TOP

Realtor open house combines local buyers, sellers

<!–Saxotech Paragraph Count: 6
–>

With “plentiful inventory and record-breaking housing affordability conditions,” Realtors nationwide say they expect this year’s spring homebuying season to be a busy one.

To kick off the season, Realtors from coast to coast will host thousands of open houses as part of the Realtor Nationwide Open House Weekend, said a news release. On April 28 and 29 Realtors in Clarksville and the surrounding areas will hold open houses all weekend long, bringing buyers and sellers together.

“This nationwide event offers buyers the chance to visit some of the many homes in their local area while learning more about homeownership,” said Todd Harvey, president of the Clarksville Association of Realtors, in the news release. “Open houses are also an opportunity for Realtors to connect with consumers in their communities about the housing issues that matter most to them.”

Realtors will be available at open houses to answer consumer questions about the homebuying process and local market conditions. There will be dozens of homes open this weekend throughout Clarksville and the surrounding areas. To see a complete list of Realtor open houses, visit www.ClarksvilleAssociationofRealtors.com and follow the links to the listings sorted by day and by area.

While the housing market continues to recover, it’s showing signs of improvement, and for many, homeownership remains an important part of the American dream, officials said. According to research from the National Association of Realtors, more renters than ever aspire to become homeowners and an overwhelming majority of Americans believe buying a home is a solid financial decision.

“Homeownership matters to individuals, families, communities and our nation’s economy,” said Harvey. “The housing market plays a vital role in both the long- and- short-term health of this country. Homeownership is not just an investment in your future; it’s an investment in the future of generations to come.”

Article source: http://www.theleafchronicle.com/article/20120427/BUSINESS/304270011/Realtor-open-house-combines-local-buyers-sellers?odyssey=mod%7Cnewswell%7Ctext%7CFRONTPAGE%7Cp

Read More
TOP

Real estate scam brings up to life in prison under California’s three-strikes law

An Orange County man who swindled elderly people out of their homes after promising to help them avoid foreclosure was sentenced to 25 years to life in prison under California’s tough three-strikes law./pp Defense lawyers and prosecutors across the state could not recall any other case in which a white-collar offender received such a lengthy sentence under a statute typically applied in violent crime cases./pp The sentencing of Timothy Barnett was unusual because his entire criminal record involved fraud. The 49-year-old was convicted last month of 17 felonies for tricking five people into unknowingly granting him title to their homes. He had been convicted of similar charges in the 1990s./pp “The worst thing you can do is take somebody’s home,” Los Angeles County Superior Court Judge Stephen A. Marcus said Friday in explaining the lengthy sentence./pp “Instead of helping people, he stripped the equity from their homes and left five people homeless,” the judge said. “Even Bernie Madoff didn’t take people’s homes from them.”/pp Defense attorney Amy Konstantelos had urged the judge to impose a lesser sentence, noting that Barnett had never been convicted of a violent crime./pp “Three strikes should never be used in a case like this,” she said after the sentencing in Los Angeles. “It’s another reason the law should be amended.”/pp Konstantelos said she intended to file an appeal./pp Barnett’s latest crimes occurred between 2005 and 2007. The victims were older residents of poor South Los Angeles communities who had used the explosion of real estate values to borrow against their equity, only to fall behind on the payments./pp That’s when Barnett appeared. Victims testified that he went to their homes and prayed with them, saying he could help keep their homes, bring loans current and reduce monthly payments./pp What Barnett didn’t make clear enough was that he would end up owning the homes, Marcus said. Along with their homes, the victims cumulatively lost nearly $900,000 of equity to Barnett./pp The judge ordered Barnett to repay his victims, but said he thought it was unlikely that Barnett had the means left to do so. Deputy District Attorney Robert Knowles said prosecutors would assist victims in collecting from Barnett “to the extent we can.”/pp Many people across the country have been accused of victimizing desperate homeowners since the real estate market collapsed in 2008, without facing a potential life sentence. What set Barnett’s case apart was two prior “strikes” he received after pleading guilty to two burglary charges in the 1990s. That made him eligible for a life sentence if convicted of a new felony, as he was in March./pp Under California law, a person can be convicted of burglary if he or she enters someone’s home with the intent to commit a crime, as Barnett did. Burglary is one of the dozens of serious or violent crimes considered strikes under state law./pp “He’s a career criminal who specializes in real estate fraud,” Marcus said. “He preys on the weakest people in our society.”/pp Among the most recent victims was an 85-year-old blind widow named Dorothy King. Her niece, Angenetta Allen, said Barnett deserved the harsh punishment./pp “Mr. Barnett did prison time for the very same thing, and as soon as he got out he did the same thing,” Allen said./pp When the judge announced Barnett’s sentence, some victims and their families cried out in approval./pp “I’m happy that he’s not going to hurt any more families,” said Robert Rodriguez, 57, who said he lost his home to Barnett. Prosecutors did not file criminal charges against Barnett involving the transaction with Rodriguez./pp “It’s the American dream,” Rodriguez said, his eyes filling with tears. “You save your down payment, you buy your home. And then you lose it.”/pp Knowles, the prosecutor, said he was pleased with the sentence./pp “I think it’s appropriate, given the facts of the case and the purpose of the three-strikes law, which is to protect citizens from recidivist offenders,” Knowles said.

