NH Attorney Peddling Loan Modifications Abandons Clients After Regulator Issues Cease & Desist Order
In Concord, New Hampshire, the Concord Monitor reports:
- Closed firm fulfilled duties, he says. The website is still up, but the phone line has been cut off. Dan Dargon's law firm no longer exists. Not all of Dargon's clients got the memo, however. A month after the Dargon Law Firm shut its doors amid an investigation by the state into its loan modification practices, clients who say they were never informed of the firm's closure don't know what's happened to their cases.
- "I never got a phone call, never got an e-mail - I didn't get mail," said Glen Whelden, 43, of Pelham, who paid Dargon $2,500 last year to get help lowering his monthly mortgage payments.
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- Dargon said [] clients have no reason to be angry with him. He said he's fulfilled the terms of their contracts, which specified that he would submit their loan modification requests to lenders but didn't guarantee specific results. "If they want to call somebody, call (Banking Commissioner) Peter Hildreth, or whoever that deputy guy is," Dargon said. "Ask them what they're thinking and how they're going to take care of them now. "Not to be rude about it," he added, "but this was not our fault."
- Dargon said Gorham attorney Don Lader agreed to take on the 300 client files that were still active when Dargon closed the doors to his Concord office in September, months after the state Banking Department issued him a cease-and-desist order to stop modifying loans without a state license.
For more, see Irate clients want word from lawyer.
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