View allAll Photos Tagged Foreclosures
Quanah Parker Brightman at home. These photos are taken January 13, 2013, the evening before a Wells Fargo foreclosure auction for this home, owned by Professor Lehman L. Brightman, a Well Known Native advocate, Korean War Marine Veteran, retired college professor and Elder.
NINO... A male Dalmatian we
have had for about 5 months.
He has had a rough life but is a
very friendly dog. He loves affection.
About 50 lbs. 4-5 years old. Nino
is a very beautiful dog deserving of
a good home.305-799-1567.
Quanah Parker Brightman at home. These photos are taken January 13, 2013, the evening before a Wells Fargo foreclosure auction for this home, owned by Professor Lehman L. Brightman, a Well Known Native advocate, Korean War Marine Veteran, retired college professor and Elder.
Quanah Parker Brightman at home. These photos are taken January 13, 2013, the evening before a Wells Fargo foreclosure auction for this home, owned by Professor Lehman L. Brightman, a Well Known Native advocate, Korean War Marine Veteran, retired college professor and Elder.
Tucson ACORN Chapter is having its first action to stop the sales of auctioned homes in the city of Tucson. This action will provide support and stand to stop all sales the day of March Second giving a large number of people another opportunity to stay in their homes. Tucson ACORN will also march to the Constables office in the city of Tucson to demand a moratorium on foreclosures until President Obama’s plan is implemented in its entirety.
Website www.quintcobb.com
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Mortgage Relief Services
Mortgage Relief Service is the process of achieving change in the loan contract agreed to by the lender and the borrower. The mortgage relief services getting attention now are those designed to reduce the principle balance and or interest rate and payment on homeowners mortgages.
Homeowners that are interested in either reducing their principle balance and or interest rate and mortgage payment (whether they are delinquent on their mortgage or not) should request professional mortgage relief assistance.
Homeowners are unlikely to get such a change unless they ask, and homeowners should also make the investment required to make their case as clearly as possible and most importantly seek professional assistance to insure the most favorable outcome possible.
The stakes are very high: your house and your credit.
In most cases, the decision on mortgage relief is not made by the firm that owns the loan. It is made by a firm servicing the loan under contract to the owner. The owner could be a single lender, or it could be a group of investors who own pieces of a mortgage-backed security collateralized by a pool of loans. Every servicing company and every lender has different guidelines that they follow when it comes to signing off on mortgage relief. This is why working with a professional and experienced mortgage relief servicing company is essential.
Whoever owns the loan (whether it is a lender or a group of lenders), the servicing firm is contractually obligated to find the solution to payment problems that will minimize loss to the owner. If the lowest-cost solution is a mortgage relief agreement, that's great -- everyone involved prefers a mortgage relief agreement instead of a foreclosure. But if a foreclosure would generate lower costs for the owner, the decision will be to foreclose. The cost of foreclosure to the borrower does not enter the decision.
Yet the decision is far from cut and dried, and it can be materially affected by whether and how the borrower presents his case.
That is why homeowners faced with this prospect, whether they are delinquent or not, should request professional Mortgage Relief Assistance.
About Quint Cobb & Associates
Quint Cobb & Associates specialize in Residential and Commercial Financing, Investment Planning and Mortgage Relief Assistance in all 50 States.
Our team of mortgage analysts, attorneys, negotiators, processors and underwriters are chosen from the top 1% of their industries.
Quint Cobb and Quint Cobb & Associates Foreclosure Relief
Governor Phil Murphy signs a series of foreclosure bills to assist families in Atlantic City on Monday, April 29th, 2019. Edwin J. Torres/Governor’s Office.
Quanah Parker Brightman at home. These photos are taken January 13, 2013, the evening before a Wells Fargo foreclosure auction for this home, owned by Professor Lehman L. Brightman, a Well Known Native advocate, Korean War Marine Veteran, retired college professor and Elder.
