Fred Glick

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Realty Reality! That describes Fred, a sharp witted and outspoken realist for the mortgage and real estate world who has appeared on CNBC and NPR's Marketplace along with being quoted in the Philadelphia Inquirer and other media outlets. In a burst of outspokenness, Fred called for the repeal of the tax credit live on CNBC! And yes, he did make a lot of sense. Stand by and enjoy his brain-to-finger translation of thoughts surrounding what we do, what we can do for our clients and how to treat each other just a little bit nicer. Fred is a licensed real estate and mortgage broker in addition to doing consultations for the aforementioned industries specializing in improving bottom lines.

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10 Comments

  1. Eric Hempler

    You make an interesting point, but I don’t think this will ever stop fraud. There will always be someone out there that has to ruin it for everyone else. Although, one advantage to having a buyers market is it weeds out the bad Realtors.

  2. Mario Villagran

    You might not ever completely remove fraud 100% but where can we get 100% of anything. The key is to reduce the amount of fraud as much as possible. Fred raises some good points here. Training is essential. I don’t like being compared to a used car salesperson. I don’t even like the fact that a used car salesperson is still portrayed in that light. The truth is that a beautician is required to put in more hours for a license than a real estate agent. Is there something wrong w/ that? I guess in CA it might make sense since we are portrayed as being shallow and into material things more than sensible things like owning a home :)

  3. Matt Stigliano

    Fred – Welcome to AgentGenius. Your idea of making some sort of fraud training mandatory would be applauded by me. Add it to the mandatory legal and ethics updates. Being able to spot fraud is part of the equation and having a yearly update of new tricks, schemes, and scams would be an excellent idea since fraud is an ever evolving beast.

    There is constant talk on AgentGenius about the education aspect of real estate and although I benefited from an “easy entry” I would gladly see the bar raised and even step up and go back for more training in order to keep my license. I think one of the first things that needs to be done is to improve the quality of the class first. I’ve been in classes that were absolute snooze fests, where I’ve corrected the instructor (who thought you should just Google images and grab them for free – if it’s on the internet you can use it kind of mentality), or where I sat there and watched other agents text away through the entire 2 or 3 hours only to quickly run out the door when the session was over, only stopping long enough to sign in to make sure they got their credit.

    Fraud makes it even more important as well. Fraud is one of those things that can be slipped right under your nose without much notice and without the proper training to know what it can look like, it can be easy to become a part of it – unwittingly, but that won’t save you from the law.

  4. Joe Loomer

    Welcome aboard, Fred!

    Recently here in the Augusta area, slimeballs where putting liens on properties just because they presented a CMA to the owners. Company was called SDA just so you know and if they show up in YOUR neck of the woods. Folks would go to closing and the title search would reveal the lien. Seller’s choice? Pay the lien from the proceeds, or lose the deal and go after them. They eventually got busted, but even an attorney that handled the liens is still in business locally.

    Agree with Matt here – annual training on the LATEST predatory practices would help us police ourselves from the inside.

    Navy Chief, Navy Pride

  5. tomferry

    Fred, looking forward to reading and learning from you here on AG! Welcome my man!
    TF

  6. Greg Cooper

    Fred….my 24 hour belated welcomes also!

    I love everything you said….raising the bar, self education and a higher level of internal policing, etc. The problem is I have that 60 mins piece from a couple of weeks ago still in my head about Medicare fraud…and I wonder what branch of our government could actually enforce the rules? For every couch bag who I read about in my paper going to jail (2 this week) I still see horrid things happening every day. When I actually spent 3 hours with my state Attorney General’s office on a particluar real estate fraud case, the AG rep pointed to a 5 foot stack of fraud files and said “well that’s really a shame but it just doesn’t rise high enough on the pile to warrant time from us.” I’m not sure it’s totally an education issue….it’s more of a bad character and greed issue. Perhaps I’m just too cynical to think it can get better.

  7. Ken Montville

    Wouldn’t it be loverly if the real estate professionals were the only ones involved in and/or perpetuating the fraud. Of course, education would be the remedy….not.

    Let us not forget the home buyer/seller who is willingly going along with or suggesting the course of action you suggest. Or the home seller that says his basement only got wet once in the last twenty years during the last hurricane or because he forgot to clean his gutters or the yard just needs grading. The home buyer who “forgot” they went bankrupt last year. Silent seconds. On and on.

    The last State mandated Ethics class I went to was filled with 300 Realtors seated elbow to elbow who listened to an instructor drone on for three hours (it did touch on fraud, btw) Education may help the honest stay honest but it won’t do anything for the fraudster.

    Welcome, to AG! I love your style!

  8. MIssy Caulk

    Welcome to AG Fred.
    I reported a local agent to the FBI. Seriously nothing has been done they are still out there committing fraud. Makes me sick.
    I had a pile of documentation I turned over to them. The FBI agent didn’t really even understand real estate. I knew not to go to Professional Standards as they would have got a slap on the wrist.

    So frustrating.
    Look forward to your posts.

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