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Debt Relief Group
Erase Debt Now. (Lose
Your House Later.)
By MICHAEL MOSS
Published:
New York Times
October 10, 2004
DES MOINES
MICHAEL A. KNOX
thought he had run out of ways to
pay off his credit card bills when
he got the salesman's call two years
ago. To wipe out his nearly $20,000
debt, he was told, all he had to do
was take out a new, bigger mortgage
on his house.
Mr. Knox, then 60 and on disability,
signed up. The mortgage broker sent
him eight checks already made out to
his creditors, and Mr. Knox dashed
to the post office the day they
arrived to mail them.
But the bigger house payment
devoured 75 percent of his income.
He quickly fell behind. And the full
meaning of what he had done suddenly
became clear.
By using his mortgage to pay off his
credit card debt, Mr. Knox had
avoided the humiliation of filing
for bankruptcy. But he had put at
risk something much more important
to him than his pride. In late
January, with Mr. Knox in arrears,
the Wall Street firm that had bought
his mortgage informed him that it
was taking away his home.
"They're going to have to carry me
out of here," he told a lawyer in
early March. Days later, Mr. Knox,
who had suffered for years from
depression, was found dead of carbon
monoxide poisoning in his sealed-up
car.
Encouraged by low interest rates and
rising home values, millions of
Americans have been using their
homes to pay off credit card bills.
One-fourth of homeowners who
refinanced their mortgages took out
larger loans on their homes in order
to pay off credit cards and other
debts, according to a recent study
by the Federal Reserve.
The maneuver is known as debt
consolidation, and mortgage lenders
are using national campaigns - from
prime-time advertising to e-mail
spam - to pitch it as a sound way to
ease the sting of credit card debt,
which averages $13,000 for people
who don't pay off their balance each
month, according to CardWeb.com. For
many, probably a vast majority, it
has been a boon. Experts say the
device is a factor in a recent
leveling off of credit card debt and
a drop this year in personal
bankruptcies.
But each year, tens of thousands of
people - not just the poor - lose
their homes after trying to cope
with their debts this way, industry
figures show, and their
heart-rending tales are raising
alarm among consumer advocates,
federal regulators and some mortgage
lending officials.
In Bluefield, W. Va., a retired coal
miner, William Anderson, 80, and his
wife, Kathleen, 79, owned their home
of 45 years free and clear, but lost
it in March after falling behind on
a new $48,000 mortgage that they
were persuaded to get in order to
pay off their automobile loans.
Robert and Shirley McCall of Paris,
Ill., were trying to pay off $7,720
in medical bills when they took out
a new $22,000 mortgage on their
house, but in failing to keep up
with the larger mortgage payments,
they were warned by their lender in
August that they were nearing
foreclosure.
In Macon, Ga., Melissa and Shawn
Lynch are trying to salvage their
home. In order to pay off credit
card debts, they took out a second
mortgage on the three-bedroom home
they bought in 2001 for $71,000, but
then were hit with medical bills on
top of the new, larger mortgage
payments. Three weeks ago, they
sought help from a debt counselor
and discovered that their house was
at great risk. "We were young," said
Ms. Lynch, 28, and the lender
"smelled blood,
really."
While not everyone affected is a
poor credit risk, much of the
booming business of debt
consolidation focuses on such
borrowers - what is known as the
subprime market.
The industry, which has an estimated
four million outstanding loans, has
enabled many people with modest
incomes to own their homes. But last
year, more than 16 percent of
subprime mortgages were delinquent
or in foreclosure. More than 76,000
families with subprime mortgages
tumbled into foreclosure in the
first quarter of 2004, and an
additional 47,000 in the second
quarter.
While statistical evidence is
piecemeal, the rush to pay off
credit cards and other consumer debt
by taking out bigger mortgages
appears to be playing a growing role
in this trouble.
Many people who refinance mortgages,
of course, do so simply to lower
their house payments. But the people
who refinance for extra cash are as
much as twice as likely to lose
their homes through foreclosure than
those who refinance for other
reasons, according to statistics
from the PMI Group, a major mortgage
insurer. And most subprime loans
being made today - estimates run as
high as
70 or 80 percent - are debt
consolidation loans like Mr. Knox's.