Quanah Parker Brightman at home. These photos are taken January 13, 2013, the evening before a Wells Fargo foreclosure auction for this home, owned by Professor Lehman L. Brightman, a Well Known Native advocate, Korean War Marine Veteran, retired college professor and Elder.
Home foreclosures have become second nature in our nation’s current economic crisis. However, everyone has seemed to overlook the impact the financial downturn has had on pets. They aren’t being adopted nearly as frequently and are, in fact, being abandoned at alarming rates across the country. The Humane Society of Charlotte asked us to help draw attention to these unfortunate facts. Because it’s true – people aren’t the only ones struggling these days.
Quanah Parker Brightman at home. These photos are taken January 13, 2013, the evening before a Wells Fargo foreclosure auction for this home, owned by Professor Lehman L. Brightman, a Well Known Native advocate, Korean War Marine Veteran, retired college professor and Elder.
28787 Jade Road, St. Joseph, MN 56374
$549,900
800# 2752
Luxury Walk-Out Ranch
Property Features:
Mature trees on a ten secluded acres
Private and spacious deck, great for entertaining
Design for three additional bedrooms in the lower level, walk-out design
Grand formal dining room with 19' vault and double French doors
Combination hearth room / kitchen with fabulous prep/serving island, informal dining, hardwood flooring, walk-in pantry
Finished laundry with custom Maple cabinets
Extraordinary master suite with sitting area (gas fireplace-stone surround), walk-in closet, dual sinks/cabinets and jet tub
Morning coffee room with ceramic tile
Professionally landscaped
Elegant and Tranquil
This extraordinary home features over 3,000 perfectly finished square feet one the main level. The home is a one-of-a-kind opportunity to own an elegant dwelling on ten tranquil wooded acres. This walk-out rambler style home offers plenty of space for every interest. The distinctive detailing and craftsmanship includes: dramatic arches, multiple French doors, a unique combination of Ash, Maple, Oak and re-claimed turn of the century accents, three fireplaces with stone and Maple surround/mantels. Will your favorite place of relaxation be your hearth room, a glance across the kitchen or the four-season room with a cup of morning coffee or the master bedroom sitting area in front of your private fireplace or perhaps at a family gathering in the spacious formal dining room or maybe just kicked-back and enjoying nature from your living room couch. This is a must experience home.
CALL for details and current price: 1-888-900-9305 Ext: 2752
SEE ALL HOMES FOR SALE: www.i-94homes.com/home.htm
Steve Hansen, Realtor, Fair Housing and Equal Opportunity
Coldwell Banker Burnet
SIMILAR PROPERTIES IN: Saint Cloud, Waite Park, Sartell, Sauk Rapids, St. Joseph, Clearwater, Clear Lake, Avon, Albany, St. Augusta, Rockville, Cold Spring, Richmond, Becker, Rice, Royalton, Little Falls, Monticello, St. Michael, Albertville, Rogers, Otsego, Maple Grove, Buffalo, Annandale, Rockford, Corcoran, and Central Minnesota
Are You wondering about Loan Modification, short sale, Foreclosure, what to do, who to ask, More important who to trust for a straight answer. I'm Donna M Bishop, Sand Castle Realty Group Inc. & former Owner/Broker of A & B Mortgage Brokers of Florida. I'm not Santa Claus but I am a Short Sale Expert. I have FREE consultations, Free Loan Mod kit, Free valuations, Free negotiations, Free from start to finish. Now you could go to an Attorney but the first thing he wants is a Retainer Fee. Not Free! Wow! I see dollar signs don't you?
My results are as good if not better. 100% I know my Customer Service is Better. I answer my calls personally. You can always reach me. not a secretary or someone different each time you call. Isn't that refreshing? But Wait it Gets Better.I eliminate the hassels, your stress & uncertainty. so what are you waiting for call me: Donna M Bishop, 239-560-3149 or email me: dbishop@embarqmail.com or visit my web site: www.SWFloridaBroker.com or check out my blog: www.CapeCoralShortSales.info
Thanks
Quanah Parker Brightman at home. These photos are taken January 13, 2013, the evening before a Wells Fargo foreclosure auction for this home, owned by Professor Lehman L. Brightman, a Well Known Native advocate, Korean War Marine Veteran, retired college professor and Elder.
