logo
I Got Scammed in Real Estate Deal — What To Watch for and How To Avoid My Fate

I Got Scammed in Real Estate Deal — What To Watch for and How To Avoid My Fate

Yahoo16 hours ago
The real estate industry is rife with scams, given the huge amounts of money involved in buying and selling it.
I'm a Realtor:
Check Out:
One of the most common themes? Induced urgency combined with an upfront fee or deposit. 'Fraudsters are fond of making things urgent, and then asking you to cough up money,' explained Mark Sanchez, Senior Real Estate Manager at Gator Rated. 'Never neglect to do due diligence.'
After polling real estate professionals, these three stories stood out as scams and red flags to avoid.
Seller-Provided Inspection Documents
In one of his real estate transactions, Sanchez encountered a house that seemed like a great deal at first. After taking a closer look at the basement however, he grew concerned about foundation problems.
'The seller never informed me about the foundation issues, and then when I started asking questions, they provided bogus inspection reports to hide the damage.
'When something seems wrong or like it is too good to be true, go with your instincts,' he continued. 'Bring in a third party inspector that will pick through the whole property. A few hundred dollars spent on such an inspection may save you tens of thousands of dollars later.'
For You:
Fake Condo Development
Today, Fred Loguidice is a seasoned real estate investor and founder of Sell My House Fast Wisconsin. However, early in his career, he lost five figures in a development scam.
He explained, 'A colleague I knew — or at least thought I knew — approached me with a 'can't miss' deal on a pre-construction condo in a seemingly up-and-coming area. The price was significantly below market value, and they painted a picture of massive returns within a short timeframe. There was a sense of urgency, a limited-time offer that I had to jump on quickly.'
'Everything seemed legitimate on the surface,' Loguidice continued. 'There were contracts, fancy brochures, even virtual tours of the planned development.
But as the months went buy, Loguidice said that excuses including permitting delays, material shortages and more began to mount, and progress stalled. 'My colleague became increasingly difficult to reach, and other investors I connected with online were experiencing the same issues,' he elaborated. 'I hired a lawyer to look into the development, and it turned out the original plans were never fully approved, the developer had a shady history, and the 'limited-time offer' was just a pressure tactic.'
Fortunately, Loguidice said since he acted relatively quickly on seeking out legal guidance, he was able to recover some of his deposit after a long legal process. Even so, it cost Loguidice a lot of time, money and sleepless nights.
Fake Lender
Real estate investor Brian Rudderow of HBR Colorado sometimes transfers contracts to investor buyers. Investors who buy fixer-uppers often fund them with hard money loans.
'I mistakenly referred a buyer to someone posing as a hard money lender on LinkedIn,' he said. 'The lender asked my buyer for a $10,000 good faith deposit.' This was, of course, a red flag in itself — lenders earn their fees at closing, not before.
'I was unaware of this, and had no chance to warn the buyer,' Rudderow went on 'They sent in the deposit and never heard from the 'lender' again. I called the bank where the money was wired, but the manager refused to give me any information because it was a violation of customer privacy.'
Bottom line: Before you open your proverbial wallet, do your due diligence.
More From GOBankingRates
New Law Could Make Electricity Bills Skyrocket in These 4 States
I'm a Self-Made Millionaire: 6 Ways I Use ChatGPT To Make a Lot of Money
5 Strategies High-Net-Worth Families Use To Build Generational Wealth
10 Used Cars That Will Last Longer Than the Average New Vehicle
This article originally appeared on GOBankingRates.com: I Got Scammed in Real Estate Deal — What To Watch for and How To Avoid My Fate
Solve the daily Crossword
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

They Wanted More Space in Brooklyn. Now They Have Room for Chickens.
They Wanted More Space in Brooklyn. Now They Have Room for Chickens.

New York Times

timea minute ago

  • New York Times

They Wanted More Space in Brooklyn. Now They Have Room for Chickens.

