Weather

Partly Cloudy

75° F

Pollen 11

| Traffic

Both lose in aborted home sale

Would-be buyer publicizes man’s immigrant status

Associated Press

Monday, November 17, 2008

Like all illegal immigrants, Lorenzo Jimenez knew the knock on the door from immigration agents could come at any time.

[ Post your comments below. ]

Enlarge this image

John Bazemore/AP

Lorenzo Jimenez poses in front of a home he owns in Roswell. He lost his job and is now in danger of being deported.

Was Nicole Griffin right to snitch on Lorenzo Jimenez?
  Yes
  No


Voter Limit: Once per Hour
View Poll Results


Recent headlines:

   • North Fulton County news

Still, he had enough faith in the American dream to buy a house, even though signing the papers meant raising the risk: He put his 2-year-old, American-born daughter’s name and Social Security number on the title.

And it worked, for a while. Jimenez and his family lived happily enough for several years alongside “regular” metro Atlanta citizens in Roswell.

Nicole Griffin’s mom lived a few doors away, and when Griffin visited, she said, her kids played with the Jimenez children. When Jimenez put his four-bedroom, two-bathroom home up for sale last spring, wanting more space, Griffin was immediately interested.

A contract was negotiated but when the sale appeared to go sour, Griffin raised a new issue: that she was a citizen and Jimenez wasn’t. She told local media, immigration officials, his boss and others that he was here illegally. She even put signs in the yard of the house exposing his residency status.

As a result, agents came knocking last month, and now Jimenez is fighting to keep from being deported. He also lost his job.

“I’m very sad and very worried,” said Jimenez, 32. “I can’t sleep because I’m thinking about my family. What’s going to happen? I don’t know.”

Griffin insists her intent was to buy the house, nothing else. The 28-year-old single mother of two maintains she was wronged first, so she acted to protect her interests. She has no regrets.

“At the end, do I feel bad the family got in trouble? No, not at all,” she said.

Those who enter the U.S. illegally often say they’re just striving for the same things that most American citizens want out of life — a good job, homeownership, maybe a chance to get a little bit ahead.

But the ambitions of citizens and noncitizens can collide and, as the painful entanglement between Jimenez and Griffin shows, both sides can wind up feeling like victims.

Daughter on title

Jimenez, who is Mexican, has been in the U.S. for about a decade. When he bought the house four years ago, the real estate agent handling the sale told him he could get a better interest rate using his daughter’s information on the closing documents than he could using the federal tax identification number he uses to pay income tax here.

Jimenez later filed papers to have his own name added to the title, and that’s how it stayed until Griffin spotted the “for sale” sign and $164,500 list price this spring.

With both sides enthusiastic about the sale, a deal was reached and the closing was set for May 15.

Griffin, a payroll clerk and first-time homebuyer, asked to postpone the closing until June 1 because she had problems locking in her interest rate. Jimenez agreed but asked that she move into the house as planned and pay rent until the closing.

Shortly after Griffin moved in, her attorney said there was a problem with the title on the house, namely that Jimenez’s young daughter’s name was on the title but her signature wasn’t on the sale documents.

Attorneys said some extra paperwork — establishing a conservatorship to watch out for the child’s interest, the first step in getting the title transferred solely to her father — would clear the title, and everyone agreed to postpone again.

Griffin didn’t pay the rent, however, claiming she was promised three months free since the delay was Jimenez’s fault. She has an e-mail from his real estate agent, Alina Carbonell, saying he’d made the offer.

Jimenez’s lawyer, Erik Meder, told her that offer was never firm and insisted she pay rent or vacate the house.

Locked in a letter war with Meder, Griffin escalated her actions. She contacted the FBI, the Roswell Police Department, local media, the state attorney general’s office and the governor’s office, among others. She asked her congressman, Rep. Tom Price, for help, saying she felt Jimenez and Meder had deceived her. Price’s office, in turn, contacted U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement, said Brendan Buck, a Price spokesman.

“I am a law-abiding American merely trying to purchase a home,” Griffin wrote in mid-July in a letter to American Homebuyers, a nonprofit that helps low- to moderate-income families buy homes. “An illegal family fraudulently obtained a mortgage using a 1 yr old SSN, and appear to have all the rights in this situation — How can this be when they shouldn’t even be in America?”

