
16 February 2009 | 30 replies
Great detective work Jeff!

21 April 2009 | 10 replies
There was a threat detected just so you know.

25 April 2011 | 26 replies
or so years... when I was well past 10 FNMA mortgages... that commercial lenders with their "5-year fixed rates" are eager to lend to people like us who are on the 'right side' of this massive RE wealth transfer, and that most likely US Bank (retail side) will sell this loan -- so a "No" to the last bullet will just mean you may get denied in underwriting (not from the loan broker/officer) if they detect a problem, meaning no loan for your deal.

18 June 2009 | 7 replies
I guess.I think Scott is trying to say that the fact that you aren't directly buying the property is being detected by the seller, and that the seller is jumping to the assumption that you have some objection to the seller's property - otherwise you would buy it yourself.So, if you don't have any such objections, then that seller won't go that way either.

12 April 2011 | 12 replies
It also attracts more visitors, as the search engine detect the blogs without missing.

30 March 2010 | 37 replies
The detective conducting the interview looked at the three of them and said, "So y'all want to be cops, huh?"

8 November 2010 | 10 replies
UNLESS...your detective work turns up multiple properties, or the deceased had a different mailing address from the real property, which would indicate income property.

13 July 2011 | 8 replies
Buying the REO "as is" by an investor or rehabber nets the lender less if their inspection detects leaks.

28 May 2011 | 11 replies
If you have no problems with electricity and internet access, try doing this: Use motion detection on your webcam to email you when something sets the motion detector off.

3 February 2010 | 5 replies
An appraiser is not a home inspector or contractor, and not particularly skilled in estimating repair costs, especially if the defect is hard to detect.