"Financing credit card debt on your
mortgage, in general, is a bad
idea," Edward M. Gramlich, a Federal
Reserve governor, said in an
interview last week. "With the
credit card debt you can go into
bankruptcy, but if you put it on
your mortgage you could lose your
house, and that happens a lot."
Policy makers see the very existence
of these debt-consolidation loans as
the next issue in their battle with
the subprime lending industry, which
until now has been criticized
largely about its high costs,
prompting new state and federal
laws.
Some industry officials say lenders
have pushed too hard in selling
dangerous loans to vulnerable
homeowners who may not fully
appreciate the risks. Larry Litton
Jr., the chief operating officer of
Litton Loan Servicing, based in
Houston, which collects mortgage
payments on behalf of lenders, said
that most of the delinquent subprime
loans he was handling involved debt
consolidation and borrowers who did
not realize that they would go back
to running up more credit card debt
unless they found some way to
balance their income and expenses.
"Even though, conceptually, debt
consolidation is used to retire
debt, it often leads to increased
debt burden," he said. "People make
decisions sometimes that aren't real
rational whenever it comes to
incurring debt. I sure hate for
people to draw conclusions that
these people are irresponsible as a
drug addict, but they are similar in
the sense that debt can be very
addicting."
William C. Apgar, an assistant
housing secretary in the Clinton
administration, said that
homeownership "can't be used as an
everlasting reserve fund for folks
who have more expenses than income
on a perpetual basis."
But as the case of Michael Knox
shows, many homeowners do use
mortgage refinancing that way and
some lenders have sold the maneuver
aggressively to people hooked on the
promise of easy credit.
Mr. Knox's story, pieced together
from financial documents and from
the increasingly despairing letters
he wrote to company officials,
regulators and others, is a
particularly sad look at this dark
side of the mortgage refinancing
boom.
Mr. Knox may have seemed like
someone you would not want to lend
money to. But by the logic of the
subprime market, he looked like a
desirable customer.
Subprime lenders charge
higher-than-usual interest rates and
can protect themselves by selling
the loans to Wall Street, which in
turn consolidates large numbers of
loans into investment pools and
markets them to investors worldwide
in the form of asset- backed bonds.
But experts say that the market is
susceptible to overzealous
salesmanship and, sometimes, fraud.
Mr. Knox had already refinanced
twice in six months when he got the
call from an Aames Financial broker.
In qualifying Mr. Knox for a $90,000
mortgage at 9.23 percent that he
ultimately could not afford, company
records show, Aames waived its own
rules for verifying income and
employment. The mortgage was also
based on an assessment of his house
that was considerably higher than
an official county estimate.
Aames, a medium-size lender based in
Los Angeles, said it had done
nothing wrong in lending money to
Mr. Knox, particularly because he
had almost always paid his bills on
time. As Aames pointed out to an
arbitrator who ruled in its favor
after Mr. Knox filed a complaint,
"No one was pointing a gun to his
head
to do it." More broadly, the company
said it had stringent measures to
avoid problem lending, including a
system adopted last year to
determine whether borrowers would
truly benefit from its loans.
In April, the company disclosed that
it was cooperating with a Federal
Trade Commission inquiry into
subprime lending practices
nationwide. And in Iowa, the state
justice department is investigating
Mr. Knox's case, saying that it may
show that the lending industry is
undermining homeownership by pushing
too hard for growth
"In addition to being appalled by
what happened to Michael Knox, we
are very concerned about appraisals
that are inflated and we are very
concerned about incomes that are
inflated or completely made up,"
said Tom Miller, Iowa's attorney
general.
Serial Refinancings
Mr. Knox became a homeowner in 1988,
using a traditional bank mortgage to
buy a wood-frame house built in 1946
just north of downtown Des Moines.
He paid $29,000 for 984 square feet;
ownership was a huge achievement for
him. "He loved that house," said his
daughter, Marlene Knox.
Divorced and living alone after
raising four children, Mr. Knox was
anxious about money, people who knew
him say. He had held various jobs,
from welding grain elevators to
working as a security guard at
parking garages. But he increasingly
suffered from depression, compounded
by circulation problems, and his
disability check of $1,068 a month
left him perennially short of funds.