Article source: http://www.kansascity.com/2012/04/27/3580652/real-estate-scam-brings-up-to.html

Read More
TOP

Ron Sutton’s Winner’s Circle to Host Eighth Annual Business Mixer and …

SACRAMENTO, California — On Friday, May 4th Ron Sutton’s Winner’s Circle and Star Racing Supply will hold their eighth annual FREE Business Mixer Motorsports Themed Party at their race shop and store in Sacramento.

The Business Mixer and Motorsports Themed Party has always been a success as Ron Sutton and the RSWC staff are experts in throwing monster mixer parties. The 2012 Business Mixer is guaranteed to be even bigger this year than the last seven years.

A fun business networking mixer, with a racing motorsports theme, the event is ideal for business people, racers and fans. Over 500 wonderful people attended the event last year and a crowd of 700 plus is expected this year.

In addition to the great business networking opportunities, a large list of activities is available for everyone to enjoy.

A full BBQ picnic dinner will take place, with burgers, brats, grilled chicken, Italian sausages, hot links, hot dogs, baked beans, potato salad, pasta salad and ice cream on tap sponsored by Reser’s Fine Foods. For when you get thirsty, a no host bar with all your favorite beers wines is also available.

The great classic rock band “Connie The Corvettes” will be playing music all night, keeping the crowd entertained with multiple costume changes throughout the evening.

The NASCAR bound RSWC race car drivers from all over the United States will be on hand giving out driver information cards, talking with guests, signing autographs, posing for pictures, and doing interviews.

Cars from the various race series the RSWC drivers take part in (USAC NorCal Focus Midgets, USAC Midgets, USAC Sprint cars, Skip Barber Race Series, SCCA Club Racing Formula Ford and F2000, Star Grand American Modifieds, NASCAR Whelen All American Modifieds, NASCAR Late Model Stock Cars and NASCAR Grand National cars) will be on display, so fans can get up close and learn all about what the drivers race. Hot rods and classic cars will also be on display.

The Veteran Crew from Ron Sutton’s Winner’s Circle race team will be conducting guided tours of the RSWC state of the art race shop, including the fabrication shop, team rigs and motor coaches.

Star Racing Supply, a full line racing speed shop, will also be holding on open house.

The eighth annual Ron Sutton’s Winner’s Circle Business Mixer Motorsports Party gets underway at 5:30 p.m. on May 4th, at the Winner’s Circle Race Shop (8581 Younger Creek Drive, Sacramento, Calif., 95828). Going until approximately 9:30 p.m., it is sure to be the party of the year, so don’t miss this great free event.

Additional information on the Ron Sutton’s Winner’s Circle can be obtained from the program website at www.winners-circle-racing.com. For direct contact, please contact Ron Sutton at ron@winners-circle-racing.com

About Ron Sutton’s Winner’s Circle:

Ron Sutton’s Winner’s Circle is a well established independent talent scout and development program, providing long term, comprehensive racing and career development for up and coming drivers focused on Professional Stock Car Careers. RSWC drivers are raced, coached, groomed, trained and molded, within a professional racing environment, into what top Stock Car teams look for when hiring drivers. Drivers involved in the program race in variety of cars, including USAC Focus Midgets, Star Grand American Modifieds, NASCAR Whelen All American Modifieds, NASCAR Late Model stock cars and NASCAR KN Pro Series stock cars.

