How should we react when our credit card company, mortgage company, and the company for which we work, all start acting like we are disposable? Sometimes life seems unfair, and that issues are out of control.
Archive for » June, 2009 «
DK in Connecticut said: “CT attorney general has been notified about SAXON. I hope to sue. Anybody else in CT wants to sue Saxon Mortgage can call CT A.G and give info so we can make these greedy scumbags get real and provide some kind of service that they claim to provide. This is fraud, Saxon is a fraud!
This is a quote from an article about the American Dream. The complete article is referenced below:
Susan Thompson, owner of a tidy home in Gary’s Glen Park neighborhood, went hunting for a home equity mortgage to pay off medical and credit card bills in 2006.
I am constantly irritated by the fact that Saxon Mortgage does not wait until the 16th day of the month to call homeowners. My monthly statement specifically says the payment is due on the first and considered late by the sixteenth.
Saxon again proved that they do not have a clue. A representative – Mr. Jones – called today, inquiring about our house payment. We send our payments by priority mail so we can follow them. We also knew something that Jones had yet to discover. Our payment was received by Saxon Mortgage Servicers – and processed.
This email came for a Mississippi resident: “We have been dealing with this company for over a year. Saxon force-placed escrow on our account for insurance when we had our own insurance and then they refused to take it off. saxon stopped accepting our payments because we refused to pay the escrow amount so now we have hired an attorney to try to fight foreclosure.
JG in Nevada said: “Where to begin, I think it mainly started when my husband lost his job. I went full time ASAP just to keep our heads above water, my payment was probably 2 weeks late I sent the payment with the late fees and 18 days later they sent me a letter saying this is not acceptable. As is the case with SAXON to keep plenty of confusion and avoid case management, I have never ever talked to the same person twice.
SM sent this email: “We contact Saxon in January 2008 to set up a repay plan. It was quick and easy. We should have known it was too good to be true. A few months later, after we had already made several payments, our home was placed in foreclosure status!
A Georgia resident sent this email: “I submitted loan modification papers July 2008. In October I was approved. I sent all of my documentation back through FedEx. My loan modification officer JEFFERY ALRIGDGE contacted me once on Oct. 7th 2008.
T. in Texas said: “The beat goes on! This is a follow-up of previous as noted here. After providing my redone financial statement to Saxon/Morgan Stanley, LAST month. I have yet to hear from them and they cannot tell me where my deal is.