By the late 2010s, it was clear to Kaja Kühl and Jay Tsai that they needed more space. As their daughter grew from infant to toddler, their one-bedroom apartment in Fort Greene, Brooklyn, seemed to shrink. The most appealing move, they thought, would be to buy a townhouse where they could spread out, including with some outdoor space, and have more control in creating an energy efficient home. But they found that most townhouses were priced beyond their reach. 'We noticed that the kinds of places that were in our budget tended to be not brownstones,' said Ms. Kühl, 55, 'but the slightly older, wood-frame-on-a-brick-basement houses that were often in not such great shape.' Ms. Kühl, founder of the firm youarethecity and an instructor at the City College in New York and Columbia University, is deeply interested in sustainable building practices, and she saw advantages in the less popular homes. 'I knew they were easier to insulate well because you can put insulation within the wood frame,' as well as behind the exterior siding, she said. When she and Mr. Tsai, 62, a former financial adviser, found an ugly duckling townhouse in Prospect Heights, Brooklyn, they had their project. With a facade covered in vinyl siding and security grates, and an interior that had been sliced up into apartments, it needed a complete overhaul. Want all of The Times? Subscribe.

For a ‘Twisted Tale,' Amanda Knox and Grace Van Patten Became One
For a ‘Twisted Tale,' Amanda Knox and Grace Van Patten Became One