    [ News Index ]

    Article source: http://www.racingwest.com/news/articles/28463-ron-suttons-winners-circle-to-host-eighth.html

    Read More
    TOP

    Green housing aimed at Yolo farmworkers

    A new affordable apartment complex in Woodland aims to provide “green” living for farmworkers.

    The Spring Lake community, planned by the Sacramento/Yolo Mutual Housing Association, is designed to be zero-net energy – consuming no more energy than it produces. The 101-unit complex will house agricultural workers and low-income families.

    On Friday, the housing association announced it had received a $30,000 grant from the Yocha Dehe Community Fund, the charitable arm of the Yocha Dehe Wintun Nation, which operates the Cache Creek Casino Resort in the community of Brooks.

    When open, the Spring Lake community will have 101 two-, three- and four-bedroom apartments at the intersection of Pioneer Avenue and Farmer’s Central Road.

    “California is making rapid progress in green building, but agricultural workers have been shut out of that in the past,” said Rachel Iskow, the housing association’s executive director.

    About 60 percent of the apartments will be set aside for farmworkers and their families. Officials said 5,000 agricultural workers in Yolo County need housing.

    The nonprofit housing association hopes to start building this fall. The estimated construction cost is $17 million.

    In addition to the tribe, funding is coming from the city of Woodland, the U.S. Department of Agriculture’s Rural Development Housing Service, the California Department of Housing and Community Development, the Joe Serna Jr. Farmworker Housing Grant Program, the California treasurer’s Low-Income Housing Tax Credit Program and NeighborWorks America.

    “This project fits very well with the Yocha Dehe Community Fund mission, which includes providing support to programs that help people help themselves as well as efforts to promote responsible stewardship of our natural environment,” said Marshall McKay, Yocha Dehe Wintun Nation tribal chairman.

    The community will employ various energy systems for residential and common areas. Infrastructure includes staff offices, laundry rooms and community rooms for financial education, leadership training and workshops.

    In a housing association survey of agricultural workers, nearly two-thirds said that low utility bills were more important than having a washer and dryer, a large kitchen or outdoor play area. Officials noted that farm workers have an average hourly income of $11.48 for seasonal employment.

    The Sacramento/Yolo association said it is preparing documentation for city, state and federal housing agencies and is waiting for tax credit allocations and other funding for the project.

    NeighborWorks Capital and Wells Fargo are lenders for the Woodland project.

    For more information, visit www.mutualhousing.com or www.yochadehe.org.

    © Copyright The Sacramento Bee. All rights reserved.


    Call The Bee’s Mark Glover, (916) 321-1184.

    • Read more articles by Mark Glover

    Article source: http://www.sacbee.com/2012/04/28/4449012/green-housing-aimed-at-yolo-farmworkers.html

    Read More
    TOP

    Banking groups challenge Colorado right-to-foreclose ballot initiative

    Two of Colorado’s largest banking associations are digging in for what could be a protracted battle against a ballot initiative that would require lenders to prove their right to foreclose on property.

    Currently, a bank can foreclose with just a lawyer’s signature without proof — such as a properly assigned mortgage — that it is owed the money.

    Initiative 84 would require lenders to show proof of their interest in a mortgage or note before they could take someone’s property. They could do so either by having recorded with a county the note and its assignment, or by providing certified copies in court of its endorsement to them.

    The Independent Bankers of Colorado, a trade group of community banks, says the issue should be handled legislatively, not as an amendment to the state constitution.

    “This could be a long battle,” IBC executive director Barbara Walker said of the group’s commitment to challenge a ballot initiative.

    The Colorado Bankers Association, which represents many of the state’s largest lenders, agrees, adding the initiative would be so onerous as to “dry up the secondary mortgage market,” executive director Don Childears said.

    “That will all grind to a halt from this nonsense,” Childears told the Colorado Title Board during a hearing Friday in which the association unsuccessfully sought to have the proposed ballot issue kicked back to an earlier stage of the process for review.

    “You can imagine the consequences if that happens,” he said, noting that more than 90 percent of mortgages generated in the state are resold.

    Homeowners get hurt, the CBA said in a statement, because the initiative would “stifle borrower-lender communication, the one mechanism for avoiding foreclosure that works well.”

    Walker said the IBC strongly opposes placing regulations of financial institutions in the state constitution. “Specifically, this would harm lenders, whether community banks, out-of-state banks, whomever,” she said.

