Wednesday, March 18, 2009

Visitor Comments

A visitor to the website made several incorrect statements, but because they did not list an email address or name I cannot respond to them. I will post the answers here. Their comments

Claim - the AG investigated RELG and found nothing wrong
Truth - Website Documents show the AG was forced to include RELG in their complaint. Question - Where are the results of their investigation, I did not know it was posted.

Claim - RELG proved that no money in its accounts came from OH
Truth - Website Documents show the deposits into RELG accounts

Claim - Outreach took customers on since January but did nothing
Truth - Did you read the Outreach Housing history? Attorneys from the beginning

Claim - Outreach Housing told homeowners not to pay their mortgage
Truth - Testimony shows RELG told homeowners to say this. This was not OH policy

Claim - Outreach Housing told homeowners they would re-negotiate their mortgage
Truth - Law Firms would sue homeowner lenders in federal court for as little as $750.00.

OH provided a valuable service to both homeowners and law firms. The AG desperately wants to make this go away, to cover up what they did and protect their own.

New Documents Posted

Additional court documents have been updated on the website: http://sites.google.com/site/disenfranchisedhomeowners/home

New documents include:

RELG Deposits - Which were the deposits made into RELG accounts. These were "Trust Funds" which are deposits made specifically for individual homeowners' court filings. RELG took the money for 650 homeowners and actually filed only 3 cases.

Motion to Compel - The case of Outreach Housing against RELG showing how RELG embezzled homeowner money and did not represent them.

Franklin RICO suit is a 75 Million lawsuit against Kirsten Franklin in South Carolina for Unfair and Deceptive Trade Practices.

Thursday, March 12, 2009

Lawsuits

So if you are up to speed on everything you know there are 3 cases.



First: in Miami with Judge Escharte where Outreach Housing is suing the law firms who
(1) took homeowner trust money and did not file,
(2) took homeowner records, sat for 4 month then returned them,
(3) incited homeowners to generate an investigation, creating a diversion to their crimes.



Second: in Broward with Judge Henning where the State is suing Outreach Housing for fraud. The State is so unprepared and lacks proof of any wrongdoing and may be facing sanctions.



Third: in Broward with Judge Weinstein where the State is suing Outreach Housing for 5 new charges that were later dropped so this case is also for fraud (justy like the case above). Hmm

Monday, March 2, 2009

There was a company that helped struggling homeowners by going after predatory lenders in federal court. The company was beginning to see significant results for hundreds of homeowners when the State took control of it.

They cited five charges that they later dropped (admits there were no laws broken) but still retain control of the company claiming they "feel" there was fraud. The receivership shut down all incoming revenues, vendor relationships, homeowner and lawyer access to the system. Now the receivership claims they must sell off all assets to pay for themselves (how convenient). I believe they really shut it down for political reasons
(the State settled with the banks for a mere 500K, which was really paid out by TARP1).

CBS covered this story without investigating, meaning they aired whatever the State supplied. I would love to show the truth about how bad the mainstream media did. The true story is that it's the homeowner who lost. They will continue to lose until a service like this is available to them. Is it legal for them to shut the company down, even after admitting there were no laws broken?

Monday, February 23, 2009

Housing Crisis & Washington

U.S. President Barack Obama pledged up to $275 billion last week to help stem a wave of home foreclosures, part of a broad effort using massive sums of government money to push the country out of recession. What?

This is ridiculous to think that there is a "blanket solution" out there for a few reasons.

First: Why would someone who is current with their mortgage continue paying? If they stop paying their mortgage, they will get money from the government. Gee, how many people will just stop paying their mortgage? What will that do for the banking system and our economy?

Second: It's not the bank's money, it's investors money. The bank is just the distributor. How can Washington dictate to the bank to make less money? Is Washington going to go to every investor on the planet and get them each to agree to take less money? Of course not. It's all just "Pelosi" talk (just my word for BS).

The only way to fix this is One Homeowner At A Time.

Sunday, February 22, 2009

OH

1) - OH supplies valuable service to Homeowners & Law Firms
2) - RELG takes Homeowner Money and all Homeowner records
3) - The State shut down Outreach without investigating RELG
4) - Service to Homeowners is stopped

Who is screwed, the Homeowners. Why are the protecting RELG?

The State shut down a perfectly legitimate company, then looked for a problem. They will make one up if they have to.

Thursday, February 19, 2009

Outreach Housing

Hello:

Washington DC handed $25 Billion to Bank of America (who absorbed Countrywide Bank). BoA took that money and settled with the State of Florida for $500,000. Is this why the AG is not interested in stirring things up?

So it's okay for the Florida AG to recognize egregious violations and collect on them, but deny homeowners? What a deal for Bank of America, and they continues to take more from TARP 2, Wow! - What do you think?