As a Las Vegas REO agent, I see many homeowners that are still in there homes after a trustee sale has been completed believing that some attorney or negotiation company is still going to “save me from foreclosure”. I just had this situation last week with an occupant named Arlene. I got the assignment that had just gone to foreclosure auction the day before and been bought back by the bank. I went to the property to check occupancy, found it to still be occupied by the former owner Arlene. She stated that she has a attorney that is negotiating with the bank to allow her to keep her house and that she was going to buy her house back from the bank.

Let me say that I can’t count how many times that I’ve heard prior owners state something along these lines. The problem is to date, I have never personally experienced, nor have known anyone that has experienced anyonebeing able to “save” their home after it’s already gone to foreclosure auction. Now, laws due vary on a state to state level. Some states have redemption periods, Nevada does not. Some states may have some type of loophole to let you keep your home, to my knowledge and experience Nevada does not.

So, back to Arlene, she declined to talk to me because her “attorney” told her not to and for her to wait for something official from her “lender”. Here’s the problem. Once your house has gone through the foreclosure process and been auctioned off and bought back by the bank, you previous “lender” has no further to communicate with you. The file at the lender level is transferred from the loss mitigation department to the REO department. Those two departments in most cases don’t even speak with each other. They are separate and have two totally different focuses. The REO departments only focus is to get that property turned around, bank on the market and sold as quickly as possible for the most amount of dollars that they can reasonably get. So to the REO department, you (the previous homeowner) are impeding them from being able to do their job by continuing to occupy the property. They have no motivation to allow you to stay in property and waste time with hopes of doing something that is virtually impossible to do.

I told Arlene that being that she didn’t want to speak to me anymore that I was going to have to report back to the bank that she has declined her Cash for Keys offer and recommend that they proceed with a formal eviction. She stated that “No I didn’t say that I’ve declined the Cash for Keys offer, but I don’t want to speak to you. I’m going to wait for something official from the bank.” I tried to explain to her that I am the banks official representative and that she wouldn’t be contact by anyone else from the bank, but she didn’t believe me and ended the conversation. That said, I reported back to the bank that the occupant declined the CFK (Cash for Keys) offer and within an hour I was CC’d on an email from the bank to the eviction attorney to proceed with an immediate eviction.

Arlene had her “attorney” call me and he was the fast / slick talking guy that was talking about the H4H (Hope for homeowner) program that that I had better read up on it because it was going to put all of us REO agents out of business. I asked him had he ever “saved” someones home AFTER it had already been sold back to the bank and he was silent. Then he state “Well I’m working like three dozen of these cases.” He said “I know that you guys get arthorized 3500 dollars from the bank and offer the occupant 500 dollars and then pocket the difference.” When I told him that that’s not the way it works he said “Yes it does, I see it all the time!” This is simply false.

I wanted to write about this because this “attorney” is going have Arlene (single mom with 3 kids) get evicted out of her house with no money and absolutely nothing to show for it. He has her brainwashed to listen to no one but him. I could have gotten her a good bit of monies to cover her moving expenses and she would have had a guaranteed set amount of time to move out without having to worry about the sheriff showing up at the door and saying it’s time to go we’re changing the locks and you don’t have time to get your stuff out!

Don’t let this happen to you. Educate yourself. If you’re in this situation or something similar to it prepare yourself before the trustee sale date to move. Have another place lined up to stay and have the funds available to move. Even if you’re offered Cash for Keys, you don’t get those funds until you’ve already moved out and the property has been checked by the bank representative to make sure that all personal property inside and out has been removed and that it’s left in a broom swept condition.

For more information on Las Vegas Foreclosures dont hesitate to call us at 1-800-977-0959

Bryan Knight REO specialist in Las Vegas, NV