    Advocates say that homeowners facing foreclosure want to know who really owns their note so they can discuss ways to avoid losing their homes, such as loan modifications. Too often they can’t tell whether the bank foreclosing on them is the right one because paperwork isn’t filed in the case to prove that.

    “The initiative looks to remove a provision the industry wrote into Colorado law allowing them to circumvent constitutional due-process protections against the taking of property,” said Corrine Fowler, economic justice director for the Colorado Progressive Coalition.

    That provision is called a “statement of qualified holder,” in which a lawyer representing a lender says the client has a right to foreclose but is not required to show how. The law changed in 2002 and 2006 when foreclosure attorneys tucked it into a much larger piece of legislation dealing with foreclosures.

    At the crux of the issue is money — how much lenders and mortgage investors would have to pay county recorders if they had to file each transfer of a mortgage. Currently the price is $10 for the first page and $5 for each additional page.

    Bankers created the national Mortgage Electronic Registration Systems as a means of tracking those transfers without having to record them in the county where a property is located. That saved the industry tens of millions of dollars — and cost county governments the same.

    But Colorado’s unique system relies on deeds of trust in the foreclosure process. Since MERS tracks only promissory notes and mortgages, it cannot file foreclosures in Colorado — although it can in nearly every other state that doesn’t use a deed of trust.

    Childears argues that lenders and investors will shy from buying mortgages from one another — a bank that makes the loan is able to sell it and then make yet another loan. A result, he said, would be fewer loans to consumers.

    Proponent and foreclosure lawyer Stephen Brunette of Colorado Springs said the measure aims to return due process to the state’s foreclosure system. “Any lender who shows they own the evidence of debt (the mortgage) and have the right to foreclose has nothing to worry about,” he said.

    The associations can still file a petition with the Colorado Supreme Court, which must hear the issue and render a decision within six weeks.

    Meanwhile, proponents can seek to have their petition language approved by the secretary of state, then begin gathering signatures — more than 87,100 are required — to get it on the November ballot.

    The initiative is the result of a bill sponsored by Rep. Beth McCann, D-Denver, which sought to do much the same. It was killed in a House committee, mostly along party lines.

    The bankers “are working to ensure Coloradan due-process laws remain limited and that Colorado continues to be the easiest state in the nation in which to take a person’s property,” Fowler said.

    There are no penalties if an attorney who signs the qualified holder statement is wrong, though a bank that wrongly forecloses indemnifies the homeowner from additional liability and must make good to the correct lender.

    Article source: http://www.denverpost.com/breakingnews/ci_20501039/banking-groups-challenge-colorado-right-foreclose-ballot-initiative

    Read More
    TOP

    Canada’s finance minister frets on housing, debt


    TORONTO, April 28 |
    Sat Apr 28, 2012 10:00am EDT

    TORONTO, April 28 (Reuters) – High housing prices and
    household debt are Canada’s biggest economic concerns, Finance
    Minister Jim Flaherty said in weekend interviews that also
    warned of a crash in Toronto’s booming condo market and hinted
    at a crimped role for the government’s mortgage insurer.

    Speaking to the Globe and Mail and the National Post,
    Flaherty said he had spoken to bank CEOs about their “race to
    the bottom” on mortgage interest rates, which he described as
    irresponsible.

    He said Ottawa was considering further changes to rules at
    the Canada Mortgage and Housing Corp, which the government this
    week placed under the authority of the Canadian banking
    regulator in a nod to the agency’s huge financial role.

    The regulator is set to probe CMHC’s mortgage backed bonds
    business, investigating a type of security that played a major
    role in the U.S. housing market meltdown, and Flaherty said CMHC
    might one day get out of the mortgage insurance business.

    “Over time, I don’t think it’s essential that a government
    financial institution provide mortgage insurance in Canada,” he
    told the Post. “I think there is a role to regulate but whether
    we, the Canadian people, have to be the owners and shareholders
    of a financial institution to do this is a question. I don’t
    think it’s essential in the long run.”

    Canada escaped the housing price implosion seen in many U.S.
    markets, and while prices dipped during the country’s
    short-lived recession, they soon recovered to well above
    pre-recession levels fueled by record low interest rates.