Someone got evicted from their apartment the day before Thanksgiving. Their possessions were tossed on the lawn and were ruined in the rain.
foreclosure on board. You are allowed to use this image on your website. If you do, please link back to my site as the source: creditscoregeek.com/
Example: Photo by Credit Score Blog
Thank you!
Mike Cohen
Built in 1929, this 17-story Art Deco-style former passenger railroad station was designed by Fellheimer & Wagner to replace the multiple previous train stations and termini in Buffalo, which were scattered throughout the city and belonged to different railroads. The structure stands on the site of the old Union Depot built in 1874, which closed in the early 1920s. The station began construction in 1925 when the New York Central Railroad settled on building their new union terminal in Buffalo at the site, with the station being built to accommodate the expected growth of Buffalo from a city of about 550,000 people to one with 1.5 million people, and to accommodate continued growth in passenger numbers. However, both of these projections never materialized, with the city’s population growth and the railroad’s passenger numbers growth, already slowing in the 1920s, slowing further due to the Great Depression during the 1930s, and then beginning a long, steady decline, only being briefly buoyed by World War II before falling out of favor as automobile travel proved more flexible and air travel more swift than train travel. Due to these circumstances, the terminal was overbuilt and never reached its full capacity during its operations, only coming close during World War II due to resource shortages and mass mobilization of the United States during wartime. The terminal was offered for sale by the New York Central Railroad for one million dollars in 1956, but found no buyers, with continuing declines in passenger numbers, coupled with the decline in the population of Buffalo itself, leading to several services being ended during the 1950s and 1960s. In 1966, the railroad, in an effort to save costs and downsize their facilities, demolished several outbuildings in the complex, and in 1968, the once powerful New York Central Railroad, a husk of its former self, merged with the Pennsylvania Railroad in an attempt to consolidate their expenses and save both companies, but this merger proved unsuccessful, leading to their bankruptcy in 1976, with both railroads absorbed into the public-private partnership known as Conrail.
In the meantime, Amtrak was formed in 1971 to provide passenger rail service in the United States, operating out of the terminal until 1979, with the agency facing budgetary limitations that did not allow them to renovate the aging structure, which, when coupled with the massive expenses of keeping the building comfortable, dry, and well-lit, led to the agency building two smaller stations in Buffalo during the 1970s to replace it. The terminal was subsequently purchased by Anthony T. Fedele, whom managed to maintain the building in decent condition, but was unable to find any interested developers to reuse the building, and eventually fell behind on taxes, leading to the building being seized at foreclosure so the taxes could be recouped by the government. During the time it was owned by Fedele, the building was vacated by Conrail’s offices between 1980 and 1984, and was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1984, with the final operations at the terminal, the interlocking towers that once signaled trains arriving at the station, being shut down in 1985. In 1986, the building was purchased at auction by Thomas Telesco, whom did not maintain the building, selling off many artifacts and fixtures from its interior, and proposing grandiose and unrealistic schemes of what he would do with the building, including being a stop on a high-speed rail line between New York and Toronto. The building was then sold to Bernie Tuchman and Samuel Tuchman, with the building seeing further elements removed and sold, and the building continuing to decay.
In 1997, the terminal, then in poor condition, was purchased by Scott Field of the Preservation Coalition of Erie County, whom paid for the building’s back taxes, and shortly thereafter, formed the Central Terminal Restoration Corporation, transferring ownership of the building to the organization. The building was stabilized and secured under the stewardship of the Central Terminal Restoration Corporation, which opened the building for public tours in 2003, and holds many fundraising events at the station every year. The building has been preserved, but a restoration or adaptive reuse of the structure has so far remained elusive.
