Fraud in real estate, are you being victimized? - Part Iby Willard Michlin Rip off artists appear in all shapes and sexes. They usually are nice
looking, well dressed and very smooth talkers. They, in conversation,
tell you about a financial killing they made, or are in the middle of
closing. Then they change the subject. A really smooth talker never asks
or suggests you invest. They wait until you beg and plead with them to
let you in on their great deal. At this point you are HAD. That means,
" your goose is cooked and you are invited to the feast, because
you are the main course." The logical question is how do you know,
before you lose your money that you are going to be ripped off? The answer
is independent research, and lots of it. Find a friend, a friend's friend
who is an "expert" in the specific field you are thinking of
investing. Ask lots of questions and listen to him. Ask him or her how
to make sure you are protected. In the years, 1990 to 1995, eight people
I know paid the same real estate trainer over $5,000 each to show them
how to buy real estate for "NO MONEY DOWN." The trainer claimed
she got results. Not one of the students, all of who got to know each
other, after years of trying, ever bought a property for "No Money
Down." One of smoothest people around was a securities investment adviser in Santa Barbara. He got hundreds of people to invest with him because hundreds of people had already invested with him. None of them did the level of homework they should have. The few people, who did do independent research, smelled a rat and didn't invest. Many of his investors have lost their whole life's savings; the rest just lost a lot of money, but will recover. If you think I am trying to scare you, then you are absolutely right. "Money should come in rapidly and be spent very slowly." See "Fraud in Real Estate - part II"
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