First Arrest Made in Foreclosure Civil Disobedience Program

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  • chefcraig
    DIAMOND STATUS
    • Apr 2004
    • 12172

    First Arrest Made in Foreclosure Civil Disobedience Program

    Personally I feel crummy enough about the foreclosure disaster facing this country, yet this sort of protest (to me) looks to turn a bad situation ugly, and in fact quite dangerous, very quickly.

    Arrest Made in Home Foreclosure Civil Disobedience Program

    Monday , February 23, 2009
    By Joshua Rhett Miller

    Police in Baltimore today made what is believed to be the first arrest in a civil disobedience program aimed at supporting homeowners who refuse to vacate their foreclosed homes.

    An activist with ACORN — the Association of Community Organization for Reform Now — faces criminal charges after breaking into a home in southeast Baltimore on Thursday to protest the foreclosure crisis sweeping the country.

    "This is our house now," ACORN member Louis Beverly reportedly said after cutting a lock with bolt cutters at the home.

    Beverly will be charged with fourth-degree burglary, according to Anthony Guglielmi, a spokesman for the Baltimore Police. Attempts to reach his attorney, Justin Brown, were not immediately successful.

    Donna Hanks, who owned the home since 2001, lost it in September when she couldn't make her $1,995 mortgage payments. It was not immediately clear whether Hanks re-entered her home last week, but she was not expected to be arrested, Guglielmi said.

    Other police departments contacted by FOXNews.com said arrests would be made if an individual is determined to be residing at a foreclosed home illegally.

    "If they're trespassing and it's not their property, absolutely, there'd by an arrest," a police source in Boston said. "If they were told to leave the property and they didn't, they'd be charged with disorderly conduct."

    Pittsburgh Police Spokeswoman Diane Richard said charges would be filed against any individual found living in a foreclosed home, whether that individual had previously lived at the residence or not.

    "If someone is court-ordered to vacate and they do not, it would be trespassing at that point," Richard said. "What exactly would be charged depends on the intensity of the violation. It could go all the way up to burglary, which is a felony."

    The flood of foreclosures across the country has already led some law enforcement officials to alter how they handle evictions.

    In Wayne County, Michigan, Sheriff Warren Evans suspended all foreclosure sales on Feb. 2 until a federal plan to combat foreclosures can be implemented, spokesman John Roach said. In Butler County, Ohio, Sheriff Richard Jones has reportedly ordered deputies not to evict residents who have no other housing options during the winter months. And in Cook County, Illinois, where a record 4,487 foreclosures occurred last year, Sheriff Thomas Dart appointed an attorney to review all eviction orders in October in order to protect individuals who continued to pay rent after their buildings were seized by banks.

    Joe Cox, a community organizer for ACORN in Baltimore, said Monday's arrest was not a surprise.

    "We definitely expected some kind of a response," Cox said. "We understand people have to do their jobs and we hope that they understand that we're doing this to highlight the issue."

    Cox said he expects homesteading — refusing to vacate a foreclosed property — will become common as blame for the foreclosure crisis increasingly shifts from homeowners to financial corporations.

    "This program is saying, 'We are not going,'" Cox said last week. "People say we're breaking the law, but we don't see how putting a person back in an abandoned property is harming anyone."

    ACORN launched its "Home Savers" campaign in New York earlier this month and plans to expand the program to at least 22 other cities and three counties nationwide in the coming weeks. Participants like Beverly say they will refuse to move out of foreclosed homes or reclaim properties altogether until a comprehensive federal housing plan takes affect.

    Cox said ACORN's homesteading program has attracted homeowners at risk of losing their homes from all socioeconomic backgrounds, from low-income Baltimore city neighborhoods to the more affluent Washington-area suburbs.

    "We very much like what President Obama is doing with his foreclosure plan, but there's going to be a lot of people still left out," Cox said. "What we've been calling for nationally is a foreclosure moratorium so people have time to get help from a HUD-certified agency and start negotiating with lenders to get the banks off [their] back."

    Attempts to reach Beverly on Monday were unsuccessful. In a Feb. 13 press release announcing the organization's plan to fight foreclosures, Beverly called for "civil disobedience" as a last resort.

