Something happened... a bad business partner, a divorce, you lost family or all of the above. Whatever the case, after the first domino fell, things got worse and you were ruined. Eventually there was a trustee sale and you lost your home.
This isn't over. What happened in the past is not as important as, what you're going to do now.
When your home sold at auction, it sold for more than you owed, maybe a lot more. The overage was collected by the trustee and deposited into a government treasury account.
When the trustee sent a letter to “notify you” of the overage, you never received it because, the law only requires the trustee to send the letter once, typically they're mailed to the subject property that sold at the auction and which of course and by then, you already had not lived there for months. So what now?
In almost all cases, there are time limits or “windows of opportunity” with respect to when proceeds may be released. When that window closes, it's closed for good.
Not all jurisdictions have the same terms or limits, but they all have an expiration, at which point your money becomes escheat or property of THE STATE, forever. Billions of dollars of people's money is literally sitting in government bank accounts.
We regularly audit hundreds of government databases nationwide locating overages from trustee sales and the people and companies those overages belong to.
When we find a match, we attempt to make contact immediately because the clock is always ticking. When contact is made with the rightful owner, we agree to contract, (which is required by law) and then complete the process of recovering the overage funds on your behalf.
The contract is simple and you pay us nothing. We take a fee out of the recovered proceeds if we are successful and you pay nothing if we fail.
If you received an email, a postcard or a phone call from us, it's because we found money that we think belongs to you. If there is money sitting in a government bank account from a property you lost and time hasn't run out, chances are good we can get your money back. Send us an email or give us a call today. Remember, the clock is always ticking.