
Across the U.S., homeowners facing mortgage foreclosure are being scammed by foreclosure “rescue” companies that promise to save their houses but that only take their money. In light of this emerging trend, the Better Business Bureau (BBB) warns that gloomy forecasts for the housing and financial markets means that increasingly more people could fall prey to mortgage foreclosure scams in the coming months and years.
“According to estimates, as many as 1.7 million homeowners could lose their houses to foreclosure in the next couple of years,” said Steve Cox, spokesperson for the Better Business Bureau. “These people will be in the desperate position of trying to save their homes, and they’ll look for someone to trust. Unfortunately, con artists are seeing their chance to step in and make a fast buck off of troubled homeowners from Palm Springs to Pittsburgh.”
In recent months, the BBB has heard from victims of foreclosure rescue schemes in almost all 50 states. Not surprisingly, states with the highest foreclosure rates — such as Georgia, Colorado and Ohio — have an exceptionally high number of complaints for companies offering foreclosure rescue.
BBBs nationwide have received hundreds of complaints from homeowners who enlisted the help of unscrupulous mortgage foreclosure rescue companies, and they all tell a similar story.
Typically, homeowners report that they were either contacted directly by a mortgage foreclosure rescue company or came across a Web site while searching for help to stop foreclosure on their homes. The companies claimed they would renegotiate the terms of their mortgages and stop foreclosure actions, or the homeowners would get their money back. Victims, who were desperate to keep their homes, paid as much as $1,300. In the end, the companies did very little work or often nothing at all. Most victims not only lost their homes but also have not been able to get the promised refunds.
“BBBs across the nation are hearing the same story from victims over and over again,” added Cox. “Desperate homeowners are duped into a false sense of security by crooked companies and think their prayers have been answered and their homes will be saved. Unfortunately, many people are losing a lot of money and their houses through untrustworthy foreclosure rescue operations.”
The BBB offers the following advice for homeowners facing mortgage foreclosure:
For more trustworthy advice and tips for troubled homeowners, go to www.us.bbb.org.
© 2008 by the Council of Better Business Bureaus, Inc. Arlington, VA
Used by permission. The name Better Business Bureau is a registered service mark of the Council of Better Business Bureaus, Inc.