Emergency Meeting to Stop the Eviction of Jennifer Britt

Tuesday, July 3, 2012, at 5 PM
15701 Warwick (near Grand River), Detroit

We are meeting at Jennifer Britt’s home.  Plans will be made to defend Jennifer and her family from imminent eviction.

Background:

Click here to watch a short video and see Jennifer tell her story.

Jennifer could be evicted as early as this coming week. She is currently in negotiations with a community organization which may be able to purchase her home from the bank at a reduced price and then sell it back to Jennifer on favorable terms. But Fannie Mae, the government-backed bank that has taken over Jennifer’s mortgage, refuses to hold off on the eviction to give Jennifer more time to complete the negotiations. Call Fannie Mae’s offices at (312) 368-6200 and demand that they call off the eviction.

The big banks have been waging war on Detroit’s neighborhoods, leaving homeless families and blighted, vacant homes in their wake. The banks’ ongoing campaign of fraud, corruption, and greed has caused senseless destruction across Michigan, and in Detroit most of all. Jennifer Britt’s story is one egregious example of this terrible phenomenon.

Jennifer Britt and her husband Leon purchased their home on the Northwest side of Detroit in 1999 and signed a mortgage agreement with Flagstar Bank. In 2001, Leon asked the bank how he could lower his $1,200 a month mortgage payments. The bank told him it would lower his payments if he refinanced his mortgage. After Leon refinanced, Flagstar only lowered the payments to $1,050 a month. Leon eventually was forced into bankruptcy and the mortgage went into default.

Leon died in 2006. Jennifer didn’t find out that her home’s mortgage was in default until she found a notice on her door that her home had been foreclosed on and that it would be sold at sheriff’s sale in a month. Flagstar told Jennifer that if she paid them $26,000 in late payments and fees, they would call off the foreclosure. Jennifer used the money that she received from Leon’s life insurance policy to pay Flagstar the entire $26,000.

Flagstar now demanded $1,550 a month. Jennifer tried to work out a modification of the mortgage agreement with the bank to lower the monthly payments to something more reasonable, but the bank refused to work with her because her deceased husband’s name was on the mortgage agreement and not hers. When Jennifer told them that her husband was deceased and that she inherited the house, the bank told her that they might change the mortgage agreement to include her name if she continually paid the monthly payments on time. Jennifer paid the monthly payments for over two years, but the bank continued to refuse to talk to her.

Jennifer lost her job in June of 2008, and Flagstar raised her mortgage payments to $1,750 a month that July, then to $1,950 a month in September. Jennifer continued to pay her mortgage payments until she had no savings left in November of 2009. The bank foreclosed on her in 2010. She tried to fight the foreclosure in court, but she didn’t have an attorney to represent her and the legal firm working for the bank out-maneuvered her in court. She could now face eviction any day.

Jennifer Britt was hit by tragedies and set-backs that could happen to anyone. The bank strung Jennifer along for years, extracting thousands of dollars from her, while refusing to lower her monthly payments to a reasonable amount because of a technicality outside her control.

Jennifer lives in her home with her son, daughter, mother, and uncle. She now works two jobs and could make reasonable mortgage payments if the bank agreed to work with her. There is no reason why Jennifer and her family should be evicted from their home, only to leave another vacant house in Detroit.

Occupy Detroit and other organizations and community members have organized to defend Jennifer Britt from eviction through a public campaign. Through the power of protest, public pressure, and direct action, the people have stopped unjust foreclosures like this before. We can and must do it again. Join us as we continue and broaden the defense of Detroit from corporate greed. All are invited to our weekly committee meetings on Thursdays at 6 p.m. at 5900 Michigan Avenue.

Foreclosures and evictions only hurt our communities. Detroit doesn’t need more empty houses or more people without homes. And the banks certainly don’t need more money. Together we can save our neighborhoods and put an end to foreclosures and evictions.

Together we will defend the home that Jennifer and her family live in from a heartless and unnecessary eviction. This is part of the ongoing national campaign to stop foreclosures and evictions. We demand that Jennifer’s family have a home to live their lives in with dignity. This is a basic right of all people.

Be the first to comment

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published.


*