A neighbor, Janet L. Bequeaith,
recalled that he would often buy
cream cheese on sale as a substitute
for higher-priced protein. He also
made his own furniture, dabbled in
unlikely inventions and taxied
people to the doctor for a few extra
dollars. A financial high point came
in 1998, when he won $15,000 in a
game show sponsored by the Iowa
state lottery.
But then he found a surer way to
instant cash. Or rather, it found
him. Credit card companies sent Mr.
Knox blank checks, out of the blue,
that he had only to fill out to get
thousands of dollars. "I tried to
tell him that's not the way to
operate,"
said Dennis M. Wilhelm, a neighbor.
"But he couldn't resist."
Mr. Knox opened charge accounts at
Wal-Mart, Target and Sears. To pay
utility bills and other expenses, he
used credit cards from Providian,
Wells Fargo and three other banks.
His luxury was a desktop computer
with an e-mail account, neighbors
say.
But eventually Mr. Knox was
borrowing cash from one card to pay
off another, and when he ran short
he would grab a two-week loan from a
storefront lender who charged
interest at the annual rate of 520
percent.
That was when he started refinancing
his home - first for $49,400 in
September 2001, then for $67,000 in
March 2002. Yet it was never enough.
Aames's brokers hunt for customers
by using lists of people who
recently refinanced their mortgages.
In telephoning these prospects,
brokers said they asked about credit
card debt, both as an incentive to
refinance again and to increase
their own commission with a larger
loan.
"It's a dog-eat-dog world out there,
and you do what you have to, to get
loans," said Stephen Black, a former
Aames loan officer in Tysons Corner,
Va. "You don't lie to your client,
but you make them feel like you're
their best friend and can
be trusted."
Still, Mr. Knox posed something of a
challenge. The real estate agent who
sold him the house said its value
had risen to perhaps $65,000, which
the county confirmed in a recent
assessment. That was not nearly
enough to get Mr. Knox, who was
already spending 55 percent of his
income on his mortgage, the new
loan he needed to pay off his bills.
Six months later, in September 2002,
Ames said it would lend him $90,900
based on a $101,000 valuation by an
independent appraiser. Startled, Mr.
Knox said he worried that his taxes
would soar. But he later wrote to
the arbitrator that Aames had
assured him the appraisal would not
be disclosed to the county. "The
appraisal was a complete sham," Mr.
Knox wrote to the arbitrator.
In an interview, the appraiser, Mark
S. Wallace, said all appraisals were
matters of opinion, and that he
frequently resisted entreaties by
lenders who wanted inflated
valuations. He has surrendered his
license to settle an unrelated case
brought by regulators, state records
show.
Aames said it had the appraisal
checked for accuracy through a
consulting appraisal firm.
Who Wrote the Letter?
For Mr. Knox, the new appraisal left
a major problem. The bigger mortgage
would raise his monthly payment to
nearly $800, with taxes and
insurance, from $643. But he got
only $1,068 in disability from
Social Security, and Aames required
that his income be at least twice
his debt.
Mr. Knox's broker, Matthew Wright,
who was then with Aames, first
suggested inflating his income by
creating a phantom renter, according
to Mr. Knox's written account. When
he balked, Mr. Knox wrote, Mr.
Wright said he could claim income
from his attempts to sell a
mimeographed book on magic that he
had put together.
Mr. Knox wrote that "I never made a
dime trying to sell my books," but
his loan papers - which Mr. Knox
later said he did not notice -
reported $820.42 in monthly income
from book sales, putting his
debt-to-income quotient at 49.9
percent,
slipping just under the company's 50
percent cap.
Still, Aames required additional
proof of self-employment, and a
reference letter appeared in his
file from a local banker. The letter
was a fabrication, The New York
Times learned by calling the bank,
which said the name of the banker on
the letter was fictitious; no such
person worked for the bank.
Mr. Knox's family and friends say it
is inconceivable that he concocted
the letter. In an interview, Mr.
Wright disputed each point in Mr.
Knox's account of the loan and
denied any involvement in the
letter. "I've never, ever committed
fraud and never will," said Mr.
Wright, who said he left Aames for a
better opportunity shortly after Mr.
Knox got his loan. "If a customer
tells me this stuff you have to
believe it."