    "We need foreclosures to stop right now," Beverly said. "We need a moratorium to allow time to try to get loans modified so they can stay in their homes. The banks don't really want your house — it becomes a liability for them. With restructuring of the loan, everyone wins."

    At least 500 volunteers have reportedly agreed to work as "home defenders" to employ non-violent tactics to block authorities from evicting homeowners. Other cities targeted by the campaign include Denver, Boston, Detroit, Pittsburgh, Dallas, Cleveland, Minneapolis and Orlando, Fla.

    Founded in 1970, ACORN is a community-based, grassroots organization that primarily focuses on — among other social issues — health care, affordable housing and voter registration programs. Its large-scale voter registration drives most recently came under scrutiny during the 2008 presidential race, during which ACORN reportedly gathered more than 1.3 million voter registration forms in 21 states. Approximately 400,000 forms were reportedly rejected for duplications, incomplete forms and fraudulent applications.

    President Obama, who was endorsed by ACORN, served as a local counsel for the organization in a 1995 voting rights lawsuit.

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    ― Stephen Hawking
  • LoungeMachine
    DIAMOND STATUS
    • Jul 2004
    • 32576

    #2
    Breaking and Entering, and Trespassing, is NOT "civil disobedience"

    ACORN is starting to annoy me.

    But it begs the question, how far away are we from some sort of "debtor's prison"

    This version of the next Great Republican Depression may be scarier than we fear.

    Originally posted by Kristy
    Dude, what in the fuck is wrong with you? I'm full of hate and I do drugs.
    Originally posted by cadaverdog
    I posted under aliases and I jerk off with a sock. Anything else to add?

    Comment

    • Sgt Schultz
      Commando
      • Mar 2004
      • 1270

      #3
      Originally posted by LoungeMachine
      Breaking and Entering, and Trespassing, is NOT "civil disobedience"

      ACORN is starting to annoy me.

      But it begs the question, how far away are we from some sort of "debtor's prison"

      This version of the next Great Republican Depression may be scarier than we fear.

      I agree dude. If you can't pay then you are out - the house doesn't belong to you. When I was 16 years old and our house was foreclosed on there was never any question of "Is this fair?". We moved out into a crummy apartment and couldn't even afford a telephone. That's life. And we're supposed to feel sorry for a woman that had a $1,995.00 mortgage payment..?? Hello...she could easily find a cheaper house that had mortgage payments that are MUCH lower than 2K per month! And this is who WE are supposed to bail out? Bullshit.

      Previous recessions have been worse than this one, with higher unemployment rates and much higher inflation. To say we are near a depression is way off. The worst one can say is that it is a mild recession.

      Comment

      • GAR
        Banned
        • Jan 2004
        • 10881

        #4
        This dumb bitch is even screwier than the one in Baltimore!

        Doctor Savicki, do you suppose I could become an OctoMom? Do you?... Select samples, create subtitles, and make your own Bollywood film.

        Comment

        • Nickdfresh
          SUPER MODERATOR

          • Oct 2004
          • 49567

          #5
          Originally posted by Sgt Schultz
          I agree dude. If you can't pay then you are out - the house doesn't belong to you. When I was 16 years old and our house was foreclosed on there was never any question of "Is this fair?". We moved out into a crummy apartment and couldn't even afford a telephone. That's life. And we're supposed to feel sorry for a woman that had a $1,995.00 mortgage payment..?? Hello...she could easily find a cheaper house that had mortgage payments that are MUCH lower than 2K per month! And this is who WE are supposed to bail out? Bullshit.

          Previous recessions have been worse than this one, with higher unemployment rates and much higher inflation. To say we are near a depression is way off. The worst one can say is that it is a mild recession.
          Mass Foreclosure is pretty stupid though. I don't agree with criminal activity, but at the same time, these banks are now entering the real estate market for extended periods and bad consequences...

          It's not just bad for the the people, its also bad for the banks, the neighborhoods, towns, etc...

