UPDATE:
ACORN activist faces burglary charge
Baltimore police have taken fingerprints at the break-in site and the current owner, William Lane, says
he will sue ACORN. The home was sold in June 2008 for $192,000. This morning,
ACORN official Louis Beverly will face a burglary charge. Look for the Left to turn him into a martyr.
It is not your home, ACORN.
Here is what the MSM won’t be telling you about the so-called “victim†in that case, ACORN worker Donna Hanks — all based on public records and court documents.
According to real property data search information, Hanks bought the two-story home in the summer of
2001 for $87,000. At some point in the next five years, she re-financed the original home loan for
$270,000.
Question: Where did all that money go?
The house initially went into foreclosure proceedings in the spring of 2006. In July 2006, Hanks filed for bankruptcy and agreed to a Chapter 13 plan which was served to the following creditors: Americas Servicing Co, Bank Of America, Chase, Covahey, Boozer, Devan & Dore, and Discover. She agreed to repay $10,500 in arrears, which resulted in a halt to the 2006 foreclosure.
The house was sold seven months ago after two years of court-negotiated attempts to allow Hanks to dig herself out of her debt hole. The only squatter here is Donna Hanks. The only looters here are the ACORN racketeers.
The foreclosure is not the criminal act.
Specifics