Authorities said today they found two handguns with the badly decomposed bodies of five family members who were discovered in a home in a wealthy, gated Orange County community over the holiday weekend.
The house where the family was found was worth about $1.7 million, according to the real estate Web site Zillow.com.
It appears that Zillow’s becoming the official reference site for property values in the
By all appearances, is the chief executive of a flourishing mortgage bank in Garden City, issuing more than $33 million in home loans to buyers across Nassau and Suffolk counties over the past four years.
A closer look at his lending practices, however, reveals that many of these loans relied on faulty appraisals and exaggerated loan applications, leaving behind angry homeowners who are struggling to pay mortgages on overpriced homes.
Aaron Wilder, CEO of HTFC and a mortgage investor, gave a deposition to Robert Bodzin, a lawyer from GMAC Bank. In February, U.S. District Judge Eduardo Robreno declared the deposition a “spectacular failure”, ordered Wider to give a new deposition, and fined Wider and his lawyer $29K.
GMAC Bank has filed a lawsuit against HTFC alleging that the company sold loans that were not property underwritten.
ROBERT BODZIN: My question is: Where are you currently employed?
AARON WIDER: I’m not. I work for free
BODZIN: Okay. You’re not employed by HTFC Corporation?
WIDER: No, I own HTFC Corporation.
BODZIN: Okay. And what do the initials HTFC mean?
WIDER: Hit That Fuckin’ Clown.
From The Wall Street Journal “”
Throughout the deposition, Robreno said, Wider “sought to intimidate opposing counsel by maintaining a persistently hostile demeanor, employing uncivil insults, and using profuse vulgarity.”
In one passage, GMAC’s lawyer, Robert B. Bodzin of Kleinbard Bell & Brecker in Philadelphia, asked Wider to open a file so that Bodzin could ask questions about certain documents.
According to the transcript, as quoted in Robreno’s opinion, Wider erupted, saying: “‘I’m taking a break. Fuck him. You open up the document. You want me to look at something, you get the document out. Earn your fucking money, asshole. Isn’t the law wonderful?’”
In another passage, Bodzin said: “We’re going to adjourn this deposition if this happens again because you are offending every single person.”
According to Robreno’s opinion, Wider responded: “‘Don’t speak for anybody in here except yourself fuck face.’”
When Bodzin said he was speaking for himself and the court reporter, Wider said: “‘If she had a problem with me she would say something. She knows it’s [not] directed toward her. It’s directed to you because you’re a piece of shit and a piece of garbage and I’m the only person in your life that is fucking up your world and I enjoy it.’”
Robreno said the transcript showed that Wider “used the word ‘fuck’ and variants thereof no less than 73 times.”
I was able to attend a presentation yesterday by , VP of data & Analytics at , and the man behind their He gave a speech to the Real Estate Roundtable at the Rainier Club where he discussed in freakish detail.
Though this kind of information is not known to be rocket science, Stan is, indeed, some sort of , and brings a level of depth to the subject heretofore unplumbed by researchers.
I was the guest of , previously known as CFO & VP of Marketing Zillow, but whose true claim-to-fame is that he’s the new (yes!) . (I’m merely the local ” and can only look at his national platform with jealousy and awe.)
The presentation was at , founded in 1888 as an exclusive private gentleman’s club. According to , no ladies were allowed at the time it was founded (nor anyone not of European ancestry nor Protestant religion.) But the now non-discriminatory club is currently a “vibrant, thriving institution whose membership comprises civic leaders of both sexes and all races.”
I’m organizing a luncheon there on September 18th, for the 10th anniversary of , the first and largest encyclopedia of community history created expressly for the Internet by Walt Crowley, Marie McCaffrey, Paul Dorpat, and various other. If you are interested in local history, I urge you to sign up for their or It’s a great way to keep up on local history and current events, and then you’ll also be one of the first to find out about the luncheon as, when tickets go on sale, it’s sure to be a sell-out! You can sit at my table.
By far the best explanation I’ve heard of the Housing Mortage/Credit Crisis is — improbably — a podcast from the motherlode of story-telling on NPR, This American Life. This podcast is a bit different from their usual slice-o-life stories in that they try to explain something extremely complex and abstract — but in personal stories. The episode is called and it’s worth at least an hour of your time on your next commute. Hearing the agents all along the “chain” of events describe what they [were] thinking in their own words is about 100 times better than reading about it.
