Foreclosures of the Rich and
Famous
You are not alone.
Although the rich and famous are rich and famous, it
doesn't mean that they are impervious to the popping of the
real estate bubble. Many have succumbed to real estate woes as
of late.
Ed McMahon had tabloids a talking
when his real estate troubles became front page news last year.
The now deceased celebrity attributed his dollar difficulties
to alimony paid out to ex-wives and the economic
downturn.
Aretha Franklin set the
record straight about her exclusive Detroit suburban home. It
went into foreclosure due to non-payment of property tax. She
could have lost her $400,000 home to foreclosure due to $445 in
back property taxes that accumulated into $20,000, since 2005.
She said it was an oversight by her attorney. Once alerted of
the situation, the Queen of Soul satisfied the
debt.
Amber Frey, infamous
ex-mistress of convicted murderer Scott Peterson lost her home
northern California home to foreclosure. At auction, the asking
price was over $200,000 less than the original purchase price.
No one snatched up the deal at a low $305,000. She ended up
surrendering the property to the bank.
Fantasia of American Idol
fame came close to losing her home in Charlotte, North
Carolina. The R&B singer settled with her Florida lender
just days before the auction was scheduled to sell her
pond-front home.
Extreme Makeover scandal hit
the Harper family
home in Atlanta, Georga when it went into
foreclosure and would have been sold had it not been for ...
even more ... generous donations. The most expansive Extreme
Makeover ever seen was completed with much dedication, sweat
and effort by volunteers, along with a deluge of donated
dollars. Taking out a $400,000+ loan for a construction
business that went belly up put the Harper's home in harm's
way.
Laura Richardson, California
Congresswoman, fell behind on property tax and mortgage
payments in 2008. To the disdain of Sharon Helmar who sold it
to her, the Long Beach home went into foreclosure and was sold.
Neighbors noted that she did not keep up the lawn or take out
her garbage.
Sports figures are not
unfamiliar with foreclosure, either. Latrell "Spree" Sprewell, former NBA
guard known for choking his then Coach P. J. Carlesimo, lost
his 70-foot yacht and his Milwaukee home to foreclosure.
Assessed at a mere $668,000, the home's value was nowhere near
what most other sports professionals in his pay range
own.
Jose Conseco experienced women woes,
which caused him to lose his expansive 7,300 square foot
Encino, California mansion. At least, that's his story. He said
he lost $7 to $8 million on his two divorces that left him hard
up for cash and was unable to pay his
mortgage.
Not to anyone's surprise,
Michael Vick's
home was in foreclosure, since he was in prison and no longer
could come up with the cash. Once NFL's highest paid player,
the dog-fight diva was convicted and was to serve 23 months in
prison. He was released earlier this year to serve out the rest
of his sentence in home confinement.
Evander Holyfield, famous for
his fight with Mike "I'll Bite Your Ear Off" Tyson, had his
Fairburn, Georgia home in foreclosure. He was also behind on
child support payments to a mother of one of his eleven
children, and being sued for not paying $550,000 he loaned he
owed to a consulting company.
Michael Jackson (King of
Pop), MC Hammer (Hammertime fame), Veronica Hearst (Randolph
Hearst widow), Scott Storch (previous hip-hop producer), Damon
Dash (hip-hop mogul), Doug E. Fresh (rap icon), Vin Baker
(former NBA star), Wyclef Jean (Fugees' frontman) and other
famous actors, performers and sports professionals have all
experienced foreclosure.
If you want to prevent foreclosure and you need
help with a short
sale,
contact
Linda Bills
Article courtesy Broker Agent Social by Kimbrough
Gray
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