    Bidding wars remain common in markets like Toronto and
    Vancouver, and Toronto is seeing a record number of condominium
    developments, a factor that Flaherty singled out for special
    concern, noting that developers were building before they found
    buyers.

    “I also talk to developers, and I hear from some of them who
    are in the business of building condos that they don’t really
    have a plan, they’re just going to keep building them until
    people stop buying them. It’s not exactly a fiscal plan,”
    Flaherty told the Globe. “It will lead to a crash.”

    But Flaherty also noted that banks had stopped the race to
    lower mortgage rates, and he described the risk to the overall
    market as modest.

    Canadian home buyers must take out mortgage insurance if
    their downpayment on a house is less than 20 percent.

    Canadian banks have mostly been more cautious lenders than
    their U.S. counterparts, without the aggressive sub-prime
    mortgages to borrowers with poor credit ratings that were such
    an important trigger to the U.S. crash.

    Article source: http://www.reuters.com/article/2012/04/28/canada-housing-idUSL2E8FS0IC20120428

    Read More
    TOP

    Park named in honor of Fred Festersen, longtime resident

    One of Roseville’s many parks is Fred Festersen Park, named after a prominent Roseville resident. But visitors to the park may not know the man and his many contributions to the city.

    Fred Festersen, 94, has lived in Roseville since 1922 and has been an active member in the Roseville community. He previously worked in the real estate and insurance business and was on the board of directors of the Red Cross in Sacramento as well as a member of the Kiwanis club and Chamber of Commerce.

    “I have a wife and five kids,” Festersen said. “I wanted a good community for them.”

    Festersen was also influential in the growth of PRIDE Industries, an organization that creates jobs for people with disabilities.

    “Three ladies from Auburn were (doing it) in a church basement — teaching handicapped children to tie their shoes and giving them menial tasks to make them feel like they were worth something,” Festersen said. “They came down to Roseville and formed PRIDE.”

    When Festersen learned about PRIDE, it needed $10,000 but only had $5,000 funds available.

    “I had money in my bank account,” Festersen said. “I loaned the money, got on the board of directors and became president right away.”

    In doing this, Festersen helped turn PRIDE into a multimillion dollar organization.

    Festersen found out in August that a park was named after him.

    “I feel honored that the city felt that I had contributed to the city,” said Festersen. “I think the main thing (is that) I was instrumental to getting PRIDE turned around to what it is today. I take pride in that.”

    Cindy Buckmaster, the administrator at Roseville Commons (Festersen’s previous home of residence), knew Festersen for three years and feels that he deserved to have a park named after him because of the good deeds he has done.

    “He had a good sense of humor,” Buckmaster said. “He seemed like he was a very family-oriented type of person. He was a pleasant man (who was) very knowledgeable about Roseville. A lot of people know this man — a lot of our residents knew of him before he moved in.”

    ———-

    Visit the park

    Fred Festersen Park is located at 2150 Village Green Drive in Roseville.

    Article source: http://rosevillept.com/detail/206688.html

    Read More
    TOP

    Sacramento area office vacancies hit a record high

    The Sacramento region office vacancy rate increased in this year’s first quarter to an all-time high of 23.74 percent, according to commercial real estate brokerage firm Cornish Carey Commercial Newmark Knight Frank.

    The rate increased 0.36 percent from the previous quarter, reflecting 366,000 square feet of additional vacant space in the region’s 22 office submarkets.

    In all, vacant office space in the region totals nearly 16 million square feet.

    “The market continues in correction mode based on the lack of job growth in the region,” said John Frisch, regional managing director for the company. “However, there are signs of life on the horizon with local expansions by Dignity Health and Vision Service Plan.

    ” … We expect the office market to get better as the year unfolds.”

    © Copyright The Sacramento Bee. All rights reserved.

    Article source: http://www.sacbee.com/2012/04/28/4449501/sacramento-area-office-vacancies.html

    Read More
    TOP

    Realtor fights restraining order from Antioch house "squatters"

    Click photo to enlarge

    ANTIOCH — The paths of several strangers recently collided at the doorstep of a four-bedroom home on Thistlewood Court.

    In a bizarre tale centered on the slumping housing market, a real estate broker discovered in February that strangers were living in the 1,826-square-foot southeast Antioch home she was trying to sell for the owner.

    Meanwhile, the home’s inhabitants say they may have been duped into a fraudulent lease agreement for the home, and filed a temporary restraining order against the Realtor.

