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Related: Editorials & Other Articles, Issue Forums, Alliance Forums, Region ForumsOhio Family's Home Mistaken for Foreclosed Property Across the Street

Katie Barnett, of McArthur, Ohio, said her home was mistaken for a foreclosed home across the street and a bank mistakenly cleared many of her family's belongings. (WBNS)
A woman in McArthur, Ohio, about 70 miles south of Columbus, said a bank mistakenly cleared items from her home, confusing it for a foreclosed house across the street, then demanded receipts when she asked to be compensated for her missing possessions.
Katie Barnett, 36, a nurse, said her family had left for about two weeks last month and returned to find the locks on their home had changed and many of their belongings had been taken.
"We called the cops and they said they thought it was a squatter," she said.
Two dressers and clothing for her five children were taken, as well as items from outside their home, including pool cleaning supplies and patio furniture, she said.
Weeks later, she said, police told her that a bank representative had contacted them, saying someone was living in a foreclosed home: the Barnett's one-story, three-bedroom home.
"Obviously I wanted to find out what bank it was. I was mad about the whole situation," said Barnett.
She later learned First National Bank in Wellston, of which she is not a customer, had mistaken her home for a bank-owned property across the street.
http://abcnews.go.com/Business/ohio-womans-home-mistaken-foreclosed-property-cleared/story?id=19773182
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Ohio Family's Home Mistaken for Foreclosed Property Across the Street (Original Post)
HarveyDarkey
Jul 2013
OP
MicaelS
(8,747 posts)1. Sue the bastards! n/t
Enrique
(27,461 posts)2. no one's perfect
that's why pencils have erasers.
Brigid
(17,621 posts)3. *Sniff sniff*
Yep, that's a big fat lawsuit I smell. These foreclosing banks are getting as bad as cops, going off half-cocked.
kestrel91316
(51,666 posts)4. Apparently banksters don't understand how address numbers work,
because a house on the wrong side of the street is going to be GLARINGLY OBVIOUS because it will end with an even or odd digit depending on which side it's on.
Sue them into the next county, Ms. Barnett.
HarveyDarkey
(9,077 posts)5. But, but, but....
GPS doesn't lie, does it?
Politicalboi
(15,189 posts)6. And all those
Monet's and Picasso's she will have to replace that she bought just before they left for their trip.
eppur_se_muova
(41,939 posts)7. Burglarly, theft, posession of stolen property ...
If it's not the right house, they have broken the law. The fact that they do this under contract shouldn't protect them from charges.
The ONLY thing it's really important that these people do right is that they get the right house, and they didn't do that.