Well, thank you, Mary!  There may be a lot of us that could be in that very
situation with all of the changes.  I wouldn't even think of these things
but sure will now and can pass it on to my family and friends..Jeanne in
Dayton 
 
-------Original Message-------
 
From: Mary Thompson
Date: 1/27/2009 10:22:16 PM
To: m thompson
Subject: [TMIC] OT-How to rent safely during the Depression
 
FYI - good info depending on your situation.  I can't speak for Mr. Hoffmann
 but this info may give you reason to pause:
 
How to rent safely during the Depression
By Bob Hoffman April 2008

( Please pass this article along. When I wrote it in April it was not much
of an issue. Renters being thrown out of foreclosures are endemic now (Oct
200. Please pass this on as the regular media is ignoring it )

Thinking of renting a home or are renting now? Facing foreclosure and want
to rent? You may want to do a few things before you hand over your money
first.

Historically, each major land bust comes with the ‘rental scam.’ It is the
same one every time and for some reason no one warns you about it until it
is too late.

Here is the deal. As a renter you are facing a few situations.

1- Everything is fine, good rental

2- The owner is in foreclosure and in the middle of your lease there may be
a sheriff’s note on your door telling you to move.

3- The person you rented it from does not own it. That person just found an
empty house in foreclosure and has run off with your money.

The first one above is good. The next two can break you. So, what do you do
to protect yourself?

1- Go online and find your property appraiser’s office. Search for the
property you want to rent or are renting. Is the person you are dealing with
the actual owner? (beware of people claiming to be ‘rental agents’ or
‘management agencies’, demand to meet the owner)

2- Check for any ‘lis pendis’ or other legal action that may be listed on
the deed. This does not mean there is an issue for sure, but it is a first
step in finding out. Be wary.

3- If your county website allows it, do a public records search on the
property and the owner listed on the deed. Do you see foreclosure
recordings? Run away.

4- Do not do a deal with someone who will not give you their driver’s
license. Write down the number and make sure it is them. Better yet, copy it


5- Never do cash. Checks can be traced a lot better than cash.

6- State law forbids landlords from using the ‘last month and security’
deposit for any reason. It must be kept in an escrow account of some kind.
Ask what the name of the escrow account is and make the ‘last month and
security’ out to the escrow agent. The word ‘escrow’ or ‘trust’ should be in
the name. Check your state laws on this and make sure the landlord follows
it. You can win in small claims if they break this law, slam dunk.

7- Do not be afraid to say hi to the neighbors and possibly glean that the
real owner left the house to the bank, or that the owner is in trouble, or
‘they have never seen that guy before.’

8 - A classified in the newspaper is not a good way to tell if someone is
legit.

9 - If using a Real Estate Agent, ask them to get a credit report on the
landlord! Or use a service to get one pulled for you. This will help you
decide if you want to rent from them!

By doing a little research online or at the property appraiser’s office, you
can save ending up homeless and possibly helping police find these crooks.

What about your rental now? You have been in it for a bit. Go to the
property appraisers and check out ownership. Then do the public records.

You may find out the house you are in is in foreclosure, the landlord has no
insurance for renters, or the person you are paying is not the owner. Just
because you have been in it for a while, even a few years, does not mean
your landlord is not going belly up.

Renter beware, crooks want to take advantage of you and they know how to
talk you into things. Report problems to the police immediately and walk
away from the deal.

Super cool renter tip: Pay the day you move in. Pay with cashier’s checks.
If you find out you got scammed, you can cancel the checks within 7-14 days
(depends on company) and get your money back. Be very wary of someone who
does not take cashier’s checks.

Bonus Cashier's Checks are also good to protect yourself from the crooks in
the moving industry. Give them their extra cash, in a cashiers check, that
they forced you to pay while holding your stuff as leverage, and then cancel
the check.

 

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