    The latest episode of the Thistlewood saga played out in a Pittsburg courtroom this week, as Contra Costa Commissioner Lowell Richards dismissed the restraining order against Realtor Melissa Case by Anthony Loquiao and Gayalea Risley.

    Richards said Thursday that Case “was on thin ice” as far as the actions she had taken as a broker, saying it’s the owner’s responsibility to deal with issues related to the occupancy of the property.

    Loquiao and Risley say they paid a hefty deposit and signed a one-year lease agreement with another Realtor for the home in October, and now believe they say they may have been duped.

    “We might have been scammed by the other Realtor. We really don’t know what’s happening,” Loquiao said.

    Richards told the engaged couple: “You probably were the victim of a scam, but you’re in a position where it wouldn’t be much for the owner to get you out.”

    Property owner Debra Stewart asked Case to help

    sell the property through a short sale. But upon arriving at the property, Case found that Loquiao and Risley were already living there.

    Stewart, of Berkeley, said she never had a lease agreement with them for the property.

    “I’ve been the sole owner since 2005. I have no idea who these people are; it’s just baffling to me. They have broken into my house,” Stewart said.

    Stewart contacted PGE and the city to turn off utilities and water.

    Case said she tried to “make nice” with the squatters in an effort to see what she could find out.

    “They kept telling me, ‘What gives you the right?’ but refused to show me the lease agreement,” Case said. “I even told them that if they were deceived, I could help them recoup their money.”

    Loquiao and Risley said they had a “bona fide” lease agreement but refused an inquiry by this newspaper to see it, saying they were too busy trying to find out where their money is going and get their utilities turned back on.

    According to Contra Costa court records, Loquiao and Risley were involved in a pair of unlawful detainer lawsuits, or evictions for not paying rent, in 2010.

    “They are serial squatters. If you go on Wikipedia, it tells you to keep the front nice and never leave the property. They basically followed that,” Case said.

    Loquiao and Risley vehemently deny the squatter claim, and accuse Case of bullying them with weekly emails and phone calls and a pair of police visits on consecutive days.

    “She’s a scary person. I feel like she’s stalking me and going to break my door down, and I don’t like it,” Risley said.

    According to state law, once tenancy is established after 30 days, occupants are afforded certain protections, and landlords must follow the state’s eviction process.

    Squatters can even gain total legal possession of a property through a process called “adverse possession.”

    Regardless of the circumstances, Case says the Thistlewood incident underscores the need for East Contra Costa cities to make it tougher for people to illegally move into vacant homes. Some squatters are coaxing banks into paying them thousands of dollars to leave homes ready for sale, Case said.

    Pittsburg is the East Contra Costa city that makes it hardest for squatters, requiring renters to come in with property owners or present a notarized rental agreement to turn on water, along with a $250 deposit. Antioch, Brentwood and Oakley don’t have such rules, Case said.

    “They’re ahead of the curve. (In other cities), I’ve resorted to telling my homeowners to let the yards go (by turning off water service) and making sure to have alarms on the property,” she said.

    Contact Paul Burgarino at 925-779-7164. Follow him at Twitter.com/paulburgarino.

    Article source: http://www.mercurynews.com/news/ci_20500025/realtor-fights-restraining-order-from-antioch-house-squatters

    Read More
    TOP

    Woman fighting foreclosure arrested

    © Jonathan Alcorn / Reuters / REUTERS

    Ana Casas Wilson, who has cerebral palsy, sits in the living room of her South Gate, Calif. in December 2011. Wells Fargo has completed foreclosure on the home and eviction could be imminent, but Wilson refuses to leave, and argues that the foreclosure was unecessary.

    A woman engaged in a bitter battle with Wells Fargo over foreclosure of her southern California home was arrested late Thursday at the tony residence of the bank’s CFO in San Marino, where she and dozens of supporters were protesting.


    Follow Kari Huus on Twitter and Facebook.


    Ana Casas Wilson, 49, who lives in the working-class neighborhood of South Gate, faces eviction from her childhood home. Like many people who have been through foreclosure, she says that the bank wrongly denied her a loan modification and moved to foreclose even when she was able to catch up.

