Lender Accused Of Improper Trash-Out After Selling Former REO To Michigan Homebuyer In All-Cash Deal
In Grand Rapids, Michigan, WOOD-TV Channel 8 reports:
- A Gowen couple is filing a federal suit against Deutsche Bank National Trust Company, saying the bank not only stole their belongings, but also, their sense of security. Rick and Sherry Rought say the same bank that sold them a home for their adult daughter is breaking into the house and treating it as a foreclosure.
- The family's plan was simple. The Roughts bought the foreclosed home in cash and fixed it up, then commuted from their primary home, moving in little by little. But six months after the purchase from Deutsche Bank, things started to get complicated.
- "We just went up there one day and there was a note on the door from this company -- a trash-out company," Rick Rought said. "The doors were broken into." The defendants not only changed the locks on the home, but stole some possessions, the Roughts said. All kinds of things were taken -- from a dining room set to the American flag mounted outside the home. "We looked and the curtains were gone, then we started to panic and when we went in, there was virtually nothing left," Sherry Rought said. "Everything was swept out and gone."
- The couple got the Michigan State Police involved, but the investigation led to dead ends: unreturned messages at Deutsche Bank and a third-party company, Field Asset Services, hired by the bank to maintain the property during foreclosure. Field Asset Services broke into the home two other times, the Rought family said, treating the property as though it was still foreclosed.
For the story, see 'Bank acts like home is a foreclosure' (Gowen couple files lawsuit against Deutsche Bank).
See also, WZZM-TV Channel 13: Family's recently purchased home, gutted by property removal service:
- The Roughts are telling their story with help from Massachusetts attorney's Joseph DeMello and Carlin Phillips. "They have suffered what many people throughout the United States have been suffering and that is unconscionable conduct at the hands of these multi-billion dollar banks," says DeMello.(1)
(1) DeMello currently represents a Massachusetts couple who got similarly screwed when they bought a foreclosing lender's REO on an all-cash basis, only to have the premises trashed out shortly thereafter. See ABC News: No Mortgage, Still Foreclosed? Bank of America Sued for Seizing Wrong Homes (In the Last Four Months, Three Homeowners Have Sued Bank of America for Mistakenly Foreclosing on Their Homes).
1 comment:
I'm representing a family in WA state that had their property seized prematurely by GMAC,FAFS and a local contractor. In WA,the owner has 20days after the auction before anyone has standing to make them leave. My clients did not get 20 days, it was 10 or so, and their personal property was taken to the dump or sold to the neighbors.
GMAC knew the timing exactly as they moved to lift the bankruptcy stay so they could foreclose.
Powell
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