I had written before about the compiled by Coldwell Banker Real Estate that allows one to approximate how much your home might cost in different areas around the U.S.
For instance, here in Seattle, $800K-900K might buy you a 100-year old house in a nice in-city neighborhood with 1800 sqft and 3-4 bedrooms and 2-3 baths and a 1-car garage on a 3000 sqft lot.
Just 50 miles South in Tacoma, with the same amount of money, you can buy a newer 4BR/4Bbth home with 5000 sqft and a 3-car garage. On 20 acres.
In , Neha Grey finds similar examples of home values all around the world.
Being a Tiki fan, Aloha-aficionado and keeper of the flame at , I was excited to see Trader Vic Bergeron’s first home on the market. The listing notes that 965 Mendocino Avenue has been a landmark and focal point of North Berkeley since it was built in 1925. Trader Vic Bergeron and his wife Esther were the first owners, and the authentic Chinese roasting brick oven still stands in the backyard. Nothing else Tiki is left, however
Since , it’s raised a lot of questions about foreclosures, short sales and distressed property in Washington State.
The was passed during the 2008 Legislative session and signed into law by the Governor on March 30 for the purpose of protecting vulnerable property owners from scam artists who seek to steal the property owner’s equity.
An unintended consequence of the law has the potential for dramatically increasing the duties owed by a real estate agent to a distressed homeowner. The law defines the term “distressed home consultant” as anyone who helps or offers to help a distressed homeowner in a variety of ways. For example, if an agent offers to save the distressed home from foreclosure by selling the home prior to foreclosure, it is possible that the law will be interpreted to mean that agent is a distressed home consultant. If the seller is a distressed homeowner and a real estate agent contacts the short sale lender to obtain a reduced payoff or to delay a foreclosure sale, the real estate agent is a distressed home consultant. If the agent writes an offer on a distressed home and the transaction will close within 20 days of a foreclosure sale, buyer’s agent is a distressed home consultant, and the buyer is also a distressed home consultant.
There are many interesting dimensions to this new law, including the fact that if a property owner fits any of the definitions of a distressed homeowner, then the law protects them as a distressed homeowner even if they never communicate that fact to anyone and even if they do not realize themselves that they are a distressed homeowner.
Obviously, this is messed up.
How was this law passed without intervention?
The Washington Association of Realtors monitored the legislation as it was proposed by the Attorney General as the legislation progressed through the House and the Senate. Both WAR and the AG were satisfied that the Bill, as proposed and intended by the AG, did not include the adverse language now causing the problems. However, after the Bill was passed in one form by the House and in a slightly different form by the Senate, it moved into a process that occurs outside the arena where public comment or influence are allowed. It was at that stage that the adverse language was added and the Bill was immediately voted out of the Legislature without any opportunity for the AG or WAR to testify about the problem.
No one’s sure if this will be resolved before the new law changes on June 12th.
All of the listed distressed property in our area is listed on our MLS and supplied to brokerages in their regular feed, but Redfin has specifically decided to include UNLISTED Bank-Owned properties, and also continue to do limited short-sales that meet certain criteria.
Redfin supports buyers pursuing some types of short-sale listings ……(however) in many cases, Redfin will not be able to represent you in a short sale. In the first quarter of 2008, we handled 65 short sales but only four were approved by the bank.
I wonder how much money those 61 lost sales cost their firm? Each one must have represented at least several hours of paperwork and negotiation. The nature of their business model would be inclined to attract bargain-hunters, low-ballers and others looking for “a deal”. If I made 65 offers on property with only 4 closings, I’d be really depressed. Not to mention, really poor.
Because of that, Redfin’s made very specific rules about how and when they’ll present an offer on a short-sale. However, even then, it’s a crap shoot if they’ll close or not and there might not even be enough of a commission to cover their minimum fee, as banks have been known to renegotiate the commission at closing.
I have to say that I don’t have much experience in short sales and after reading their statistics, doubt I’m going to make that the focus of my business anytime soon.