Thursday, September 9, 2010

Family Gets 1-Day Notice Of Pending Foreclosure Sale After Being Stiffed By Suspected Out-Of-State Loan Modification Racket

In Lewisburg, Tennessee, WSMV-TV Channel 4 reports:

  • The Vetter family in Lewisburg first learned their house was being auctioned on the courthouse steps when they read it in the newspaper the day before. They’d paid a home loan modification company to help them avoid foreclosure, but later discovered the company had hundreds of complaints against it for doing nothing to help the consumers who had paid them.

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  • They turned to a company called Premier Legal Advocates and paid it a fee of $998 upfront to negotiate a lower mortgage payment for them. They found out too late it isn't a real law firm.(1) Hundreds of former clients have posted comments on consumer websites claiming they lost their houses to foreclosure because Premier never contacted their mortgage companies.

  • [Kathrynne] Vetter said her mortgage company had never heard from Premier Legal Advocates. The company, which is based in California, has an F rating with the Better Business Bureau. The owner is listed as Brian Pascal, a man who the Better Business Bureau said has owned several similar companies in the past.

For the story, see Family Loses Home With 1 Day's Notice (Couple Blames Loan Modification Company).

(1) By using the word "legal" in the name of their business, Premier Legal Advocates arguably misrepresented that consumers would receive professional services associated with legal counsel. The Ohio Attorney General has recently taken this position in an unrelated lawsuit involving an outfit allegedly running a racket targeting the infirm elderly. See Cordray Sues Duo who Targeted Seniors with Medicaid Ploy.

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