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December 3, 2007 at 4:24 AM #108030December 3, 2007 at 7:32 AM #107924CoronitaParticipant
People being foreclosed actually spent money on buying the caulk, paint, sledgehammer needed to do the vandalism? They probably put it on a credit card. π
December 3, 2007 at 7:32 AM #108026CoronitaParticipantPeople being foreclosed actually spent money on buying the caulk, paint, sledgehammer needed to do the vandalism? They probably put it on a credit card. π
December 3, 2007 at 7:32 AM #108060CoronitaParticipantPeople being foreclosed actually spent money on buying the caulk, paint, sledgehammer needed to do the vandalism? They probably put it on a credit card. π
December 3, 2007 at 7:32 AM #108067CoronitaParticipantPeople being foreclosed actually spent money on buying the caulk, paint, sledgehammer needed to do the vandalism? They probably put it on a credit card. π
December 3, 2007 at 7:32 AM #108080CoronitaParticipantPeople being foreclosed actually spent money on buying the caulk, paint, sledgehammer needed to do the vandalism? They probably put it on a credit card. π
December 3, 2007 at 9:11 AM #107969AKParticipantI have little sympathy for the “owners” who commit these criminal acts, but the fear of vandalism might encourage approvals of short sales in lieu of foreclosure.
December 3, 2007 at 9:11 AM #108072AKParticipantI have little sympathy for the “owners” who commit these criminal acts, but the fear of vandalism might encourage approvals of short sales in lieu of foreclosure.
December 3, 2007 at 9:11 AM #108104AKParticipantI have little sympathy for the “owners” who commit these criminal acts, but the fear of vandalism might encourage approvals of short sales in lieu of foreclosure.
December 3, 2007 at 9:11 AM #108111AKParticipantI have little sympathy for the “owners” who commit these criminal acts, but the fear of vandalism might encourage approvals of short sales in lieu of foreclosure.
December 3, 2007 at 9:11 AM #108125AKParticipantI have little sympathy for the “owners” who commit these criminal acts, but the fear of vandalism might encourage approvals of short sales in lieu of foreclosure.
December 3, 2007 at 12:46 PM #108133studenteconomistParticipantI actually heard about this from someone who lives in the area when I was in Westlake Village last week for a job interview. It is amazing how one outragous story makes the rounds so quickly. Talk about skewing your perceptions of eviction behavior. Anyway, there was a huge Countrywide office there, so maybe the perpetrator lost his/her job and their house to the same company. Just speculation but I imagine we will be reading about this house in the newspapers/national websites before the month is over. Bad news like this travels at light speed.
December 3, 2007 at 12:46 PM #108237studenteconomistParticipantI actually heard about this from someone who lives in the area when I was in Westlake Village last week for a job interview. It is amazing how one outragous story makes the rounds so quickly. Talk about skewing your perceptions of eviction behavior. Anyway, there was a huge Countrywide office there, so maybe the perpetrator lost his/her job and their house to the same company. Just speculation but I imagine we will be reading about this house in the newspapers/national websites before the month is over. Bad news like this travels at light speed.
December 3, 2007 at 12:46 PM #108271studenteconomistParticipantI actually heard about this from someone who lives in the area when I was in Westlake Village last week for a job interview. It is amazing how one outragous story makes the rounds so quickly. Talk about skewing your perceptions of eviction behavior. Anyway, there was a huge Countrywide office there, so maybe the perpetrator lost his/her job and their house to the same company. Just speculation but I imagine we will be reading about this house in the newspapers/national websites before the month is over. Bad news like this travels at light speed.
December 3, 2007 at 12:46 PM #108274studenteconomistParticipantI actually heard about this from someone who lives in the area when I was in Westlake Village last week for a job interview. It is amazing how one outragous story makes the rounds so quickly. Talk about skewing your perceptions of eviction behavior. Anyway, there was a huge Countrywide office there, so maybe the perpetrator lost his/her job and their house to the same company. Just speculation but I imagine we will be reading about this house in the newspapers/national websites before the month is over. Bad news like this travels at light speed.
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