New York Times

timea minute ago

  • New York Times

For a ‘Twisted Tale,' Amanda Knox and Grace Van Patten Became One

As the title character of the mini-series 'The Twisted Tale of Amanda Knox,' the actress Grace Van Patten had to convincingly embody a highly examined figure at the center of a real-life legal drama followed by millions. Even more daunting, she had to do it in front of Amanda Knox herself, an executive producer. Those close to Knox were stunned by the results. 'Grace, I haven't told you this yet — when they see you play me, they get chills,' Knox told Van Patten during a conversation with The New York Times last week. 'You just did it, and they were like, 'Oh my God, oh my God, oh my God.'' Van Patten gasped in response. 'It was some fusion that happened,' she said. 'Because a lot of it felt very subconscious to me.' The eight-part series debuts on Hulu on Wednesday. The chills were inspired, Knox said, partly by Van Patten nailing her personality quirks: her occasionally singsong voice, the snort in her laugh, the cha-cha in her step. These behaviors and others became ammunition for Italian prosecutors and the global tabloid machine during Knox's highly publicized trial for the 2007 sexual assault and murder of Meredith Kercher. Kercher, a 21-year-old British exchange student and one of Knox's three roommates, was found dead from a knife attack in the flat they shared in Perugia, Italy. Knox, a 20-year-old Seattle native who was studying there, and Raffaele Sollecito, her Italian boyfriend of about a week, were arrested and imprisoned just days after Kercher was found. In 2009, both were convicted of the killing, with Amanda sentenced to 26 years and Sollecito to 25 years. In 2011, the ruling was overturned, and Knox returned to the United States. Then in 2014, Knox and Sollecito (played by Giuseppe Domenico in the series) were re-convicted of murder, a conviction that was overturned in 2015, ending the nearly decade-long saga. Another man, Rudy Guede, was convicted separately of the murder in 2008 and was released from prison in 2021, after serving 13 years of a 16-year sentence. (Guede's original 30-year sentence was reduced on appeal.) A separate slander conviction for Knox was upheld earlier this year. She had implicated Patrick Lumumba, the owner of a bar where she had worked, and herself in a confession made under duress, which she had tried to withdraw almost immediately. (Lumumba was in jail about two weeks as a result.) In all, Knox spent nearly four years in an Italian prison. The mini-series recreates this legal roller coaster in an unconventional style. It is a prison drama, a courtroom drama, a love story and an anxious horror tale. And it is largely in Italian. Van Patten ('Nine Perfect Strangers,' 'Tell Me Lies') plays Knox from her 20s, when she was full of 'whimsy and optimism and innocence,' as Knox put it, into her mid-30s, when Knox was defined more by 'trauma and hauntedness and determination.' 'We asked her to play the best experiences of my life and the worst experiences of life,' said Knox, now 38. 'We asked her to do it in English and Italian.' The series also depicts Knox's decision, in 2022, to return to Italy to confront Giuliano Mignini, her nemesis during and after the trial. Mignini, the lead Italian prosecutor, had fixated on and promoted the image of Knox as a conniving, sex-crazed murderer. (He compared Knox to Joseph Goebbels, the Nazi propaganda minister, during the proceedings.) Tabloid headlines smeared her as 'Foxy Knoxy,' a childhood nickname lifted from her Myspace page. Onscreen, Mignini (Francesco Acquaroli) is a relentless figure, a smug monster to be dreaded. Knox's trip to Italy to face (and ultimately befriend) the prosecutor is used as a framing device in the series. 'This is not a show about the worst experience of someone's life,' Knox said. 'This is the show of a person's choice to find closure on their own terms and to reclaim a sense of agency in their own life after that agency has been stolen from them.' To prepare to play Knox, Van Patten had numerous video chats with her and spent time in Los Angeles with Knox and her two children. Knox was also frequently on set during production. It all helped the actress understand the complex emotions involved in such a nightmarish experience. 'I was able to go to those places because of how deeply open Amanda was and how deeply vulnerable she was with me,' Van Patten said. An interrogation scene, in which Knox is mentally and physically tormented by a team of Italian officials, was particularly intense to film, Van Patten said. (Watching Knox spiral and give way under what amounts to psychological torture is brutal viewing.) Van Patten was learning Italian throughout filming, but the show was largely shot sequentially, and those early scenes captured authentic desperation. 'I tried not to learn the other people's lines as much as I could so that I was in a state of confusion,' she said. Knox said the themes of perception and miscommunication are fundamental to the story. 'That clash of perspectives and cultures and language, and the tension there, that's the beauty of drama and it's the beauty of reality,' she said. 'It is what makes this so psychologically and emotionally complex.' Kercher (Rhianne Barreto) is mostly seen in flashbacks of quiet, playful moments of friendship between her and Knox. The limited screen time reflects real life, in which the media circus around Knox and Sollecito overshadowed Kercher's brutal death. Last year, Stephanie Kercher, Meredith's sister, told The Guardian that she found it 'difficult to understand' what purpose the mini-series would serve. 'Meredith will always be remembered for her own fight for life, and yet in her absence, her love and personality continues to shine,' she said. 'The Twisted Tale' was created by K.J. Steinberg ('This Is Us'), and executive producers included Monica Lewinsky; Knox's husband, Christopher Robinson; and Warren Littlefield ('The Handmaid's Tale'). It was Lewinsky who first approached Knox about dramatizing her experiences. In 2021, Lewinsky worked to reframe her own story as a producer on the FX series 'Impeachment,' about her relationship with former President Bill Clinton when she was a 22-year-old intern and the fallout from it. Lewinsky knows 'deep in her bones what it feels like to have a bad experience, the worst experience of her life, used to diminish her and the turning of her into a punchline,' Knox said. 'She has been such a trailblazer in the mission of refusing to be squashed, refusing to be limited.' 'I was really moved by how open people were to me,' Knox said of her collaborators. 'I felt supported not just as a source but as a storyteller in my own right.' Knox said coverage of her was informed and shaped by persistent cultural messaging that 'women are either sluts or virgins, and that they all secretly hate each other and would murder each other if they had the chance,' she said. She believes younger generations are more likely to scrutinize reporting and demand more nuance than the public did during her trial. Still, Knox said she was initially reluctant to saddle Van Patten, 28, with 'this baggage that I have been carrying around my entire adult life.' 'In the same way that I didn't want the dark shadow of being the girl accused of murder passed on to my daughter,' Knox said, 'I didn't want that to pass on to Grace.' Van Patten had few preconceived ideas about Knox's story. She was a child when it happened and first learned about the case in the 2016 documentary 'Amanda Knox,' which included interviews with Knox, Sollecito and Mignini, among others. 'The show gives everyone the opportunity to understand it more and to form an opinion based on facts, and not what they were being fed at the time,' Van Patten said. 'She was just a 20-year-old girl going through this.'

Crypto is booming. Washington is driving the rally
Crypto is booming. Washington is driving the rally