She said she contacted anyone she could think of who might be able to help the sale go through.

Jimenez said she started making his life a nightmare. He claims she caused cosmetic damage to the house and intentionally clogged the plumbing, both of which she denies.

Griffin also went after Carbonell, the real estate agent. She contacted the Georgia State Real Estate Commission to try to get her license revoked. Carbonell said the threat to her reputation and to her career caused her so much stress she had to take a leave of absence.

Griffin said she reported Carbonell because the agent knew Jimenez’s daughter’s name was on the title from the beginning but didn’t tell her right away. (Carbonell was not the real estate agent who originally advised Jimenez to use his daughter’s name.)

In September, Meder got a judge to order Griffin to pay retroactive rent and get out of the house within a week.

Griffin then went to the upscale Atlanta restaurant where Jimenez worked as a cook and told his boss he was undocumented, which Jimenez said resulted in his firing.

“It was my last resort,” Griffin said, “but once I realized my family had seven days to get out of a house that a family’s not even legally supposed to own, I did go to his employer and I did let his employer know.”

She also put bright red signs in the yard reading, “This house is owned by an illegal alien.” When Jimenez tore them down, she put up new ones.

Griffin said she wanted the neighbors to share her outrage over what was happening.

“I don’t feel bad for anything that happens to the Jimenez family at this point,” Griffin said recently, “because no one feels bad that all I tried to do was buy a house, and I ended up living back with my mother.”

Living in limbo

In early October, plainclothes ICE agents showed up at Jimenez’s apartment. They asked him about his residency status and his purchase of the house, then handcuffed him and took him away. He was released a few hours later and is due before a judge in January and could face eventual deportation.

His lawyers plan to apply to keep Jimenez in the country permanently, a process that could last several years. While it’s pending, he will be eligible for a work permit. But even if he gets one, Jimenez will be living in limbo. His application to stay could be rejected, which means he still could be ordered to leave the country.

Jimenez has taken the house off the market but doesn’t want to move his family back in amid the uncertainty, so they’re still in the apartment that was supposed to be a transitional stop until they bought a bigger place.

Griffin hasn’t tried to buy another home, in part because she can’t afford to, so she and her kids are still staying with her mother.

Down the street, the Jimenez house sits empty.

Comments

By Missouri American

Jun 30, 2009 11:32 PM | Link to this

Ms Griffin - I pray for you. Just because you have been born here, you can judge others of their status. Remember one of your own family members was a immigrant at one time and they had to struggle, so that you can live a better life. But being a single parent is hard, I understand, since I was one also, but I stood on my own and NEVER had to live off my parents.

Your anger did not teach your kids friendlyness, it taught them that you are evil.

You should have stayed at your mothers until you could close the deal first off, since you never had the money in the first place to pay your closing cost. Who was going to pay your house payments - Taxpayers!!

Then you take your anger out on the house and damage it, with this all being said about you and you going out of your way to harm a man that provides a home, and living for his family you want to harm them, as you are jealous! I hope you NEVER get a house until you GROW UP and get a life away from MOMMY!!!

Immigrants are people also, you need to find a church and pray about your life and ask for God to come into your heart and forgive you for what you have done and caused!

If Mr. Jiminez and his wife is sent back to Mexico, the USA will keep his children here that are born in USA. How would you feel if the USA separated you from your kids forever?

I would take those kids and raise them, until Mr. Jiminez was able to get back into the USA.

Missouri resident!

By us citizen

Jan 6, 2009 9:41 AM | Link to this

Let not forget that are country in going under because a lot of people want to do illegal thing to get what they want. And others do the right thing and get nothing. I he was a citizen who got caught doing that, would people be just as sympathetic. If you do things the right way, you don't have ho worry.

