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triciae_gw

Bankruptcy Mess Continues

triciae
16 years ago

As some of you know, DH & I tried unsuccessfully for over one year to locate the rightful owners of a property we wanted very much to purchase. We were able to track it to the American Home Mortgage bankruptcy filed in the Deleware District in August '07. From there though we've received nothing but a fruitless 'run around'. There was a lively debate here on the forum regarding adverse possession. :)

Hope continues to tickle at us though so periodically I do a web search for new info. Found this today. Wonder if 'our' house is one of these 490,000 unidentified properties?

"American Home Mortgage can't figure out who owns the mortgages -- so destroy 'em?

Posted Feb 11th 2008 3:18PM by Zac Bissonnette

Filed under: Housing

The fallout from the subprime crisis has gone from merely scandalous to the downright ridiculous.

American Home Mortgage has files for 490,000 loans sitting in a warehouse (at a cost of $45,000 per month), and it can't even figure out who owns the loans because they've been bought and sold so many times since they were issued sometime after September of 2005.

So American Home Mortgage has a brilliant idea for what to do with them: Burn them!

Not so fast, say Wall Street investors who claim that the files can help them prove that they are their rightful owners.

According to the Wall Street Journal(subscription required), "The Melville, N.Y., mortgage lender, which is liquidating its assets in bankruptcy proceeding, made the offer to counter opposition from former backers who said American Home's plan to destroy the files endangered their rights to enforce the loans."

The fact that it's hard to tell who owns the loans is an interesting symbol of how crazy the real estate market became: people were signing off on loans and it wasn't even clear who the ultimate lender of the money was.

This moral hazard was probably a prime contributor to rampant mortgage fraud.

Tags: American Home Mortgage, AmericanHomeMortgage, inthenews, loans, mortgages, subprime"

/tricia

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