Experts estimate that fraud is at
play in at least 20 percent of all
loans that end up in foreclosure;
inflated valuations are rampant,
experts say, and appraisal trade
groups say the system needs to be
overhauled. Connie Wilson of
AppIntell, a firm in Weldon Spring,
Mo., that helps lenders avoid
problem loans, said employees of the
lender and others who profit from
the loans are almost always involved
in loans that later end up in
foreclosure.
Last month, the Federal Bureau of
Investigation warned of a looming
"epidemic" in mortgage fraud
involving loan brokers, appraisers
and lending officers. Its caseload
of open fraud inquiries surged to
533 investigations in June from 102
in 2001.
Aames credits a hot line it set up
in 2001 with exposing employees who
improperly qualified borrowers. In
other cases it was the borrower who
discovered irregularities. A
disabled elderly woman in Seattle
who settled a case against Aames
last year found fabricated letters
and invoices in her file verifying
income she did not have.
Whatever the precise origin of Mr.
Knox's fake letter, Aames's rules
require harder proof of
self-employment, like a business
license or advertising receipts.
Aames said the underwriter who
checked the loan had waived this
requirement at his discretion.
A New Cycle of Debt
Mr. Knox had expected the new
mortgage to leave him free and
clear. But borrowing $90,900 cost
him $7,259 in fees and other
expenses. After repaying his
existing $67,000 mortgage and
mailing $15,574 to his creditors, he
still owed $3,800 in credit card
bills.
He did what most borrowers do in
this situation, debt counselors say:
he ran up more credit card debt.
Even filing for bankruptcy on this
new debt, which he did six months
later, could not save his home. The
mortgage alone was simply too big.
"My health has been ruined, my
medical bills have gone up because
of the stress this loan has caused
me," he wrote to Aames.
To consumer advocates, stories like
Mr. Knox's show the need, at a
minimum, for some government
intervention to warn borrowers of
the risk in this debt maneuver. With
rising interest rates, some say the
pressure on homeowners will only
increase.
"Credit is not just a benefit; it is
also a dangerous instrument," said
Margot Saunders, a managing attorney
at the National Consumer Law Center
in Washington. "Everything from cars
to toasters that have some danger
are regulated, but loans which can
cause such devastation when provided
in the wrong situation are not
regulated."
Aames says it would object to any
measures that unfairly restricted
access to credit. "It would be a
great disservice to deny millions of
prime and subprime borrowers the
opportunity to tap into the equity
in their homes to pay for important
purchases and consolidate debt when
the vast majority of these customers
repay their loans," Ian Campbell, a
spokesman for Aames, said.
In a recent speech on subprime
lending, Mr. Gramlich of the Federal
Reserve warned that steps being
taken to curb lending excesses would
apply only to banks and other
companies that are closely
scrutinized by banking regulators,
and not to independent mortgage
companies.
"We as an industry do a lot of great
things in providing liquidity," said
Mr. Litton, the mortgage servicer.
"But the problem is, we often lose
sight of common-sense things. Is it
good business practice in principle
to do three cash-outs in one year?"
Mr. Knox pursued arbitration because
his loan contract barred him from
suing Aames. In November 2003, the
arbitrator rejected his case without
explanation. Aames, which said it
received very few complaints about
its loans, said it stopped requiring
arbitration because of controversy
over the practice.
In Mr. Knox's case, the loan was
sold to Bear Stearns, which says it
offered to extend his payments to
avoid foreclosure. Consumer
advocates say such offers generally
involve too little money to help
people like Mr. Knox.
Instead, he bought more lottery
tickets. He visited the local
casino. And when the foreclosure
notice arrived, he phoned his
brother, Christopher, in Arizona to
say goodbye.
"I told him to come out with me,"
Christopher Knox recalled. "And he
said, 'I'm too old to start over
again.' "
A few weeks later, in early March,
he made a last call for help. He
phoned a lawyer, and the lawyer
contacted former colleagues at the
state justice department and told
them that Mr. Knox had a strong
case. When an investigator there
could not reach Mr. Knox, she phoned
the police. They found his body in
the car.
Last Thursday, the sheriff's office
held an auction to sell Mr. Knox's
home, which had an opening price of
$64,200. Nobody bid on it. Bear
Stearns will have to dispose of the
property by itself. |
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