          Comment

          • chefcraig
            DIAMOND STATUS
            • Apr 2004
            • 12172

            #6
            The pisser is, this has absolutely nothing to do with civil disobedience. This is not Rosa Parks refusing to give up a bus seat that she had already (completely) paid for. What it really is being the sort of "two wrongs make a right" type of boneheaded activism that is more devisive than it is uniting. It appeals to the baser instincts of a threatened society, and does nothing more than add fuel to an already well lit fire. Inviting the police to arrest you while breaking the law to get on tv and draw attention to a cause is one thing, yet what happens when a group of "concerned onlookers" decides to wade into the situation as the arrests are made? Phony civil disobedience very rapidly escalates to full out (and very real) civil disturbance. Anyone that was around a poor neighborhood or television set in South Florida during the McDuffie riots of 1980 (which started in Miami yet for some reason found like minded individuals "chipping in" all the way to West Palm Beach) or the Rodney King mess in L.A. knows what happens in these dire cirmcumstances. So what other gain than situational exploitation leading to mindless violence would a form of protest like this offer, and just who would believe that this would be a positive, let alone forward thinking idea, in the first place?









            “The greatest enemy of knowledge is not ignorance, it is the illusion of knowledge.”
            ― Stephen Hawking

            Comment

            • swage33
              Head Fluffer
              • Jan 2009
              • 311

              #7
              Man, so much pain is created on this planet by manipulating the ignorant. Housing is not a right...would be great if it was...if it was a right, you could bet your ass it wouldn't be the equivilant of a 2k/month mortgage. Would most likely be a shanty....but you would have a right to live there. Who would fucking want to?
              High quality hate while you wait

              Comment

              • kwame k
                TOASTMASTER GENERAL
                • Feb 2008
                • 11302

                #8
                ACORN has become PETA. Stupid pranks and outrageous behavior for attention.

                I agree, if you can't afford or pay for your house, you lose it. As distasteful as that sounds it's the way it is. With so many programs out there to help you finance your home to a lower payment, if you are able, you can keep your home.

                Funny thing is.....wait a year or two and you probably will be able to buy your house for half of what you paid for it.

                Homeownership is not a right.....it's the American Dream! Now we need a government that can get us back on track so Americans can realize that dream, not by over extending yourself with a gluttony of credit or buying a house you cannot afford but owning a home within your means. Now that's the American Dream or American Reality.

                It used to be for our parents or grandparents.....you save, put a chunk money down, and stay in that house till you retire, all within your means.

                Now the honest worker who loses their job, through no fault of their own, and loses everything.........Those people my heart goes out to.
                Originally posted by vandeleur
                E- Jesus . Playing both sides because he didnt understand the argument in the first place :D

                Comment

                • GAR
                  Banned
                  • Jan 2004
                  • 10881

                  #9
                  Originally posted by LoungeMachine

                  This version of the next Great Republican Depression may be scarier than we fear.

                  It's all part of the Master Plan of spreading the wealth around!

                  Comment

                  • GAR
                    Banned
                    • Jan 2004
                    • 10881

                    #10
                    Originally posted by swage33
                    Would most likely be a shanty....but you would have a right to live there. Who would fucking want to?
                    The Russians and the Chinks, who else would wanna live in a hovel?

                    Comment

                    • FORD
                      ROTH ARMY MODERATOR

                      • Jan 2004
                      • 59648

                      #11
                      The Chimp bailout should have gone to homeowners to pay off their mortgages, not to Wall Street whores to enable their further rape and pillaging of this country.

                      Then these people would have their homes, the banks would earn their money semi-honestly, and GAR wouldn't have another reason to spew bullshit from his library perch.
                      Eat Us And Smile

                      Cenk For America 2024!!

                      Justice Democrats


                      "If the American people had ever known the truth about what we (the BCE) have done to this nation, we would be chased down in the streets and lynched." - Poppy Bush, 1992

                      Comment

                      • mwsully
                        Groupie
                        • May 2004
                        • 77

                        #12
                        Kwame, Ford, Lounge, Nick...say it aint so!?

                        I've always loved how you've been the champion for the little man. You have championed environmental issues, with just plain common sense and logic. You've shown you have a heart.

                        But I thought you'd have more sympathy for the homeowner as well as the ACORN woman -- maybe not so much the act but the intention. The society we live in is so fucking screwed up. I don't even know where to begin. (And I may not be able to truly express my thoughts clearly here).

                        I am tired of seeing the haves taking more and the have nots losing it all. It is happening right before our eyes. So the banks take the mortgage payments from the paycheck-to-paycheck worker, and when they can't pay, they keep the land. What a great deal for the banks.

