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The state cracks down on foreclosure "rescue" schemes—too late for one (former) Bellevue homeowner.

In the summer of 2001, with her marriage just over and her job gone, Vila Pace-Knapp was in dire financial straits. She was behind on her mortgage and had received the first of three letters indicating that her Bellevue home would soon be foreclosed on and sold at a trustee sale. One day, an associate broker from Windermere Real Estate named Dick Pelascini knocked on Pace-Knapp's door.

She told him she wasn't interested in selling. But he left her his card and told her he had a friend in the mortgage banking business; perhaps the two of them could work together to help her out. Soon after, Thomas Boboth, president of Pacific Shoreline Mortgage, visited Pace-Knapp. He, too, left a business card and indicated he could help her "save her home."

She told both men about her difficult personal circumstances, but also said she did not need help. She intended to file for bankruptcy in order to stave off the foreclosure. But the bankruptcy court, for a variety of reasons, declined to grant her petition—three times.

Meanwhile, Pelascini and Boboth continued to contact her, "essentially harassing her until she relented and accepted their offer to 'help,'" according to a judge's finding in a lawsuit that grew out of the case. On Oct. 25, 2002, the evening before her home was scheduled to be put up for auction, Pace-Knapp went to Pelascini's office and signed an agreement that she later testified she'd barely read. King County Superior Court Judge Suzanne M. Barnett later called Pace-Knapp "an unsophisticated homeowner whose ability to reason clearly during this period was obviously impaired."

The agreement she signed was a sale and leaseback arrangement, with an option to repurchase. Boboth and Pelascini bought her house for $164,000, just $15,000 more than what she owed. (Its fair market value, according to Judge Barnett's finding, was "at least" $226,100.) In return, the new owners agreed to rent the place to Pace-Knapp and give her the option of buying it back in two years according to a predetermined formula.

But the monthly rent charged was the same amount as her unaffordable mortgage payments. After the first year, she paid even more. When she tried to renew her lease again, the investors evicted her. "She ultimately lost the home to the speculators who set her up," said Judge Barnett.

A bill signed by Gov. Christine Gregoire on Monday will likely prohibit these kinds of deals. Requested by Attorney General Rob McKenna, HB 2791 is designed to quell "foreclosure rescue" schemes—for which demand is currently very high. In King County, foreclosures are up 65 percent from a year ago, according to Chris Matty, chief marketing officer for foreclosurepoint.com, a listings Web site.

The law establishes a five-day opt-out period if the homeowner smells a scam; it requires that the homeowner be able to afford all the terms and receive 82 percent of the fair market value if the house is sold. Any "rescue" agreement also must be clearly printed in 12-point font and written in the same language that the consultant used to solicit services from the homeowner.

The legislation was not prompted by any one incident, says David Huey, head of the Consumer Protection Division in the attorney general's office. "It's simply our awareness of what was happening in the market." The leaseback rescue deal, like the one that Pace-Knapp entered into, is the only one targeted under this legislation, Huey says, "because that's the one where we're seeing all of the abuse. I have yet to see it work in any situation." The attorney general's office doesn't have numbers on how widely used the schemes are.

"People thought that they were being helped and in fact, without their own knowledge, were signing away the deed to their homes," says Kristin Alexander, a spokesperson for McKenna.

Huey says the low success rate of the leaseback option deal is to be expected. The attorney general's investigation found that, usually, rental payments are too high or the option-to-buy price is too high or it's unrealistic to expect that the customer's credit will improve during the course of the lease. The underlying problem, Huey says, is the purchaser's philosophy: They're trying to make money off someone's foreclosure.

To this end, the new law establishes a "fiduciary" responsibility the moment a foreclosure "consultant" contacts a distressed homeowner—meaning they have to act in the homeowner's best interest. The law's definition of "consultant" is a page long and excludes only financial institutions, nonprofit counseling services, attorneys, or mortgage lenders.

"You gotta help or make money," Huey says. "If you're in it to make money, then you shouldn't be telling people that you're gonna help them because our experience is they don't get help in this type of transaction."

Jack Burns, a Kirkland-based real estate investor, hates HB 2791 and says it will only increase the foreclosure rate in Washington state.

Burns says he doesn't use leaseback options anymore despite clients who have "begged" him to do so. Litigation has made the practice too risky; he says that in the past four years he's only made three such deals—and been sued for two of them. One case is still pending, and the other was settled out of court.

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  • Vila Pace-Knapp 05/06/2009 8:30:00 AM

    Space does not allow me to tell all of what I would like about my "ordeal" with Thomas Boboth and Dick Pelascini. To say that they groomed me for almost four months to accept their offer to "help me save my house," is an understatement. I told them everything about my circumstances, they told me nothing that was true. I did decline their offers to help me "save" my house, over and over and over again. They continued to come to my front door in the mornings, afternoon, even late into the evening, they were nothing if not dedicated to "saving my home". . . During those months I came to trust these men and believed they did have my best interests at heart, I was so very wrong. When Dick Pelascini found out that I had filed a lawsuit against him (and Boboth) he warned me that "I would not like him if I made him mad." The men I had decided to trust had me renting my own home back from them and when my furnance stopped working they did nothing. When my roof started to leak they did nothing, oh except collect more from me in rental money than my mortgage payment had been. When my civil case was filed they evicted me, then they put in a new furnance, a new roof and the new tenants were charged less than I had been forced to pay them. When I was being evicted I was granted two or three extensions from the sheriffs department, I had lived in my home for almost twenty years and I had no ideal where I could store my belongings, where I or my handicapped son would live, Pelascini and Boboth came to my door, late at night, and they were enraged that I was allowed extra time, they told me they would throw my belongings onto the street if I remained there one more day. These men and others like them only care about getting the most profit possible, if they have to deceive the public to do that, no big deal. If they have to commit fraud, so what. I would never sign my house over to these men if they had told me the truth, I would never accept an offer that is "too good to be true," I felt badly for taking so much time away from these so called gentlemen and their businesses, they had me convinced that they were going out of their way for me and I was being selfish, taking care of my problems alone when they could help me save my home. When you read about these scams, think of your children, parents, someone you know that is elderly or hanicapped, how would you feel if this were to happen to them. We are all connected, this does not happen in a vacuum.

  • Joe Kaiser 05/02/2008 11:10:00 PM

    AAG David Huey has said this sort of thing before . . . "Anybody who contacts you with a scheme to save your house, I�d would be very very skeptical about it, because I�m just not aware of anybody out there who is aggressively marketing anything that works." � Assistant Attorney General David W. Huey, Tacoma, WA http://pushedtoshove.com/2008/05/the-art-of-the-foreclosure-rescue/ In reality, it�s not that successful foreclosure rescues don�t happen. It�s that the Washington AG's office is unwilling to consider ANY foreclosure rescue where an investor stands to make a profit as one that works. And once again, it comes down to nothing more than their twisted view of the role we investors play. It�s disingenuous for David Huey to say he�s not aware of any foreclosure rescue program that works, especially considering he�s spent the last three years with 30 successful foreclosure rescue files in the box in the corner of his office. My 30 transactions, 100% successful. Joe Kaiser www.pushedtoshove.com

 

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