moretrouble
LoanSafe Member
Ocwen stock is dropping a rock. Maybe somebody at CFPB is reading my letter.
My letter was In post #8. They already spent at least $100K for the 4 attorneys trying to foreclose on my cheap 400K house. That was not too wise trying to get 400K risking million dollar loss of market cap. Wait till I file a complaint in the Federal court exposing the scam , wonder what would that do to the stock?Hmmm....
" The company has been a target of the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau. Nearly a year after a federal judge dismissed the CFPB’s mortgage servicing misconduct suit against Ocwen Financial Corp., the watchdog agency moved in early February to overturn the decision. "
(HousngWre)
Good luck , Isisis. If you're pro se don't expect to win. A pro se can not prevail because a pro se win would deem the law education acquired by the opposing attorneys (and the judge ) worthless, waste of time (and careers); as opposed we learn from the internet. You need to create enough trouble and incur enough costs for them so they will leave you alone. The advantage a pro se has is you can litigate all the way to the U. S Supreme Court with minimal legal fee. My motions, responses were about 300-page longs gave them plenty of time to read. Those attorneys probably loved me because of the fees they could charge. I look at this as exercise of the brain, staying away from dementia.I'm in federal court now and the usual suspects have scheduled a deposition. Along with the legal issues at hand I suppose this is a matter of psychological warfare. They're sizing me up to see how good the case is, whether I'd be a credible witness and looking for weakness to exploit. Some things I've read suggest saying as little as possible, being non combative and likable but then again if I wanted to be congenial and agreeable I wouldn't have taken these guys to federal court with allegations of oppressive unlawful conduct. So I'm tempted to use the opportunity to plead my case and am likely to find that irresistible but wondering if restraint is more advisable.
Complicating matters even further is having to search through my closet you see if I have any grown up clothes. Looking back this may not have been the best time to dye my hair purple. Also need to take out the nose ring and make sure my various tattoos are well hidden. Just kidding....sort of.
Hi Isisis.I'm in federal court now and the usual suspects have scheduled a deposition. Along with the legal issues at hand I suppose this is a matter of psychological warfare. They're sizing me up to see how good the case is, whether I'd be a credible witness and looking for weakness to exploit. Some things I've read suggest saying as little as possible, being non combative and likable but then again if I wanted to be congenial and agreeable I wouldn't have taken these guys to federal court with allegations of oppressive unlawful conduct. So I'm tempted to use the opportunity to plead my case and am likely to find that irresistible but wondering if restraint is more advisable.
Complicating matters even further is having to search through my closet you see if I have any grown up clothes. Looking back this may not have been the best time to dye my hair purple. Also need to take out the nose ring and make sure my various tattoos are well hidden. Just kid ding....sort of.
Of course they're not going to write it down!!! Never document the crime. This is called the "golden rule."That leaves the only choice number 3. Being laughed at by one guy is much better than being laughed at by the whole world....So when you understand why they did what they did, everything becomes easy.
Since you are still in the house, what did you end up landing on for terms?Your settlement conf. reminds me of my own court-mandated mediation meeting. Before going in, I knew it was going to be a waste of my time but they (BOfA and Ocwen) convinced the judge let them tried the last time to suck me up into some kind of agreement to refute all my claims for a measly sum of 10K. I also knew that if I had accepted the offer they would have laughed at me saying "What a dummy MF". Inflation , we are paying for the banks' bailout.
Still in the house after 12 and a half years.
There is no term or agreement. I'll stay till the sheriff kicks me out.Since you are still in the house, what did you end up landing on for terms?
Agree, but at the same time we have rights as well. I am just not going to agree to a modification (that is terrible terms) without them showing justification of the amount due. I have asked repeatedly, and I have been thrown 6 different totals, I want/I'm entitled to these details. When asked over the phone they reply "well let's start off with finding what your payoff of the 1st is"? No, that's not what I'm asking, if if they can function separately from the 1st to their benefit then we are going to start there. What is my total due and how did you arrive at that number. Via mail, I can find 6 different amounts they stated. The payment ledger shows a $42k balance...so show me how the additional $60k is factored in!I want to say this out loud. For anyone reading this post, or thinking of challenging your foreclosure. Unless you are just attempting to stall time, and literally have zero desire to keep your home, I advise everyone to attempt to workout a Loan Modification of any kind, or to consider a Chapter 13 Bankruptcy if the modification fails.
But you should only get a Chapter 13, *IF* you have received actual financial counseling, and can afford a purposed plan payment. DO NOT JUST TAKE THE ADVICE OF A BANKRICPTY ATTORNEY, WHICH *RARELY* HAS YOUR BEST INTEREST AT HEART.
As time rolls and goes on, many people who have lost their homes, or walked away, have immense regret. Almost all of them are paying more in rent now, than they ever were on their crappy subprime mortgages. And further more, the loan mods, while sometimes crappy, would have eventually landed them to upside, in 2020, and on.
The Banks, have learned a lot since 2007. They no longer file cases in the name of MERS Inc, or lose promissory notes. Judges are far less sympathetic towards defendants, and housing, housing is a whole other world.
The entry into homeownership, even starter homes, is unprecedented. It's also becoming quickly out of reach, for most people. Beginner Condo's which once sold for $300,000, back in 2018, now regularly fetch well in excess of $575,000.
I just think... considering the facts, most people are far better off getting a loan mod, and paying a bank, and slowly, but surely, building equity, and having a secure, fixed payment. Despite what others say, this insane housing market will slow, but will not burst. And rental prices... well, a lot of people are going to suffer a slow death of a 1,000 cuts.
There's a handful of us on this thread still in our homes twelve years now. More Trouble, Annie Mac, Krafty, Survivor, me who else? I think all of us got to this point in different ways, perseverance being the most obvious. Something my attorney said in settlement suggested something else He said they aren't used to being up against someone like me. Not certain what he meant but I speculate it's something we all have in common. When a homeowner makes cogent arguments and doesn't treat the bank with reverence but with the same consideration they'd show any human this throws them off balance. They become disoriented at the thought of something greater than themselves in the dominance hierarchy, the law for instance....Since you are still in the house, what did you end up landing on for terms?