| December 18, 2007 |
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Freddie Mac is using YouTube drama to get the word out about foreclosure fraud. Freddie Mac is one of the nation's largest investors in residential mortgages and it decided to air an Internet video about foreclosure fraud because a survey found the Internet is the first place one in four mortgage delinquent homeowners go for mortgage information. That's almost as many troubled homeowners who go to their mortgage lender (28 percent) or bank (32 percent) first, according to the Freddie Mac-sponsored survey. Unfortunately, Internet searches can send you right into the hands of con artists whose only desire is to steal your home equity. Generally speaking, equity is the difference between the market value of a home and the amount the homeowner owes the lender. Home values have fallen in many areas, but before the current soft market, the housing boom generated enough equity to see many borrowers through hard times. Freddie Mac's two-minute, professionally-produced and acted "Avoid Fraud" video dramatizes a common foreclosure fraud scheme and demonstrates the game the scam artist plays to get at your equity. According to the video:
Freddie Mac's "Avoid Fraud" YouTube video also comes with the message: "Shut the door on fraud." Report it to 1-800-4Fraud8 (1-800-437-2838). |
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