                        Call me what you will, but I commend the ACORN person for having the balls to do SOMETHING, instead of us just sitting here discussing what should be done to help those in need or hoping something will be done.
                        And yes, our grandparents were able to save and buy a house at one time, but then I think the cost of living has risen a little since then (sarcasm).

                        Home prices are out of reach for most retail/service workers, which includes the majority of people. They will never realize their dream, unless major revolution happens.

                        There should be civil unrest; it is time for all the people who have been exploited, enslaved, conned, deceived, brainwashed to revolt against the elite, imperialist, very NON-democratic U.S. government.

                        Ok, I'll shut up now.

                        Comment

                        • bueno bob
                          DIAMOND STATUS
                          • Jul 2004
                          • 22951

                          #13
                          Originally posted by mwsully
                          I've always loved how you've been the champion for the little man. You have championed environmental issues, with just plain common sense and logic. You've shown you have a heart.

                          But I thought you'd have more sympathy for the homeowner as well as the ACORN woman -- maybe not so much the act but the intention. The society we live in is so fucking screwed up. I don't even know where to begin. (And I may not be able to truly express my thoughts clearly here).

                          I am tired of seeing the haves taking more and the have nots losing it all. It is happening right before our eyes. So the banks take the mortgage payments from the paycheck-to-paycheck worker, and when they can't pay, they keep the land. What a great deal for the banks.

                          Call me what you will, but I commend the ACORN person for having the balls to do SOMETHING, instead of us just sitting here discussing what should be done to help those in need or hoping something will be done.
                          And yes, our grandparents were able to save and buy a house at one time, but then I think the cost of living has risen a little since then (sarcasm).

                          Home prices are out of reach for most retail/service workers, which includes the majority of people. They will never realize their dream, unless major revolution happens.

                          There should be civil unrest; it is time for all the people who have been exploited, enslaved, conned, deceived, brainwashed to revolt against the elite, imperialist, very NON-democratic U.S. government.

                          Ok, I'll shut up now.
                          I hear you, dude.
                          Twistin' by the pool.

                          Comment

                          • Combat Ready
                            Foot Soldier
                            • Mar 2007
                            • 572

                            #14
                            Originally posted by mwsully

                            Ok, I'll shut up now.
                            Thank you

                            Comment

                            • FORD
                              ROTH ARMY MODERATOR

                              • Jan 2004
                              • 59648

                              #15
                              Originally posted by mwsully
                              I've always loved how you've been the champion for the little man. You have championed environmental issues, with just plain common sense and logic. You've shown you have a heart.

                              But I thought you'd have more sympathy for the homeowner as well as the ACORN woman -- maybe not so much the act but the intention. The society we live in is so fucking screwed up. I don't even know where to begin. (And I may not be able to truly express my thoughts clearly here).

                              I am tired of seeing the haves taking more and the have nots losing it all. It is happening right before our eyes. So the banks take the mortgage payments from the paycheck-to-paycheck worker, and when they can't pay, they keep the land. What a great deal for the banks.

                              Call me what you will, but I commend the ACORN person for having the balls to do SOMETHING, instead of us just sitting here discussing what should be done to help those in need or hoping something will be done.
                              And yes, our grandparents were able to save and buy a house at one time, but then I think the cost of living has risen a little since then (sarcasm).

                              Home prices are out of reach for most retail/service workers, which includes the majority of people. They will never realize their dream, unless major revolution happens.

                              There should be civil unrest; it is time for all the people who have been exploited, enslaved, conned, deceived, brainwashed to revolt against the elite, imperialist, very NON-democratic U.S. government.

                              Ok, I'll shut up now.
                              Believe me, I'm on the side of the homeowners, not the landlords or the predatory capitalist mortgage companies. As for ACORN, I'm sick and tired of them being the convenient Repuke scapegoat, because some bloated pedophile Oxycontin addict in Palm Beach blames them for putting a black man in the White House. ACORN is a worthy organization that has done many good things, and in a battle between them and the Wall Street Vampires, there's no question which side I'm on.

                              The side of the people.
                              Eat Us And Smile

                              Cenk For America 2024!!

                              Justice Democrats


                              "If the American people had ever known the truth about what we (the BCE) have done to this nation, we would be chased down in the streets and lynched." - Poppy Bush, 1992

                              Comment

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