NY attorney general launches app aimed at vetting foreclosure rescue offers

New York's attorney general launched a new web-based app on Tuesday to help struggling homeowners determine whether offers of foreclosure rescue are legitimate or scams.

Using up to $100 million from bank settlements following the housing market collapse, Attorney General Eric Schneiderman has established a network of 86 counseling and legal services to help struggling homeowners across the state for free.

With the new app called AGScamHelp, borrowers can check whether a company or individual offering mortgage help is among those vetted by the state or the 145 counseling agencies approved by the federal Department of Housing and Urban Development.

"While my office is committed to cracking down on scam operations that target struggling New Yorkers, the most powerful tool against these frauds is to ensure that consumers are informed and aware of the free services that are available to them," Schneiderman said. He discussed the app Tuesday at Brooklyn Law School.

Scams typically promise lower monthly payments or reductions in principal in return for an upfront fee, but fail to deliver and leave victims deeper in a financial hole.

From March 2010 to September 2014, New York homeowners filed 2,700 foreclosure rescue scam complaints, documenting at least $8.25 million in losses, according to the Center For New York City Neighborhoods and the Lawyers' Committee for Civil Rights Under Law.

The attorney general's office said it continues to investigate foreclosure scams and got a court judgment last month for restitution plus $2.5 million in penalties and costs from a lender and affiliates based in Farmingdale on Long Island.

___

Online:

http://www.aghomehelp.com/