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Foreclosure Defense Florida

Bank Break-In Victim Applied For Mortgage Modification Via HAMP

foreclosure-Lock

By: Arthur Delaney | HuffPost Reporting-

Nancy Jacobini had applied for a mortgage modification when JPMorgan Chase broke into her house and attempted to change the locks on Sept. 28.

“I’m locked in my bathroom,” said Jacobini during a 911 call. “Somebody broke into my house!”

It turned out the bank wanted to secure the property even though Jacobini was not in foreclosure. She had applied for a modification via the Obama administration’s Home Affordable Modification Program, which gives mortgage servicers cash incentives to reduce monthly payments for eligible borrowers. But she paid a shady company to do the application for her and doesn’t know its current status.

Jacobini said she is only three or four months behind in making payments on the Orlando home she’s lived in for the past 15 years after losing her job in 2009. A Chase spokesman told HuffPost that the bank has reached out to Jacobini to apologize for trying to change her locks.

Consumer advocates say the mistaken lock-changing attempt by Chase is a symptom of a foreclosure fraud problem that has led the country’s largest banks to temporarily halt foreclosures nationwide. Rep. Alan Grayson, a Democrat who represents Orlando,  staged a press conference at Jacobini’s home. “My constituents, and many other hardworking people across the nation, are being outright bullied by a gang of greedy and reckless foreclosure firms,” he said.

A top bank regulator told HuffPost on Friday, however, that the fraud is limited and is  not directly harming homeowners. “The core issue remains the improper completion and submission of paperwork required by state law before foreclosing on seriously delinquent borrowers when alternatives to foreclosure are not possible,” said a spokesman from the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency. The Obama administration is resisting calls for a national foreclosure moratorium.

Consumer advocates say mortgage servicers like Chase are bungling paperwork for seriously delinquent borrowers and barely delinquent borrowers alike. And they say HAMP, which launched in 2009 with the goal of modifying mortgages for three- to four-million homeowners, has exposed the problem. More people have been bounced from the program than have received “permanent” five-year modifications, according to government data, and stories of  mortgage servicer incompetence have piled up.

Find the full Huffington Post article here…