Auditors help owners at risk of losing their homes By: Jerry Kronenberg

This is a reprint of a story in the Boston Herald by Jerry Kronenberg featuring MFI-Miami. The story was about how Loan Auditors help homeowners save their home.

Update- When This article was written MFI-Miami was the only company investigating mortgage fraud on behalf of homeowners. We were the first ones in and are one of maybe two three mortgage experts still in business. The issues mentioned in this article believe it or not, are still happening. Although, they don’t get the media attention they once received. 

Why? The economy is in better shape and the number of people upside down on their mortgages is under 3%. As a result people can sell their homes have equity left over to downsize or get a rental. Also, lenders are also willing to do loan modifications as a last resort if needed.  

Mary Everleigh nearly lost the house she’s owned since 1986 to a fast-talking financier – until Stephen Dibert combed through her mortgage papers and realized the woman had fallen for a scam.

“Steve laid out all of the documents and said, ‘You know, what? Something isn’t kosher here,’” said Everleigh, a Michigan home-owner. “it was a big eye opener for me.” Dibert, a former loan originator turned anti-scam sleuth, is expanding his Miami-based Mortgage Fraud Investigations into Massachusetts – apparently becoming the first load “auditor” to set up shop in the Bay State.

This is a service that’s definitely needed in the Boston area. Said Dibert, one of a handful of mortgage auditors who’ve opened across the country in recent months.

Mortgage auditors review customers’ loan papers for forged signatures, sham home appraisals or other illegal acts. Any wrongdoing can strengthen financially strapped homeowners’ hands in negotiations with lenders.

Many customers are seeking “loan modifications.”

A modification is when banks agree to cut homeowners’ interest rate or otherwise change mortgage terms to help homeowners avoid foreclosure.

Others want lenders to OK “short sales,” where borrowers sell homes in today’s weak market for less than their unpaid mortgage balances and banks simply “eat” the difference.

Auditors also check paperwork covering a loan’s “securitization,” the process under which lenders bundle up hundreds of mortgages into big bonds later sold off to Wall Street. Large investors buy and sell mortgage-backed bonds like stocks, meaning that any given home loan can change hands a half-dozen times or more. However, an investment firm that later wants to foreclose on someone’s mortgage must provide a chain of paperwork proving that it really owns the loan in question. Failure to produce an original or even one key document can get a foreclosure case dismissed.

Dibert said:

“It’s Real Estate 101.cIn order to foreclose on a mortgage, you have to prove that you own it.”

Dibert has worked in the mortgage industry for the past decade. He launched MFI in June after friends kept asking him to check their loans for rip-offs:

“People were coming up to me and saying, ‘Steve, I think I got taken on my mortgage. Can you take a look at the loan papers?” the 41 year old recalled. “As more and more people started calling, I realized that I could make a business out of this.”

These Days, Dibert performs about 100 checks on each customers loan. He producing five- to 15-page reports. He also charges about $350 to $600.

The Florida man estimates that he finds problems as much as 90% of the time.

Common flaws include math errors on federal Truth in Lending Act forms. TILA form must accurately list a mortgage’s total lifetimes cost within $35.

While such mistakes can seem minor, they often give homeowners just enough leverage to get out of fraudulent loans.
For instance, Dibert recently helped a man who thought he agreed to pay $1,500 a month, but ended up facing roughly $3,800 in monthly mortgage bills.
August Blass of California-based National Loan Auditors thinks the housing boom led to lots of flawed loans because “things were going 1,000 miles an hour, so (banking) fundamentals were lost.”

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