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Online Mortgage Notes, Deeds, and Notice of Defaults/Foreclosure Documents


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2011 Mar 4, 3:44am   1,861 views  4 comments

by Mark_LA   ➕follow (0)   💰tip   ignore  

Is there any other service other than PropertyShark.com that has the public records scanned for Los Angeles County? They offer the service for only $15/month, but they only have records back to January 2005.

#housing

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1   FortWayne   2011 Mar 4, 6:20am  

you can try the county assessor, but I think it costs a bit more. Although if you walk in I believe you can get any record for 15c or something like that. Not sure if they still do that.

http://assessor.lacounty.gov/extranet/Outsidesales/online.aspx

2   Mark_LA   2011 Mar 4, 6:52am  

ChrisLA says

you can try the county assessor, but I think it costs a bit more. Although if you walk in I believe you can get any record for 15c or something like that. Not sure if they still do that.
http://assessor.lacounty.gov/extranet/Outsidesales/online.aspx

That's probably where propertyshark gets the entire county of L.A. data for ~$13k + tax, it's more of a bulk data service they offer, not meant for the average joe. I don't have time to walk in for every single property that I'm researching.

I want to see how much equity (of lack of) a seller has, the type of loan, etc before potentially submitting offers. No point submitting offers to someone with negative equity who has a toxic option-arm loan that just recast....it's better to wait for the bank to foreclose on them...and I can even track the actual NODs and foreclosure documents as well.

I can get that info from Propertyshark via PDF files of the actual documents, but it's a little spotty for very recent stuff and not available for any documents filed prior to January 2005 (in L.A. County at least--don't know about other areas they service).

Does RealtyTrac or ForeclosureRadar offer these documents for a flat monthly fee?

3   EBGuy   2011 Mar 4, 7:17am  

It's like Fort Knox down there at the LA Recorders office. Heck, even Marin County puts their indexes online so you can at least see if a NOD has been filed. Pretty addictive, ain't it. Ducky subscribes to ForeclosureRadar, so he can fill you in on the details. I pull free data from RealtyTrac maps and then figure out the house number from the square footage on Zillow. Redfin then gives you APNs to correlate to County Recorder's data.

4   FortWayne   2011 Mar 4, 7:45am  

Sorry Mark, for residential RE all I know is county assessor walk in method. If someone does have a better way please do post it if you can.

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