Forum Replies Created
-
AuthorPosts
-
farbetParticipant
Mello Roos is a killer for these Po folks around Questhaven/
With resets popping up now things willget hectic.
Mello Roos is a bond right anyone?
Can one pay the Mello Roos up front instead of having it stretched out for 20-30 years?farbetParticipantMello Roos is a killer for these Po folks around Questhaven/
With resets popping up now things willget hectic.
Mello Roos is a bond right anyone?
Can one pay the Mello Roos up front instead of having it stretched out for 20-30 years?farbetParticipantMello Roos is a killer for these Po folks around Questhaven/
With resets popping up now things willget hectic.
Mello Roos is a bond right anyone?
Can one pay the Mello Roos up front instead of having it stretched out for 20-30 years?farbetParticipantMello Roos is a killer for these Po folks around Questhaven/
With resets popping up now things willget hectic.
Mello Roos is a bond right anyone?
Can one pay the Mello Roos up front instead of having it stretched out for 20-30 years?farbetParticipantMello Roos is a killer for these Po folks around Questhaven/
With resets popping up now things willget hectic.
Mello Roos is a bond right anyone?
Can one pay the Mello Roos up front instead of having it stretched out for 20-30 years?farbetParticipantIs the mello roos lower on the Archer area homes side than the Questahaven area?
farbetParticipantIs the mello roos lower on the Archer area homes side than the Questahaven area?
farbetParticipantIs the mello roos lower on the Archer area homes side than the Questahaven area?
farbetParticipantIs the mello roos lower on the Archer area homes side than the Questahaven area?
farbetParticipantIs the mello roos lower on the Archer area homes side than the Questahaven area?
November 18, 2007 at 9:52 AM in reply to: WESTSIDE REAL ESTATE AGENTS AND APPRAISERS INDICTED #100729farbetParticipantAnd the beat goes on. Is this happening in San Diego? Reminds me of a Super J situation in Carlsbad
Homeowners entangled in loan scheme
BY KATIE THOMAS | [email protected]
November 18, 2007
E-mail Share
By all appearances, Aaron Wider is the chief executive of a flourishing mortgage bank in Garden City, issuing more than $33 million in home loans to buyers across Nassau and Suffolk counties over the past four years.A closer look at his lending practices, however, reveals that many of these loans relied on faulty appraisals and exaggerated loan applications, leaving behind angry homeowners who are struggling to pay mortgages on overpriced homes.
http://www.newsday.com/news/local/ny-enforc1118,0,1299029.story?page=1
“I trusted him, I felt like he was an honest person,” said Robin Fitzgerald, who negotiated with Wider to pay $805,000 for a home in North Massapequa in 2005 that a later appraisal valued at $545,000. Fitzgerald is now facing foreclosure. “I wasn’t familiar with the prices of houses here. I’m a first-time homeowner.”
November 18, 2007 at 9:52 AM in reply to: WESTSIDE REAL ESTATE AGENTS AND APPRAISERS INDICTED #100812farbetParticipantAnd the beat goes on. Is this happening in San Diego? Reminds me of a Super J situation in Carlsbad
Homeowners entangled in loan scheme
BY KATIE THOMAS | [email protected]
November 18, 2007
E-mail Share
By all appearances, Aaron Wider is the chief executive of a flourishing mortgage bank in Garden City, issuing more than $33 million in home loans to buyers across Nassau and Suffolk counties over the past four years.A closer look at his lending practices, however, reveals that many of these loans relied on faulty appraisals and exaggerated loan applications, leaving behind angry homeowners who are struggling to pay mortgages on overpriced homes.
http://www.newsday.com/news/local/ny-enforc1118,0,1299029.story?page=1
“I trusted him, I felt like he was an honest person,” said Robin Fitzgerald, who negotiated with Wider to pay $805,000 for a home in North Massapequa in 2005 that a later appraisal valued at $545,000. Fitzgerald is now facing foreclosure. “I wasn’t familiar with the prices of houses here. I’m a first-time homeowner.”
November 18, 2007 at 9:52 AM in reply to: WESTSIDE REAL ESTATE AGENTS AND APPRAISERS INDICTED #100827farbetParticipantAnd the beat goes on. Is this happening in San Diego? Reminds me of a Super J situation in Carlsbad
Homeowners entangled in loan scheme
BY KATIE THOMAS | [email protected]
November 18, 2007
E-mail Share
By all appearances, Aaron Wider is the chief executive of a flourishing mortgage bank in Garden City, issuing more than $33 million in home loans to buyers across Nassau and Suffolk counties over the past four years.A closer look at his lending practices, however, reveals that many of these loans relied on faulty appraisals and exaggerated loan applications, leaving behind angry homeowners who are struggling to pay mortgages on overpriced homes.
http://www.newsday.com/news/local/ny-enforc1118,0,1299029.story?page=1
“I trusted him, I felt like he was an honest person,” said Robin Fitzgerald, who negotiated with Wider to pay $805,000 for a home in North Massapequa in 2005 that a later appraisal valued at $545,000. Fitzgerald is now facing foreclosure. “I wasn’t familiar with the prices of houses here. I’m a first-time homeowner.”
November 18, 2007 at 9:52 AM in reply to: WESTSIDE REAL ESTATE AGENTS AND APPRAISERS INDICTED #100841farbetParticipantAnd the beat goes on. Is this happening in San Diego? Reminds me of a Super J situation in Carlsbad
Homeowners entangled in loan scheme
BY KATIE THOMAS | [email protected]
November 18, 2007
E-mail Share
By all appearances, Aaron Wider is the chief executive of a flourishing mortgage bank in Garden City, issuing more than $33 million in home loans to buyers across Nassau and Suffolk counties over the past four years.A closer look at his lending practices, however, reveals that many of these loans relied on faulty appraisals and exaggerated loan applications, leaving behind angry homeowners who are struggling to pay mortgages on overpriced homes.
http://www.newsday.com/news/local/ny-enforc1118,0,1299029.story?page=1
“I trusted him, I felt like he was an honest person,” said Robin Fitzgerald, who negotiated with Wider to pay $805,000 for a home in North Massapequa in 2005 that a later appraisal valued at $545,000. Fitzgerald is now facing foreclosure. “I wasn’t familiar with the prices of houses here. I’m a first-time homeowner.”
-
AuthorPosts