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Woman Closed On Loan In Hospital Bed

Reported by: Joce Sterman, ABC2 News

You've seen the stories before, right here on our website, abc2news.com and on the air. Our award-winning Mortgage Meltdown series takes a look at housing loans that take advantage of you, costing you more money – maybe even your house. Now we’ve got another story. As ABC2 News Investigator Joce Sterman explains, a local woman's house is on the line thanks to a deal she signed in a hospital bed.

It's a sales pitch made of promises: cut your monthly payments in half, find interest rates as low as one-percent. When Judith Holley heard those claims on the radio, she thought she'd found salvation. She says, "When you hear people on a Christian station, you automatically assume they're very honest people." Judith was looking for a way out of her money problems when she heard the ad for a mortgage company she thought could help. The 68-year old says she was struggling, unable to work after losing her leg. After refinancing to handle other bills and help her kids over the years, payments on the Parkville home she'd owned since 1980 had become too much to handle. Judith needed a solution. However, she says what she got only made her situation worse. It’s a realization she made while taking a hard look at her bills months after signing a new loan. She says, "The ending balance was $175,000 and the beginning balance had been $173,000. So, I thought, that's weird. Shouldn't that be coming down instead of going up?"

But with a Pay Option Arm, it's not weird: it's standard procedure. Judith was lured in with the promise of lower payments and low interest, but she actually signed up for a loan with negative amortization. That’s a fancy term for what many experts call a quicksand loan, where Judith’s balance will just keep growing. In fact, she already owes the bank about $7,000 more than when she took the loan last January. ABC2 Mortgage Expert and Freedmont Mortgage CEO Carl Delmont says that’s a problem. He says, “Because you now owe more than the original loan payment, your credit score will plummet. So you're stuck in a loan that's rising, that keeps going up in payment and balance and you can't refinance because your score just dropped 60-100 points."

Delmont has been trying to help Judith, and he knows all about the Pay Option Arm. He says it's the kind of loan many people end up taking because they don't understand the terms. But the numbers are dropping. According to First American Core Logic's loan performance data, in 2006, five-percent of Baltimoreans who refinanced took negative am loans. That figure fell to just over two-percent in 2007, when Judith signed up. She takes responsibility for pushing to get the loan completed, but some believe she has a reason for not understanding what she was getting into. Why? Judith signed all of her paperwork during a stay at Good Samaritan Hospital. She had congestive heart failure and was on a cocktail of medications. But that didn't stop a loan agent with Chatham Mortgage from closing the deal right in her hospital room. It’s an act Judith looks back on with anger. She says, "I think he's a sleaze ball. But the thing is they went of business last year.”

Chatham Mortgage's local branch in Timonium did go out of business, but we were able to track down the man who brokered Judith's loan. Ron Shadoff told us over the phone that he spoke with Miss Holley for several weeks about the loan before she signed and that she was anxious get the money to meet personal expenses. As for the closing, he says, “The title company sent an attorney along to ensure Judith's competency and that closings in hospitals are not uncommon."