debt on Walker’s $62,000 Pompano Beach home came up for sale. It promptly drew 8,031 electronic bids, auction records show, all but two dozen from Bank of America or Fortress entities.

The bidding for Walker’s $768.25 lien ended in a tie, with “Bennu, LLC JA13B” winning collection rights, county records show. Like the thousands of other Bennu variations, it lists a post office box in Atlanta as its address. The Fortress companies listed the firm’s midtown Manhattan headquarters.

Two other bank operations, a subsidiary of JP Morgan Chase & Co. and BankAtlantic, a longtime tax sale investor based in Fort Lauderdale, and some other big investors also bid using multiple identities. But Bank of America and Fortress overwhelmed competitors with the volume of bids it lodged, so much so that some bidders who had planned to spend millions of dollars buying liens came away with little to show for it.

James Cox, a Duke University School of Law professor who specializes in corporate and securities law, said the domination of auctions by a few underlying entities using multiple names and bids “always raises questions” about whether all bidders competed on a level playing field.

About half the 78,698 liens in the bond deal are on property in the state’s three most populous counties. The liens average just under $5,000 each, but many debts were no larger than a few hundred dollars. They range from debt on mansions fronting Biscayne Bay in Miami Beach to modest condominiums and commercial buildings. Most are far below the property’s assessed value, county records and sales data show.

Because the bonds were offered privately, there’s little public record of how much they are expected to earn. Issuers of securities typically collect fees and can profit from a rise in the prices of the bonds. New York City, which has issued bonds backed by tax liens since 1996, is one of the few jurisdictions to do so.

The consequences for property owners are yet to play out. Under Florida law, the tax lien holder can foreclose if the homeowner doesn’t pay the bill with interest and fees within two years, but aren’t allowed to contact them about the matter until then. Most people will eventually pay off the debt rather than risk losing their homes.

No Federal Policing

Federal consumer regulators don’t record complaints about tax lien sales, so little is known about the impact on investors or homeowners. “That’s not an area we’ve been particularly active in,” said Monica Vaca, assistant director of the Federal Trade Commission’s division of marketing practices.

That leaves jurisdiction over collection practices for these debts to local authorities, some of whom are starting to complain about the consequences for citizens and neighborhoods. Tax lien investing has proven contentious in cities such as Cleveland, which canceled this year’s sale amid concerns that previous ones had contributed to an upsurge in foreclosures. That, in turn, caused further decay in marginal neighborhoods, housing advocates say. Cleveland has relied on a subsidiary of JP Morgan to handle these duties.

In Maryland, three Baltimore area men were sentenced earlier this year after pleading guilty to criminal charges of bid rigging in a U.S. Justice Department antitrust case. A federal grand jury in New Jersey also is investigating tax lien investing, though no charges have been filed.

Many firms were subpoenaed in the New Jersey probe, which does not appear to involve Bank of America. One firm subpoenaed was Mooring Tax Asset Group, a Virginia company that has helped service Bank of America’s tax liens, including those pledged in the investment package. Mooring denies any wrongdoing and said it is cooperating fully with the investigation.

Officials in Maryland and the District of Columbia have struggled for years to rein in tax certificate investors who pile fees—sometimes thousands of dollars worth—on homeowners, who can lose their property as a result. DC officials are facing off in court with one investment group to try and find out the owners’ identities and halt what they consider excessive legal fees charged to homeowners.

Two Baltimore area men convicted in the Maryland bid rigging investigation, for instance, made at least $10 million threatening homeowners with foreclosure unless they paid them fees that often amounted to ten times the taxes owed, according to federal prosecutors.

In another example, the Huffington Post Investigative Fund reported in May on the case of Vicki Valentine, an unemployed mother of four who lost her Baltimore home over what began as an unpaid city water bill of $362. She was unable to pay the thousands of dollars in legal fees and other charges due to investors and keep the mortgage free property, which her family had owned for nearly three decades.

Collection policies vary widely among the 29 states that conduct lien auctions, compounding the uncertainty and confusion. In addition, it’s far from sure if growing concerns over the legality of paperwork used to support property foreclosures nationwide will have an impact on the tax-lien market, officials said.

In most states, the owner of a property tax lien—even if it’s just a few hundred dollars on real estate worth many times that much—is given high priority under the law. A tax lien can wipe out a mortgage, for instance, and courts generally won’t challenge that supremacy, meaning that in some cases investors can walk away with homes for little more than the taxes due on them.

Some tax collectors worry that banks or others might turn to tax lien purchases as a way to guarantee a less messy path to foreclosure. In some areas, it might be much easier and quicker to foreclose by securing a tax lien on a property on which the bank holds a mortgage. That’s possible in Florida, though it is not permitted in New Jersey, which considers it a conflict of interest.

Nobody knows how many banks are bidding on property they hold mortgages on because tax collectors aren’t equipped to collect the data. That leaves Florida collectors unsure who will be presenting certificates of ownership two years from now when homeowners whose liens were sold this year might be faced with a foreclosure action.

Other collectors, though they are pleased at how efficiently online auctions can generate tens of millions of dollars in newfound revenue, acknowledge bidding rules are lax and that they lack the expertise to police the sales.

Walker, the Florida retiree, said she realizes she had an obligation to pay her debt. But she said she feels it’s wrong for faraway investors on Wall Street to be taking advantage of her shaky finances. “I don’t think it’s fair,” she said.

Peter Tartaglione and Julian Hattem contributed to this article at Huffington Post Investigative Fund.



Fort Lauderdale mayor accused of “sell out” as public housing battle heats up

By Dan Christensen, BrowardBulldog.org

Jack Seiler

Jack Seiler

Yet another Fort Lauderdale neighborhood is fighting City Hall over plans for unwanted new development – and has taken the additional step of hauling the city into court to try and stop it.

In court papers, the not-for-profit Trust for Historic Sailboat Bend claims the fix was in when the city commission voted 5-0 in March to bulldoze and replace the Dr. Kennedy Homes public housing development. The vote, after a lengthy public hearing, reversed the city Historic Preservation Board’s 2009 decision to deny demolition.

Now, trust officials say they have proof the city intended all along to approve the demolition: a letter Mayor Jack Seiler wrote last September expressing the city’s “support” for the demolition and offering his “best wishes for the success” of the controversial replacement housing project.

“The mayor had his mind made up before the evidence was heard,” said Trust Vice President Charles Jordan. “The quasi-judicial hearing over which he presided was a charade.” (more…)

Reeling from foreclosures, Pompano homeowners upset as renovation money heads to private developer for new housing

By Dan Christensen, BrowardBulldog.org

Site of proposed Captiva Club apartments

Site of proposed Captiva Club apartments

Homeowners are crying foul at Pompano Beach’s plans to funnel to a private developer as much as $2 million in federal housing funds meant to help neighborhoods blighted by foreclosed and abandoned houses.

“Do we feel betrayed? You got that right,” said Ron Boehl, president of the Cresthaven Civic Association.

Pompano Beach is among the hardest-hit cities in a county with one of the highest foreclosure rates in the nation. A city report this month said there are more than “1,900 bank-owned properties” in Pompano, with another 1,600 homes in pre-foreclosure proceedings.

The Cresthaven and Pompano Highlands neighborhoods on the city’s north side have taken the brunt of the foreclosures and now face a second blow of losing access to about $1 million in federal money meant to revitalize abandoned and foreclosed houses. (more…)


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