Mom, Family Face Boot After Son Uses Forged Deed To Score Fraudulent Loan On Fully Paid-Off Home; Victim Fights Back, Seeks To Void Deed, Mortgage
In Miami, Florida, The Miami Herald reports:
- Ten people spanning three generations share a single bathroom in what's left of Annie Edwards' crumbling home in Liberty City. There are holes in the wood floors and trash bags plastered to the leaking ceiling -- and Deutsche Bank is adamant that it wants this 82-year-old structure. It has been fighting to repossess the home since 2006 in an ongoing legal battle that involves allegations of forged signatures, a disbarred property appraiser and a family on the brink of homelessness.
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- Edwards' predicament represents a confluence of the fraud, document forgery, and suspicious foreclosure practices that have plagued South Florida's housing market from the housing boom after Hurricane Wilma in 2005, through the current "robo-signing'' scandal. In the midst of a new national foreclosure crisis, Edwards' story stands out as a case study of the housing and banking systems' laundry list of problems.
- The 63-year-old retiree says her housing troubles began five years ago when her ex-husband, legally blind and illiterate, was duped into taking out a $102,000 mortgage on the house by his adult son and daughter-in-law. The couple forged Edwards' signature on a document that stripped her possession of the home, and then made off with the money in January 2006, she said.
- "It's really a sad case,'' said Jonathan Heller, a lawyer who volunteered to defend Edwards from
foreclosure.(1) "She worked for 30 years, had no mortgage on the property, is in a wheelchair and every night she goes to sleep thinking, `Am I going to have this house when I wake up?'
For more, see House, homeowner caught in a mortgage meltdown (A Liberty City woman is fighting foreclosure, claiming forgery, fraud and bank negligence in a drama that has her family home at stake).
(1) According to the story, using a dishonest property appraiser was only one of many suspicious actions by mortgage lender Argent Mortgage, Heller alleges. The loan approval process was also questionable, he said. The loan application claims Edwards' ex-husband, Kenneth Edwards, was an "owner-occupier,'' of the home, though he hadn't lived there for 10 years and public records shows he bought a separate homesteaded property in 1996. The bank never checked and, according to Kenneth Edwards, never asked. In a sworn affidavit, he states that he never spoke to any bank representatives before the loan was made.
According to Annie Edwards' counterclaim, the lender also relied on a forged quit-claim deed that stripped her of her ownership, the story states. A police report found her signature on that document was a forgery, the counterclaim states. If the forgery defense is accepted in court, that would make the loan, and the foreclosure, legally invalid.
Annie Edwards reportedly puts most of the blame on her stepson and his wife, since they obtained a loan without her knowledge, never paid the mortgage, and hasn't heard from either one of them since. Edwards' attorney Jonathan Heller hopes to take the matter to trial, and eventually have the foreclosure ruled unlawful. He also filed a counterclaim for wrongful foreclosure, the story states.
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