Thursday, April 9, 2009

Florida AG Joins Illinois, Minnesota Counterparts In Tagging Jacksonville Upfront Fee Loan Modification Firm With Suit; Alleges Deceptive Practices

In Jacksonville, Florida, WJXT-TV Channel 4 reports:

  • Florida's attorney general has sued a Jacksonville company, claiming it's defrauding homeowners who are facing foreclosure. According to the lawsuit, National Foreclosure Counseling Services targeted homeowners and charged them up-front fees to modify their loans, in violation of Florida law.(1) The Attorney General's office said the company collected an average of $2,000 in up-front fees, and charged $125 an hour. The lawsuit also claimed that the company failed to perform the services following payment.

  • State investigators also said the company lured homeowners using mailings which implied they were coming from a government agency. The mailings claimed the consumers had been selected for special programs by "Government Insured Institutions," and stated the mailings were a last attempt to assist the homeowners before foreclosure.(2)

  • The Attorney General also requested the Duval County Circuit Court issue an injunction against the company, requiring it to immediately stop demanding up-front fees from customers before providing services. The company offers services nationwide and has already been sued by the attorneys general of Illinois and Minnesota.

Source: State Sues Foreclosure Rescue Company.

For more from the Florida AG's office, see:

(1) Also named as defendants in the lawsuit are: Raymond Paulk, Robert V. Dallavia, and American Foreclosure Counseling Center.

(2) In addition, the lawsuit alleges that, since October 1, 2008, the defendants "required homeowners who want their services to sign statements asserting that they are not "IN ANY WAY CONFUSED ABOUT ANY PART OF THE WORKING AGREEMENT," that they are not victims of the Defendants under the Florida Deceptive and Unfair Trade Practices Act, that they are "CONFIDENT THEY [ARE] NOT BEING VICTIMIZED ... IN ANY WAY WHAT-SO-EVER" and that the defendants are "NOT ATTEMPTING TO DUPE, MISLEAD, SWINDLE OR CHEAT" them." (Obviously, a not-so-subtle attempt to get the homeowners facing foreclosure to waive their legal rights under the statute.) The suit also alleges that the defendants "employ a sales force of approximately 140 persons and bringing in approximately $500,000 in fees each month." See Lawsuit - paragraph 26-27.

The lawsuit also alleges(at paragraphs 28-33) that the defendants' mailings:

  • give the impression they come from a government agency,
  • refer to the Defendants as "housing counseling community service[s],"
  • state that the homeowner's property "has been selected for special programs by the Government Insured Institutions,"
  • tell the recipients to contact an "Advisor for Duval County" or another Florida county, and that a representative for Duval [or other] County is available" to talk to the homeowner,"
  • state that they are an "urgent notification" and constitute a "last attempt to assist you,"
  • state that the property in question "qualifies" for loan modification.

3 comments:

Anonymous said...

COMPANY HAS BEEN CLEARED AND ATTORNEY GENERAL HAS DETERMINED NFCS IS DOING BUSINESS WITHIN THE STATE OF FLORIDA GUIDELINES. THIS COMPANY HAS A PROVEN TRACK RECORD OF SUCCESSFULLY MITIGATING OVER 3000 HOMEOWNERS.

Anonymous said...

From an April 8, 2009 press release from the Florida Attorney general:

Attorney General Bill McCollum today announced that his office has obtained a court order temporarily prohibiting a Jacksonville company from charging up-front fees for foreclosure-related rescue services. According to the order issued by the Duval County Circuit Court, National Foreclosure Counseling Services Corp. is barred from charging homeowners any fee in advance for providing foreclosure-related rescue services. The order was agreed upon by the state and the company.

Members of the Attorney General’s Economic Crimes Division, working as part of the Attorney General’s Mortgage Fraud Task Force, began investigating National Foreclosure Counseling Services, Corp. in January and filed a lawsuit against the company earlier this month. The investigation revealed National Foreclosure Counseling Services, Corp. allegedly required the consumer to sign a “working agreement” which included an up-front “retainer fee” averaging $1,800, an up-front “processing fee” of $200, and an hourly fee of $125 for future services before signing the consumer on as a client.

The injunction against National Foreclosure Counseling Services Corp., which also operates under the name American Foreclosure Counseling Center, will remain in effect until the resolution of the case. No further hearings are set at this time. Consumers affected by these or other practices may file a complaint online at http://www.myfloridalegal.com or may call the fraud hotline at 1-866-966-7226.

The lawsuit, which has also requested consumer restitution, is one of six filed by the Attorney General since the Foreclosure Rescue Fraud Prevention Act became law on October 1, 2008. The law specifically addresses companies which claim they can save homes from foreclosure by negotiating or modifying the terms of the homeowners’ mortgages. Civil penalties for violating the law can be up to $10,000 per violation or $15,000 if the victim is a senior citizen or disabled individual. The Attorney General’s Office has received thousands of complaints about these companies and their services over the past several months and continues to investigate more than 40 companies for potential violations of the law. More information is available online at http://www.myfloridalegal.com/mortgagefraud.

Anonymous said...

The April 8, 2009 Florida Attorney General press release can be viewed at this link:

http://www.myfloridalegal.com/newsrel.nsf/newsreleases/CCF1920BF78BBC05852575920069FC67