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Foreclosing on a Bunch of Snakes

by Al Lewis
Thursday, June 2, 2011

Commentary: Oh, serpents! Thought you said it had servants

snake_home.jpg
For sale: Nice house, large kitchen, several thousand snakes included.

They say there are snake pits on Wall Street.

Chase has learned there are snake pits on Main Street too.

Last year, the J.P. Morgan Chase banking unit foreclosed on a home near Rexburg, Idaho, that is infested with garter snakes.

They slide through the yard, the crawl space, the walls, the ceilings, even across the floors. Sure, they're harmless, but there are perhaps thousands of them. They give off malodorous secretions when alarmed, and can even leave the well water tasting a bit like the way they smell.

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Two families have fled the house in scenes reminiscent of horror-film classics. One turned to a local TV station in 2006 to document the infestation, complaining of not being able to sleep at night. The video is still available on YouTube and is doing absolutely nothing for sales. Watch the video on snakes in the house.

The next family appeared on TV's "Animal Planet" earlier this year. They said they were told the previous owners came up with the snake story to explain why they stopped paying their mortgage. But, it turns out, the story was true.

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Search "Idaho snake house" on the Internet and several intriguing posts emerge. Zillow.com offers a sales description that mentions "a large kitchen with center island," but nothing about snakes on the kitchen floor.

The house, built in 1920 and remodeled about five years ago, has somehow become a hibernaculum, where snakes gather en masse for winter. It's so famously infested that Chase has taken it off the market.

Earlier this year, the five-bedroom home at 675 W. 5000 North was listed for $109,200. That's about $66,000 below its market value. But somehow there were no takers, even in a region known for its Snake River.

Chase is now in the unenviable position of having to be delicate with snakes that continue to live in the home despite a defaulted mortgage. Once a house has been featured on "Animal Planet," you can't just burn it down or otherwise slaughter its reptilian residents. You have to be nice to snakes. It's just good business.

"We have contracted to have the snakes trapped and released," said Darcy Donahoe-Wilmot, a Chase spokeswoman in Seattle.

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"We plan to seal the foundation and install a barrier around the foundation to help prevent future access," she said. "A report will be issued by the contractor to be provided to any potential buyers."

Possible buyers might include some guy with a flute and a turban, or maybe a slippery salesman looking to replenish his line of proprietary oil. More likely, though, Chase is going to be stuck with the Idaho snake house for a long time.

Protesters recently appeared in Ohio at the annual meeting of Chase's parent, J.P. Morgan Chase & Co., to complain about the company's foreclosure practices. There have been similar protests at all major banks, as if these institutions actually love foreclosing on homes.

Banks currently have about 1.9 million homes on their books or in foreclosure proceedings, according to RealtyTrac, a real estate market researcher.

Imagine all the disrepair, the pet-fouled carpets, the mold, the bugs, the rats and the snakes.

Foreclosures have slowed in recent months, but that trend is largely attributed to legal delays, including banks' dubious use of "robo-signers" on court documents.

Yes, major banks have major problems. But they're still swamped with more foreclosures than they can handle, and Americans are still slithering away from their homes like it's not a snake-like thing to do.

The Mortgage Bankers Association recently reported that about 8.3% of homeowners missed at least one mortgage payment in the January-March quarter. In a healthy market, that figure holds at about 1.1%.

Foreclosed homes made up 28% of all U.S. home sales in the quarter, according to RealtyTrac. And 2011 is on track to be another record year, with about 1.2 million foreclosures expected. This dashes any hope for a housing market recovery any time soon.

The snakes are just starting to awaken at the Idaho snake house. Chase can't chase them out just yet.

"Hopefully, in a few weeks," Donahoe-Wilmot said. "The contractor feels there is not yet enough activity to perform the capture."