CNN

timea minute ago

  • CNN

Crypto is booming. Washington is driving the rally

It's been a summer to remember for crypto. Bitcoin is eclipsing record highs, shares in crypto-related companies are soaring and Wall Street is rethinking its stance on the industry. Once on the fringes of finance, cryptocurrency is now being embraced by a growing base of enthusiastic investors — and that's driven in large part by the White House's support. It's integrating with traditional finance more than ever before, bolstered by sweeping legislative changes in Washington. For example, President Donald Trump recently issued an executive order that opened the door for digital assets like crypto to be included in 401(k)s. This boosted bitcoin — the world's largest cryptocurrency by market value — to a record high of $124,000 last week. Anything related to bitcoin has been on fire this year as investors continue to pour money into crypto-related companies. Meanwhile, skeptics who warn of crypto's flaws are raising concerns about heightened risks for consumers. Shares in Robinhood (HOOD), a trading platform that includes cryptocurrencies, have soared 200% this year. Coinbase (COIN), a crypto exchange, has gained 28%. Strategy (MSTR), a company that purchases bitcoin, is up 26% this year. And BitMine Immersion Technologies (BMNR), a company that mines bitcoin, has surged 625%. In comparison, the benchmark S&P 500 is up 10% this year. The Nasdaq 100, an index tracking the 100 largest tech companies in the United States, is up 13%. Crypto is climbing into unprecedented territory. Google is part of a multibillion-dollar deal with a bitcoin mining company called TeraWulf, helping drive enthusiasm about the industry. 'Institutional adoption and strategic infrastructure deals have propelled crypto markets well beyond summer expectations,' said Brian Dobson, head of disruptive technology equity research at brokerage firm Clear Street. 'We see this as the early stages of a broader cycle.' The current crypto mania has the makings of a classic speculative rally, supported by intense bullishness on tech, AI and crypto, according to Steve Sosnick, chief strategist at Interactive Brokers, a trading platform. 'The (Trump) administration proclaimed that it would be crypto-friendly,' Sosnick said. 'Markets have been very much willing to embrace speculation of any kind.' Circle (CRCL), a stablecoin issuer (a type of crypto coin), has surged 80% since it debuted on the New York Stock Exchange on June 5. The latest crypto-related company to debut on the New York Stock Exchange is called Bullish (BLSH). Retail investors have been big buyers. However, 9% of global fund managers surveyed by Bank of America in August had exposure to cryptocurrency. 'One factor is just pure excitement around the potential diversification of 401(k)s into alternative assets,' said Michael Green, chief strategist at Simplify Asset Management. 'The growing acceptance and awareness of crypto in that space has really powered flows into bitcoin in particular this year.' BlackRock has also propelled bitcoin's ascent. The asset management firm launched its own bitcoin exchange-traded fund in January 2024 after the Securities and Exchange Commission greenlit bitcoin-focused ETFs. The ETF is up 137% since its launch, and it's become the primary vehicle for investors to get exposure to bitcoin without purchasing the cryptocurrency, Green said. The S&P 500, in comparison, has gained 37% across the same period. Another crypto win came on July 18, when Trump signed the GENIUS Act into law, laying out regulations for stablecoins. Stablecoins are a type of crypto pegged to another asset, like the US dollar, to keep its value steady. The 'stable' value gives it potential use in digital payments. JPMorgan Chase CEO Jamie Dimon on his company's earnings call in July said the bank is going to be involved in stablecoins to 'understand it' and 'be good at it.' 'The way to be cognizant is to be involved,' Dimon said. 'We're going to be in it and learning a lot.' JPMorgan on July 30 also announced a partnership with Coinbase 'to make buying crypto easier than ever.' Beginning this fall, Chase customers will be able to fund their Coinbase accounts to purchase crypto with their Chase credit cards. With all the crypto changes this year, it's important for investors to 'seek as much education as possible' on new technologies and assets like bitcoin to better grasp 'all of the opportunities and risks involved,' said Chris Kuiper, vice president of research at Fidelity Digital Assets. The Trump family has been active in the crypto industry. World Liberty Financial, a company tied to the Trump family, has issued its own stablecoin. Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent on Thursday said in a social media post that the government aims 'to execute on the President's promise to make the United States the 'Bitcoin superpower of the world.'' While markets cheer developments in the space, others are warning of crypto's flaws and raising concerns about potential financial risks. The GENIUS Act, for example, has been heralded by proponents of the crypto industry. Yet some policy advocacy groups are drawing attention to what they call the lack of consumer protections. 'The GENIUS Act does not really offer much in the way of consumer or investor or financial stability protections beyond what already exists,' said Amanda Fischer, policy director at Better Markets, a nonprofit advocacy group. 'I do not think that this bill should be viewed as regulating stablecoins, so much as it is the government endorsing stablecoins and importing crypto risks into the regular financial system,' Fischer said.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store