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Colorado Springs company agrees to pay for allegedly scamming foreclosure victims

Some homeowners barely got 1/2 of what they had coming to them

A foreclosure sign tops a sale sign outside a Denver home in this 2007 file photo.
A foreclosure sign tops a sale sign outside a Denver home in this 2007 file photo.
Feb. 13, 2008--Denver Post consumer affairs reporter David Migoya.   The Denver Post, Glenn Asakawa
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A Colorado Springs company and four of its principals have agreed to repay $125,000 to foreclosed homeowners — one of them a survivor of the Aurora theater shooting — who were allegedly duped in a found-money scheme that involved the public auction of their properties.

The alleged scam by Austin Home Ventures involved homeowners who were entitled to a small windfall of profit after their houses were sold at a public trustee auction for more than what was owed to a bank.

The settlement is the result of a in December 2015 after a tip from Weld County Public Trustee Susie Velasquez.

Known as “overbid proceeds,” the money is the difference between what a buyer paid for the property at auction and what was owed on the mortgage and to other lien holders. County public trustees are required to hold the overbid funds for six months for a homeowner to claim before turning over the money to the state treasurer’s unclaimed property fund, where it can be claimed at any time afterward.

and how counties — which at the time were allowed to keep any funds that were unclaimed after five years — often did little to locate the rightful owners, in part because of a lack of resources. An explosion in the number of foreclosures during the economic collapse caused a number of homes to be sold for more than what was owed on them.

In 2012,  It was under those new laws that the companies charged in the lawsuit operated.

There is no cost to a homeowner to claim the overbid funds, but Austin Home Ventures and its principals — Bryan Jensen, Ethan Eaton (aka  Ethan Graham), Bailey Perez and Billy Fuston — allegedly made foreclosure victims believe the only way to get the money was with their help. They would charge up to 50 percent of the money due the homeowner, according to a lawsuit by the Colorado Attorney General’s Office.

Aurora theater  was entitled to more than $42,306 after his home was foreclosed in late 2014 — two years after he shielded his girlfriend during the theater shooting and was grazed in the head by a shotgun blast. But he saw barely half that amount.

Gallup told Perez he lost his home and job after having medical and financial issues as a result of his experience in Aurora, according to court papers filed in the lawsuit. He had no medical insurance,

In all, investigators learned Austin Home Ventures and its subsidiaries — Capital Asset Recovery and Capital Realty — allegedly scammed about 25 people with concocted fees and unnecessary procedures.

Colorado law allows companies that unite owners with their unclaimed property to keep as much as 30 percent of the actual value of the located property, depending on when their agreement is signed.

The companies named in the lawsuit also allegedly convinced distressed homeowners facing possible foreclosure or who were just behind on their mortgage payments — some of them military personnel having to fly overseas — to let them sell the property. In reality, however, the principals merely rented the houses, pocketed the cash and did not bother to keep up mortgage payments, the AG lawsuit alleged.

Eaton, Perez and Fuston are responsible for $32,500 of the settlement. AHV and Jensen must have the remaining $92,500 paid by December 2018.

“If you are an unscrupulous business or individual looking to take advantage of homeowners in distress, my office is going to make sure you are held accountable,” said Attorney General Cynthia Coffman said in a statement.

None of the defendants admitted to any wrongdoing or any of the allegations the AG made in the lawsuit.

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