Pines in Lockup

From the U-T:

A Carlsbad attorney who made national headlines for telling clients to break into their foreclosed homes and retake possession was arrested Tuesday after a State Bar hearing on whether to revoke his license to practice law.

Simi Valley police – who were at the hearing in plainclothes – arrested Michael T. Pines, outside the California State Bar court in Los Angeles at 12:30 p.m., police said. Detectives said Pines failed to appear in court in Ventura County and had an outstanding open-trespassing warrant for his arrest.

After Tuesday’s 90-minute hearing in the State Bar court, police served the warrant, arrested him and took him to Ventura County Jail.

State Bar attorneys have asked a judge to disbar Pines, who they call a “substantial threat of harm to the interests of his clients and the public. He is a menace,” according to a court filing. Pines’ methods made national news last year when he helped clients break into their foreclosed homes and reoccupy them.

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Carmel

Across from Carmel Beach and a short stroll to town, this restored 1929 M.J. Murphy Mediterranean home with unobstructed ocean views from three-levels is a rare gem for the very discerning. The diligent and inspired renovation retained the original mahogany doors, S & S tile, metalwork, hardware, fixtures & fireplaces, wherever possible, with careful architectural and historic considerations.

All the basic systems have been entirely replaced and the interior surfaces, mill-work, beams, floors, appliances and amenities are stunning. This classic has six-bedrooms, each with a private bath as well as many unique indoor and outdoor gathering spaces.

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Glaucus

What isn’t easily conveyed here is the delay between making a full-price offer, and then having to wait four days before knowing the results. 

It’s an unsettling time for buyers – you like the house, you want to buy it, but you need the seller’s signature to create a binding contract. If they want to take their time and shop you around, they can – and usually will:

Hire More, or Slow Down!

From NMN:

The only bank that has been penalized for mortgage servicing lapses got slapped for doing the opposite of what state attorneys general have been demanding.

Bank of America Corp. was penalized in the fourth quarter for delaying foreclosures — not for moving too quickly.  B of A expects to pay an estimated $230 million of “compensatory fees” to Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac for the lag.

Now, experts are wondering whether the absence of any regulatory fines amounts to a green light to speed up the processing of foreclosures as long as the paperwork is in better order.

“It’s ironic that servicers are being fined for not foreclosing fast enough but have faced no penalties for their poor performance on loan modifications and not helping borrowers,” said Steven Gillan, the executive director of the American Alliance of Home Modification Professionals, an Astoria, N.Y., company that helps servicers with the government’s loan modification program.

Regulators have failed to punish servicers for noncompliance with the Home Affordable Modification Program because, they say, they lack the authority to assess penalties.

Fannie has assessed similar fees against other servicers for dragging their feet in completing foreclosures within its prescribed deadlines, said Maureen Davenport, a Fannie spokeswoman, but it has not disclosed the names of the other servicers or the amount of fees assessed.

Whether servicers should pay fines — and how much — for lapses is a focal point of settlement talks with state attorneys general and federal banking regulators.

Cease-and-desist orders are expected early this week from federal regulators against the top 14 mortgage servicers, but they are not expected to include any monetary penalties.  Instead, the regulators likely will demand servicers hire more staff or slow down the foreclosure process.

Mold House for Free

From Jacksonville.com:

Perry Laspina was in the middle of foreclosure with the possibility of losing the house he owned in Jacksonville. Then the mail came one day in late January telling him that the house was his.

Despite the $72,000 mortgage that he barely paid anything on, despite the foreclosure … the house was his.  Despite the fact that he didn’t have an attorney in the foreclosure proceedings, the mortgage holder simply gave up and walked away.

It’s a tale populated with many of the major players in the national foreclosure drama: The law firm of David Stern, the Mortgage Electronic Registration Systems (better known as MERS) and a mortgage packaged with others and sold into a securitized trust.

Here’s how it happened.

Back in 2006, Laspina, a used-car dealer based in South Florida, had some extra money and decided to buy some real estate that he could resell quickly at a profit. It was, after all, the height of the housing boom with prices skyrocketing and mortgage money easily available.

“Since everyone else was making money flipping houses, I figured I would, too,” he said.

He wasn’t familiar with Jacksonville, but his brother owned a house in Fernandina Beach and found the house on Oakwood Street in the Panama Gardens neighborhood of Jacksonville off North Main Street.

It’s an old neighborhood where most of the houses are still well-maintained.

Laspina bought the house for $80,000, putting $8,000 down and taking out an adjustable rate mortgage with EquiFirst for the remaining $72,000 with an interest rate of 9.5 percent.

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Video/Stats Mix

You’d think that the week before tax day would be a slower time for real estate, but here are the number of NSDCC detached sales that were marked pending around April 15th:

Year April 2-8 April 9-15 April 16-22
2008
60
55
50
2009
48
46
50
2010
63
58
59
2011
64*

(*only 2 have closed)

These days, the pursuit of homebuying doesn’t take a week off.

Thankfully, neither do the new REO listings coming to market – here’s the latest:

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