Her story starts on the day she came home from work, only to find her home boarded up and with the locks changed, and goes from there:
- the failure to winterize the home led to bursted frozen water pipes which led to the destruction of the house,
- squtters taking up residence in the home which led to more trashing,
- the destruction and loss of all the family's personal belongings,
- a notice of foreclosure action that was improperly served (ie. 'sewer service'),
- a $2,000 nuisance fine by the City of Chicago because of the debris from a home gutting that was left piled on the front lawn (since she was still the owner, she got hit with the fine),
- the efforts Zabrina's lawyer, attorney Kelli Dudley, who coordinates the predatory lending program at John Marshall Law School, and who has teamed up with a private local law firm to file a seven-count counterclaim against the banks in their foreclosure action, alleging misdeeds from trespassing to unlawful conversion of property to consumer fraud.
After spending time couch-surfing with her family across Cook County, Zabrina ultimately gave up on Chicago and moved her family to Valparaiso, Indiana in search of a new start.
For the story, see Not a Wonderful Life: The Effects of Aggressive Foreclosure.
No comments:
Post a Comment