___

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3,573 comments

  • Andrew Williams
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    Andrew Williams Mon Jun 27, 2011 01:13 am EDT Report Abuse
    Id live there an be HAPPY!!!! :-)
  • Michelle Johnson
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    Michelle Johnson Thu Jun 23, 2011 05:35 am EDT Report Abuse
    It'd be great if you keep hawks...
  • Piidi
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    Piidi Mon Jun 06, 2011 07:04 pm EDT Report Abuse
    Robo signing isn't "dubious," it's perjury. How can you attest under oath that you've personally viewed a document when you're "signing" electronically and the document's never even been in the state you're in? I've been a notary and I just don't get how that could possibly be legal or make sense.
  • Fedup in USA
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    Fedup in USA Sun Jun 05, 2011 08:19 am EDT Report Abuse
    We're supposed to cry for a bank that didn't tell buyers about a snake infestation!? They lied to families buying this home and tried to cry foul when they stopped paying their mortgage because of a literal snake infestation. This house and this story should become a rallying point to our politicians on the unfair practices of the banks, realtors and home inspectors. Think about it all these parties had to lie to make the sell - is this the American way?
  • Me
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    Me Sun Jun 05, 2011 07:50 am EDT Report Abuse
    Chase strung us along with promises of a loan modification for almost 3 years... you wouldn't believe some of the crap they pulled on us...including making us resubmit our loan modification request documents dozens of times because they "expired" and saying that they couldn't read the documents we faxed them, saying they had to send for official tax return copies...6 times in one year????? What the hell were they doing with the ones they already had...making confetti???? Chase is totally crooked and you will NEVER win with them. I hope they all burn in Hell.
  • Madam Deb
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    Madam Deb Sun Jun 05, 2011 01:15 am EDT Report Abuse
    I just pulled my feet up from the floor. Too creepy for words.

    If I could afford it I would buy the house and burn it down, snake-lovers be damned. If they love snakes so much, why don't they go "rescue" these slitherly creatures?

    Ewww!
  • anchorslady
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    anchorslady Sat Jun 04, 2011 11:50 pm EDT Report Abuse
    I hear daily from people in foreclosure that have been scammed and jerked around by the banks while trying to get a modifications. Many have gone on a year or two and still wind up in foreclosure. The banks sold these mortgages to unsuspecting people that believed all the hype. Then they believed they could work out a modification. Liars figure and figures lie. Do Not Blame the Government, Put the Blame Where It Belongs, on THE BANKS. SAD BUT TRUE YOU CANNOT TRUST THE PLACE THAT YOU STORE YOUR MONEY BECAUSE THEY REFUSE TO TAKE THE BLAME FOR THE MESS THEY CAUSED AND WE (THE TAXPAYERS) BAILED OUT THEIR OUTHOUSE. Try to get a loan from your bank today, you better have 750 or more credit scores and be ready to sign your life away. In the meantime people working for the same bank on monifications continue to lose paperwork over and over, refuse to talk to clients, give tons of misinformation and then may not even have the deed or the actual mortgage for your property. Read every rule and regulation for foreclosure in your state and know your rights, then fight. You do need to know if you do not have a job and your spouse is not working, unless you are a retiree, you really do not have a shot at modification because you cannot repay the debt even if it was modified. For people that are working or retired you have a shot unless you sit by and do nothing until it is too late.
  • Katsnake
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    Katsnake Sat Jun 04, 2011 08:42 pm EDT Report Abuse
    If I had the money, I'd buy the house, snakes and all. I don't mind sharing space with a few thousand garters, as long as they don't mind sharing with my other dozen snakes. LOL I'll rather not leave AZ permanently though... maybe as a summer home, the snakes can have it the other 9 months of the year to den up in, and I'll just be there for the summer while they're out doing their thing. :) Besides, I grew up not too far from there and learned how to catch garters as soon as I could run fast enough to catch them. LOL
  • Joseph
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    Joseph Sat Jun 04, 2011 07:03 pm EDT Report Abuse
    I've never seen a garter snake that big
  • Lori K
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    Lori K Sat Jun 04, 2011 05:32 pm EDT Report Abuse
    All these comments about mortgage skipping are interesting, really! Why don't you buy this house????? Go, ahead, live there, enjoy it. Soak up the ambience of the slithering masses in your bed, food, well, everywhere! Please write back when you've moved in, and send pics!

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