She had no idea her home could be stolen. Then she read her junk mail. [View all]
Rohina Husseini had no idea someone could steal a house, but the first small clue that the home she owned for nearly a decade was no longer hers was a piece of junk mail that most of us ignore
The Springfield mother said she initially tossed the mortgage refinancing offers that began arriving over the summer in the trash, but one detail bugged her: The letters were addressed to another woman. Curious, Husseini said she finally opened one.
You bought a new house, congratulations, read the letter addressed to Masooda Persia Hashimi.
I was like, Wow, this doesnt seem right, Husseini said. I dont know this person at all. She never lived in my house even before [I moved in].
In the frantic hours that followed, Husseini discovered the total stranger was now the legal owner of the brick Colonial worth about $525,000 that forms the center of her life with her husband and daughter.
Husseini, who owns a home health-care business, was the victim of a lesser-known crime alternately called house stealing or deed theft that has seen an uptick in some areas in recent years. Scammers gain control of a deed to a home and then attempt to resell the property or to open a line of credit on it.
The results can be disastrous. Unsuspecting homeowners can be foreclosed upon or even find strangers living in an unoccupied property or vacation home that has been sold out from under them.
Oftentimes, the [scammers] will offer a stolen home at an attractive price just below the market rate for an area so it is snapped up quickly, said Cynthia Blair, the former president of the American Land Title Association. They get a cash purchaser . . . and [the scammers] are off into the sunset with the money.
https://www.msn.com/en-us/news/us/she-had-no-idea-her-home-could-be-stolen-then-she-read-her-junk-mail/ar-BBXsCka?li=BBnb7Kz&ocid=mailsignout