Liz
Marysville,#2Consumer Comment
Wed, April 29, 2015
That's it Dan. Join the military - forget about the clients that you screwed on Loan Mofifications.
Anthony
United States of America#3Consumer Comment
Thu, January 17, 2013
Kevin Hurley has New Scam in Andover, Massachusetts a operation with man named James Graham.
Supposed to "help people in foreclosure save their homes."
Check their credentials!!
NOT Lawyers!! NOT Licensed!! NO Referrals!
They will take your money to "save your home" but they can't!!
Don't be DUPED into losing EVERYTHING!
Be Watching
manchester,#4Consumer Comment
Thu, February 24, 2011
Well it looks like Kevein Hurley is at it again, This guy has signle handedly trashed several
companies....way to go Kevin, I delt with him a few times with my company in NYC, this guy is bad news all the way around... another one bites the dust...I bet Kevin got away scott free too.
Be Watching You.
This is from ABA Journal
Lawyers who worked for a now-shuttered New Hampshire law firm that got into the mortgage modification business told of their ethical qualms in a hearing Thursday into alleged legal violations.
Assistant attorney general Karen Gorham is alleging that lawyer Dan Dargon ran “a loan modification mill,” the Concord Monitor reports. The Dargon Law Firm got into the practice last year, she said during the banking hearing, after spending $100,000 on leads that gave him mortgage information leading to potential clients.
The state banking department says Dargon's firm charged $2,500 up-front for loan modifications, but failed to obtain the necessary license, according to WMUR.com. He is accused of violating the law on 108 occasions. Dargon maintains the state banking department has no authority to regulate lawyers.
Joseph Becher testified he was the only lawyer working for Dargon until he started taking on mortgage modification clients in 2009, according to the Concord Monitor account. Soon the law firm had more than 30 employees, Becher said, and it began to "turn into a business where the primary objective was how to get clients in and out of the door as expeditiously as possible while still meeting our contractual obligations."
Becher said he quit in May because he was troubled by how Dargon was running the law firm.
Lawyer Jeffrey Merrill joined the firm in December and resigned in February, about two weeks after he heard the law firm’s head telemarketer say he wanted to get away from a “consultative sell” that focused on whether the potential client qualified for assistance. Instead the telemarketer wanted to begin more of an “emotional sell” emphasizing the "pain and anguish people feel when they get that foreclosure notice."
"That is completely unethical," Merrill said.
According to WMUR.com, Dargon maintained that many experienced lawyers stuck with his firm until it closed, and they had “absolutely no problem with the way things were run.”
GoonWaffe
Fairfield,#5Consumer Comment
Sun, January 09, 2011
We don't care about the Titan fund anymore we have like twenty of those things. You are the father to us all, it's time to come home.
Poitot
United States of America#6UPDATE EX-employee responds
Wed, December 29, 2010
amirite?
Dargon Law Firm PLLC
Concord,#7REBUTTAL Owner of company
Tue, December 15, 2009
Hi there -