    In an action that is becoming increasingly common, Wilson has taken her complaint public and her protest directly to bank officials. In Thursday’s protest, with at least 80 supporters, she attempted to deliver her mortgage payment directly to Tim Sloan, the top financial officer for Wells Fargo. In addition to protesting the foreclosure, the group was challenging an ordinance created last year making it harder to picket in this wealthy enclave.


    “People are deciding to take this stand that was previously a little unthinkable,” said Peter Kuhns, with the Alliance of Californians for Community Empowerment, which helped organize this and other “home defense” actions. “They are risking arrest, refusing to leave, getting their families involved and putting themselves out there.”

    Many people are shedding the sense of shame of foreclosure, which kept most people silent in the past, even if they didn’t think they had done anything wrong, he said.

    “More and more people are standing up and willing to go public because there is no other remedy and putting public pressure on the bank,” said Kuhns.

    Wells Fargo did not respond directly to Wilson’s situation, but provided a statement in response to queries about her.

    “Wells Fargo works very hard to keep customers in their homes whenever possible,” said the statement, sent by Jennifer Langan in corporate communications. ”We review our customers for a variety of modification options, from HAMP, HARP, HAFA and through our own proprietary programs. Despite these efforts, if a customer is 16 or more months delinquent, it can be extremely difficult to recover.” 

    Some homeowners who have taken this high-profile approach in their fight against foreclosure, enlisting the support of protesters from the Occupy movement and housing activists, are finding success at it.

    Occupy movement targets Wells Fargo shareholder meeting

    The case of Rose Gudiel, reported by msnbc.com last year, is one example. In October, Gudiel was hunkered down in her home, surrounded by supporters, awaiting eviction. But at the eleventh hour, lender Fanny Mae canceled the eviction notice and offered her a loan modification, enabling her to keep the home.

    Peter Kuhns, ACCE

    Ana Casas Wilson, sitting, and supporter Rose Gudiel demonstrating in front of the home of Wells Fargo CFO Tim Sloand on Thursday.

    Many similar foreclosure battles are under way nationwide, with support from a movement called Occupy our Homes.

    Wilson, who has cerebral palsy, lives with her husband, who works as a school janitor, her teen son and her mother, who helps care for her. She has worked as a court reporter, and as an advocate for the disabled.

    The trouble covering the mortgage started when she was treated for breast cancer in 2009, and her husband’s income declined as a result of cutting hours to help take care of her. They got behind, but their income stabilized several months later. By then, the bank had moved into foreclosure proceedings and would not accept her payments or discuss ways to catch up, Kuhns said.

    The implication in Wells Fargo’s statement that Wilson was 16 months behind is misleading, says Kuhns, because for most of that time, the bank refused to take her payments.

    Thursday’s protest was on Wilson’s behalf, and it was more generally challenging a San Marino ordinance adopted last November – just a few weeks after a protest of predatory lending practices on Sloan’s front lawn. That demonstration, involving about 100 protesters, was peaceful and ended without incident, the Los Angeles Times reported.

    Under the statute, picketers must keep 150 feet from a target residence, or 75 feet from the curb adjacent to the home, whichever is farther.

    “The purpose of the ordinance is not to reduce picketing, but to protect the people who are the victims of picketing,” police Chief John Schaefer told the Times when it was passed. “We’re a prime target. We have a lot of people who fit the profile to be the victim of this type of crime.”

    Video from the protest posted by the San Gabriel Valley Tribune shows protesters carrying signs and chanting “Wells Fargo, shame on you!” in the street in front of the home.

    Wilson is shown crossing a police cordon in her wheelchair to deliver a check to Sloan. She knocks several times, but gets no answer.

    “He’s embarrassed,” Wilson tells the Tribune. “That’s why he won’t come out. … He knows that what they are doing is wrong.”

    Wilson was arrested under the anti-picketing statute, after protesters and police faced off for about two hours. She was released about an hour later and is expected to appear in court in early June.

    “The leaders of Wells Fargo and the members of their family should be afforded the right to feel safe in their private residence and we encourage all organizations choosing to demonstrate at private residences to abide by the law for the safety of the general public,” the Wells Fargo statement said.

    More content from msnbc.com and NBC News:

    Follow US News on msnbc.com on Twitter and Facebook

    Follow Kari Huus on Facebook

    Article source: http://usnews.msnbc.msn.com/_news/2012/04/27/11433080-woman-fighting-foreclosure-arrested-in-appeal-to-wells-fargo-cfo?lite

    Read More