"No matter where you travel... No matter where you roam
You'll never see an outlaw... Take a family from it's home."
--"Pretty Boy Floyd"
"Well, to probably make banks think twice before they
try to take someone's home, and if they are going to take it wrongly, the end
result will be them tearing their house down like I did mine."
Like many people, Terry
Hoskins (Moscow, Ohio) has had troubles with his bank. But his solution to foreclosure might
be unique.
Hoskins said he's been in a struggle with RiverHills Bank over his Clermont County home for nearly a decade, a struggle that was coming to an end as the bank began foreclosure proceedings on his $350,000 home.
"When I see I owe $160,000 on a home valued at $350,000, and someone decides they want to take it – no, I wasn't going to stand for that, so I took it down," Hoskins said.
Hoskins said the Internal
Revenue Service placed liens on his carpet store and commercial property on
state Route 125 after his brother, a one-time business partner, sued him.
The bank claimed his home
as collateral, Hoskins said, and went after both his residential and commercial
properties.
Hoskins said he'd gotten a
$170,000 offer from someone to pay off the house, but the bank refused, saying
they could get more from selling it in foreclosure.
Hoskins told News 5's
Courtis Fuller that he issued the bank an ultimatum.
"I'll tear it down
before I let you take it," Hoskins told them.
And that's exactly what
Hoskins did.
Man
Says Actions Intended To Send Message To Banks
The Moscow man used a
bulldozer two weeks ago to level the home he'd built, and the sprawling country
home is now rubble, buried under a coating of snow.
"As far as what the
bank is going to get, I plan on giving them back what was on this hill exactly
(as) it was," Hoskins said. "I brought it out of the ground and I
plan on putting it back in the ground."
Hoskins' business in
Amelia is scheduled to go up for auction on March 2, and he told Fuller he's
considering leveling that building, too.
RiverHills Bank declined
to comment on the situation, but Hoskins said his actions were intended to send
a message.
"Well, to probably
make banks think twice before they try to take someone's home, and if they are
going to take it wrongly, the end result will be them tearing their house down
like I did mine," Hoskins said.
Man
Has No Regrets Over Bulldozing House
Hoskins said he's heard
from people all over the country since his story first aired Thursday, and he
said most have been supportive.
He said he sought legal
counsel before tearing down his home and understands the possible consequences,
but he has never doubted his decision once he made it.
"When I knew I was going to lose it, I decided to take it down," Hoskins said.
"BEND
OVER, MOTHER-FUCKERS !"
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