Rojo Lewis
Seller changes their mind on a subject to deal?
4 September 2020 | 19 replies
Bad actors in Tampa will soon be called Rojos
Andrew B.
Agent/Investor How to Avoid a Conflict of Interest
4 September 2020 | 8 replies
The perception and case study is for unscrupulous actors, but as an agent/investor you are certainly allowed to buy properties for yourself and get a good deal.
Karly Wright
Tenant Demanding Us To Fix Broken A/C Unit
8 September 2020 | 10 replies
I would probably do the following, this is completely malicious compliance and depends on your skill set: have an HVAC company do an inspection on the furnace and tuneup.
Jay Hinrichs
LATEST PHISHING SCAM HITTING REAL ESTATE INVESTORS
8 January 2021 | 36 replies
These usually come from an account being compromised and the threat actor using the compromised user's email account to send targeted messages to all that person's contacts.
Lloyd Segal
Economic Update (August 31 - September 4, 2020)
31 August 2020 | 0 replies
It was later owned by actor-comedian Wally Cox, who sold the place to Sammy Davis Jr. in 1955.
Shannon X.
T.V Flipping shows
16 September 2012 | 16 replies
Last year you would see camera crews at the real foreclosure auction, now they pay actors and create drama.
Hendrix P.
Landlord Insurance
13 November 2012 | 5 replies
Vandalism and malicious mischief is included on almost all landlord (dwelling fire) policies.
Samuel Ksiazkieicz
A little help understanding this land trust strategy
23 November 2012 | 3 replies
However, the same clause prevents a defaulting party from maliciously and unlawfully detaining the property under the guise of having an “equitable interest (‘claim of equity’)” in it in order to forestall eviction, buy time and free rent.
Susie S.
Who can help me, a newbie find a deal in positive cash flow properties?
5 December 2012 | 17 replies
These bad actors target out of state buyers from expensive areas.
Guillermo M.
Are title companies required to read the Operating Agreement of an LLC when they sell a property?
11 December 2012 | 6 replies
I’ve dealt with LLC borrowers that think they know who has signature authority but after I read their OA I find that they are wrong, not maliciously wrong, but just don’t know.I think a lot of this has to do with knowing and trusting the people involved….it’s all about relationships, at every phase of the transaction.Hopefully there is a Title Officer reading this thread that can help.