Rare NYC foreclosure auction yields deals, protest
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By KAREN MATTHEWS
Associated Press Writer
NEW YORK (AP) - Hundreds of houses - some with starting bids as
low as $1,000 - were sold to the highest bidders Sunday in a rare
auction of foreclosed properties in the New York metropolitan area,
the company running the sale said.
``We don't see as many properties going to foreclosure or being
sold in New York City as we do in other parts of the country that
have been hit a lot harder,'' said Robert Friedman, chairman of
Irvine, Calif.-based Real Estate Disposition Corp. ``It just seems
like other areas were over-built more.''
The auction was only REDC's second for New York City, although
the company runs sales around the country. Auctions of foreclosured
properties in locations including Georgia, Colorado, Puerto Rico,
Minnesota and Michigan are scheduled later this month.
About 1,000 people attended the auction Sunday at the Jacob K.
Javits Convention Center in Manhattan, with additional bids coming
from the Internet for more than 350 condos, single-family houses
and duplexes around New York City and Pennsylvania.
Despite descriptions of some homes as fixer-uppers with problems
including mold, water damage and vandalism, many were eager to
score damaged real estate.
Tami Burgess, who paid $340,000 for a Yonkers home that she'd
been eyeing since October, said she was excited but had ``a lot of
work to do on the house.''
The sale was protested by a handful of picketers who chanted:
``Evictions are a crime! It could be your house next!''
One of the protesters, Sharon Black, said she was in bankruptcy
and hoping to save her Baltimore home.
``These folks are profiting off the people's misery,'' she said.
REDC spokesman Rick Weinberg said the auctions help stimulate
the economy by putting people in vacant houses.
``Their problem is with the foreclosure crisis in general,''
Weinberg said. ``We are part of the solution, not the problem.''
Ed Bates paid $115,000 for a house in Nyack and said he had no
qualms about buying a foreclosed home.
``It's really not taking someone's home for the simple reason
that it's vacant,'' he said. ``If somebody was in there and I had
to get them out, chances are I wouldn't have purchased the house. I
feel sad for them, but still, that's the way the world is.''
On the Net:
Real Estate Disposition Corp.: http://www.ushomeauction.com
03/09/09 08:14
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