The building features a brown brick exterior with an octagonal corner tower, with a large barrel-roofed main concourse structure wrapping around the tower to the south and east. The facade of the tower features multiple setbacks, chamfered corners, corner clock faces at the roofline above the twelfth floor, a rotunda with large archways and buttresses atop the tower with a decorative trim crown at the parapet, vertical window bays that stretch from the building’s base to the roofline, large entrances with metal canopies, large transoms, and stone surrounds, pilasters, and stone trim and caps atop the parapets. The main concourse portion of the building features large arched curtain walls at the ends of its barrel vaulted roof, a cavernous barrel vaulted interior, large metal canopies over the entrances, and a tunnel underneath that once allowed traffic on Curtiss Street to run beneath the building, though this has been closed since the 1980s due to the building’s decay, with a light court between the waiting room and a low-rise office block in the front, which sits just east of the tower and presents a similar facade treatment to that of the tower, with vertically accentuated window bays and pilasters. The rear of the building is more spartan in appearance, with a scar from the former location of the entrance to the train concourse to the rear, with the connecting structure having been removed following the discontinuation of railroad services at the building in 1979. The train concourse features multiple platforms with Art Deco-style aluminum canopies with sleek columns, thin-profile roofs, and rounded ends, with the train concourse featuring arched clerestory windows and a gabled roof, and being in a rather advanced state of deterioration with vegetation having grown throughout the structure and the surrounding abandoned tracks between the platforms. Attached to the southwest corner of the main building is the baggage building, a simpler six-story Art Deco-style structure with a buff brick exterior, a penthouse above the main entrance to the building, pilasters, vertically accentuated window bays, steel windows, stone spandrel panels, stone trim, and stone parapet caps, with long canopies along the base of the front and rear of the building that protected incoming and outgoing mail and baggage from inclement weather. To the west of the baggage building is the one-story mail processing building, which features a similar facade treatment, with the main difference besides height being the rooftop monitor windows in the middle of the building’s roof. Southwest of the baggage and mail processing building, sitting close to Memorial Drive, is a structure that formerly housed the Railway Express Agency, which is more utilitarian than the rest of the surviving complex, and is in an advanced state of decay, with the demolition of the structure being planned to take place sometime this decade. The structure features large window bays with steel windows, stucco cladding on the brick structure, and the remnants of canopies on the north and south facades of the first floor, with a long and low one-story wing to the rear.
The complex is one of the largest designed by Fellheimer & Wagner, and has maintained a remarkable state of preservation in its original form with few changes since its construction, besides some damage from the years of decay and neglect in the 1980s and 1990s. Another notable structure by the firm, and one of the most well-known railroad stations in the world, is Grand Central Terminal in New York City, which was also built for the New York Central Railroad. In addition to Grand Central Terminal, the firm also designed terminals that are more similar in appearance to the Buffalo Central Terminal, including Union Station in South Bend, Indiana, and Cincinnati Union Terminal, with Grand Central Terminal, Buffalo Central Terminal, and Cincinnati Union Terminal being among the largest, most impressive, and most significant railroad stations ever built in the United States. The station, though unrestored, is still impressive, and hopefully will be eventually adaptively reused for an economically sustainable function.
If you ever wondered how many notices they would tack up on your front door before they haul all your stuff out of your house, take a look.
Quanah Parker Brightman at home. These photos are taken January 13, 2013, the evening before a Wells Fargo foreclosure auction for this home, owned by Professor Lehman L. Brightman, a Well Known Native advocate, Korean War Marine Veteran, retired college professor and Elder.
Lawrence has been hit very hard with foreclosures--many of the properties on the market now in Lawrence are in some state of foreclosure. It's a terrible situation that really threatens the entire community. Garden Street is just one street and has 8 homes in various states of foreclosure.
At this time LCW has purchased 4 buildings and we hope to continue to purchase properties, rehab them and bring them back into productive use for our community.
This is a picture of two of the buildings we own--they are 2-family attached row houses. The first floors have 2 bedroom apartments and the 2nd and 3rd floors are a two level apartments that are either 3 (or 4) bedroom apartments--we haven't actually decided how many bedrooms would be best.
