| The
Mortgage Elimination "Scam"
by Attorney William Bronchick
from legalwiz.com
"Legally eliminate your mortgage"
Can this possibly be true? Well, I've read the claims and
researched the law and here's what I came up with.
The Claim
The claim is that you can legally eliminate your mortgage
based on an accounting loophole that goes something like this...
"If the lender who funded your loan used borrowed money
to fund your loan, then the loan is not valid. And, since
the loan is not valid, the security (mortgage or deed of trust)
is not valid either. All you do is simply march into court
and ask a judge to void your mortgage lien, and you don't
have to pay it back."
Now, without going into the legal issues, a common sense
approach would tell you that the entire premise of this argument
is patently absurd. Think about it... most lenders use borrowed
money to fund loans, that's the nature of the business.
So, if these "mortgage elimination" promoters are
correct, then millions of mortgages would be void. The entire
economy would collapse. This sounds vaguely familiar to the
"tax protestor" scam where people claimed that they
didn't owe income tax because the government did not have
the constitutional authority to tax them. More on that later...
The Law
The mortgage elimination promoters cite various court cases
in support of their position. At first blush, it would seem
there are dozens of court cases in which the judge actually
did what they claimed, that is, declare a mortgage void because
the lender used borrowed funds for the loan. But, since most
laymen are not trained in the law, they take this stuff, hook,
line and sinker.
I've read the decisions and they all have a common theme:
they don't support the mortgage elimination theory. In fact,
most of the cases are only vaguely on point.
The "tax protestor" promoters did the same thing...
take a quote from a judge's decision out of context and cite
the case as support for their position. In the end, the tax
protestors all lost in court, paid large fines and went away
with their tails between their legs. The government went after
the promoters of the scam.
Similarly, the government is going after the promoters of
the mortgage elimination scam. The Federal Reserve recently
issued a warning, a copy of which can be found at the end
of this article. The Office of the Comptroller of the Currency
issued a similar warning last year.
The FBI recently raided the office of the Dorean Group, a
big promoter of the mortgage elimination scheme. Click here
to read about it.
The Cult of Stupidity
As I write this, undoubtedly a few "followers"
of the theory will email me and argue that I don't understand
or that I'm part of the "establishment mentality"
that keeps the little guy down. Of course, these are likely
the same people who are collecting referral fees from the
scammers that are charging thousands of dollars to consumers
in exchange for a false promise to eliminate their mortgages.
On a philosophical level, I appreciate discussions about
how the dollar really isn't backed by gold, the government
doesn't have the right to tax Americans and the the like.
But I wouldn't tell a client to actually rely on any of these
theories in a court of law. Nor would I charge someone thousands
of dollars in exchange for a promise or guarantee that their
mortgage could be eliminated without paying it off.
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