Hey Razmic,
Of course I remember you. Yep, things can get rough fighting the bank. Here's some options from where you're at.
1. Appeal or have your attorney appeal and play a paper game like More Trouble is doing in the posting you replied to.
2. Change of venue. If you were in State before, file a complaint in Federal Court now. That means you'll who get to use claims like FTCPA and FCRA but you can also include state claims, though not one you used before.
3. File Chapter 13. You can have it dismissed later, you're not married to it but it's worth a few months. It could be six months or more before they can schedule a sale again. At that point you can file again.
Try to find a attorney who does adversary proceedings or Google "Max Gardner Boot camp attorneys". These guys unlike regular BK attorneys go after banks.
4. File a complaint with California's version of the CFPB, the DFPI. It's like the CFPB and
probably just as useless but you never know.
The DFPI facilitates communication with your financial institution when you file a complaint. It also assists in protecting other consumers.
dfpi.ca.gov
If all else fails and you can't stop the sale there are attorneys doing wrongful foreclosure lawsuits on contingency. That might include UD. Here's one that contacted me. Nonprofit Alliance of Consumer Advocates. NACA law.gov. They also claim to stop sales. I know nothing about them, just passing it on.
Hang in there!