Negative Scanned - CanoScan 8800F
Hasselblad 500C/M Black Body
Carl Zeiss Planar C T* 80mm f2.8
Fujifilm 100 Acros
Enjoying myself with ♫♫♫ Megadeth - Foreclosure Of A Dream ♫♫♫
Thanks to Malik and Pelican on developing this film.
foreclosure on calculator. Please feel free to use this image that I've created on your website or blog. If you do, I'd greatly appreciate a link back to my blog as the source: CreditDebitPro.com
Example: Photo by Credit Debit PRO
Thanks!
Mike Lawrence
Quanah Parker Brightman at home. These photos are taken January 13, 2013, the evening before a Wells Fargo foreclosure auction for this home, owned by Professor Lehman L. Brightman, a Well Known Native advocate, Korean War Marine Veteran, retired college professor and Elder.
Check out all the great MICHAEL JACKSON pictures at:
www.michael-jackson-photos.com/
www.michael-jackson-photos.com/michael-jackson-nerverland...
Funding dirty coal? Not with our money.
Activists hung a banner on Bank of America's Charlotte, NC headquarters to tell the bank: "Not with our money!" People are fed up with Bank of America putting profits before people and planet. The bank is the largest funder of the US coal industry and the leading foreclosure on Americans' homes. Meanwhile, BoA is laying off 30,000 workers and hiking fees left and right. Enough is enough.
You too can tell Bank of America, "Not with our money!"
Photo Credit: Nell Redmond
Ranch Style Home with Character
Property Features:
Landscaped one acre lot
Front covered porch
Private covered back patio and wrap-around deck 20 x 20
Three bedrooms & two full bathrooms on main level
Main floor master suite with walk-in closet, step-in shower with slate surround, dual sinks, jettub with ceramic surround and ceramic flooring
Formal dining area and eat-in-kitchen
Foyer entry with guest closet
Spacious kitchen with prep/serving island (granite top), stainless steel appliances, hardwood floating floors (Mohawk), 9' ceilings, granite counter tops, pantry cabinet and built-in desk area and Maple cabinets
Main floor family room/living room with 9' ceilings with unique archway access to serving/entertaining counter
Main floor laundry with cabinets and deep sink
Upgraded lighting fixtures, Delta plumbing fixtures, in-ground sprinklers, invisible fencing, new microwave, 30 year shingles, wood binds throughout, brushed nickel hardware
Rocked, insulated and heated three car garage
Newer Ranch Style Home with Character
With 1,700 square feet up and down rambler style home offers plenty of space for a growing family or individuals looking for one floor living. The one acre landscaped lot provides the perfect setting to enjoy all outdoor activities including gardening. The home's exterior features: a front covered entry, private back patio with a 20 x 20 wrap-around deck, and in-ground sprinklers. The front foyer includes a guest closet. The property boasts: a spacious kitchen with a granite center island, over-sized serving counter open to the family room, hardwood flooring, stainless steel appliances, pantry and an informal eat-in space. The main level master suite includes a walk-in closet, step-in shower with slate surround, sensual jet tub with ceramic surround, and dual style sinks. The lower level has multiple day-light windows and offers unlimited possibilities.
CALL for details and current price: 1-888-900-9305 Ext: 2501
SEE ALL HOMES FOR SALE: www.i-94homes.com/home.htm
Steve Hansen, Realtor, Fair Housing and Equal Opportunity
Coldwell Banker Burnt
SIMILAR PROPERTIES IN: Saint Cloud, Waite Park, Sartell, Sauk Rapids, St. Joseph, Clearwater, Clear Lake, Avon, Albany, St. Augusta, Rockville, Cold Spring, Richmond, Becker, Rice, Royalton, Little Falls, Monticello, St. Michael, Albertville, Rogers, Otsego, Maple Grove, Buffalo, Annandale, Rockford, Corcoran, and Central Minnesota