By lisashaw

Dec 5, 2008 12:05 PM | Link to this

What a perfect and interesting match!
Jimenez wanted to sell a house he has NO legal right to own in America. Nicole tried to buy a house she can't afford.
Anyway, this has nothing to do with race. Who cares the skin color of a home owner. As long as his/hers home was taken good care of. But illegal is illegal, no matter who is talking or talking to whom.
Good job, Nicole, I solute you! Let's get more people involved and stop those illegal alien coming to America to lay their eggs on American soil. Do you know how much of tax payer's money went to raise these illegal aliens offsprings? they run like rabbits in heat.
We need more US citizens like Nicole, a lot more!!!



By learnedalesson

Nov 24, 2008 7:31 PM | Link to this

just returned home from a funeral in texas....my 2 nieces were killed by an illegal alien from mexico.. no drivers license or insurance...i'm sure he just wanted to do right for his family.....now my family paid the ultimate price...

By Terri

Nov 23, 2008 1:36 AM | Link to this

Has she called President Bush, and President-elect Obama to tell them what happened? She is a vengeful,hateful person,and makes me ashamed to be a female. I pity her daughter's.

By Terri

Nov 23, 2008 1:34 AM | Link to this

Has she called President Bush, and President-elect Obama to tell them what happened? She is a vengeful,hateful person,and makes me ashamed to be a female.

By Simon

Nov 21, 2008 7:25 PM | Link to this

A comment on one of the entries -- voting for President-elect Obama was not a vaccination against racism, prejudice or bigotry.

If it were, then many already need another inoculation.

By friendofnicole

Nov 21, 2008 12:07 PM | Link to this

Wgirl,

I have no idea how this became about race - most of the comments posted have been funny because people don't even know what color Nicole is. SHE IS NOT WHITE!!! She happens to be bi-racial (I will not say what because that is for Nicole to say). If people ever saw a picture of her family then they would be surprised to realize that she has Mexicans in her family and many other races. THIS HAS NOTHING TO DO WITH RACE.

Although, this article was written by a very biased source - know this.. Nicole did not find out that the home was purchased using a child's SSN until she actually tried to close and could not. Please put yourself in her shoes - she paid earnest money, moved in before closing because Mr. Jimenez asked her to, only to find out she would never be able to close because Mr. Jimenez nor his Agent were honest. If they would have been honest from the beginning then Nicole could have either found another house, or waited to move in until the Jimenez family resolved their title problems. Also, she did not know that Mr. Jimenez was in the country illegally until they got caught and then decided to tell the truth.

As for your comment to the neighbor - what you do onto others comes back - well then please tell Mr. Jimenez not to cry foul now - He has had 10 years to become a citizen. Since he has been here all he has done is lie and deceive people including the bank, mortgage company, his employer (he could not have been fired if he would not have lied on his application). His family has received various types of assistance including the Homestead Credit - which he should not have received.

Overall, Mr Jimenez has received many benefits without ever taking the time to become a citizen and - HIS FREE RIDE IS OVER!!!

By Wgirl

Nov 20, 2008 10:40 PM | Link to this

Question to Nicole Griffin, "What if you had tried to purchase a home from someone of your same race and the deal had gone "sour", would you try to air that person's business too as a means for revenge?
To your 86 y.o. neighbor, all respect due to my elders, and at the same time, since you are from the generation of teachers that has supposedly laid a foundation of "what you do comes back to you (morals and values)? Goingforth, do to others what you would have them do to you!

By longtimeforestresident

Nov 20, 2008 6:54 PM | Link to this

I am an 86 yr old lady. I have lived in the subdivision since it's inception! My next door neighbor is Nicole's mother. She has lived next door for approx 13 years and is like a second daughter to me!She and her husband are both very friendly and kind! They are the first to offer any assistance when they see me outside! I can't tell you how many times I have had to call in the middle of the night for a ride to the hospital! No matter the time of day, I just have to ask..and my neighbor comes running! She called me on election day, and offered to pick me up and drive me to the polls, take me inside and return me home safely! I also know Nicole and her lovely daughters! I can't believe the ignorant replies that I have read..People today have forgotten to teach the younger generation manners and respect..we need more parents like Nicole and her Mother and Father.....I applaud Nicole and wish her all the best

[1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10] next

Commenting is open from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. M-F, except on Tuesday when it's open until 9 p.m.

Post a comment



Remember me?

You may use the following formatting:
Bold: **this text will be bolded** = this text will be bolded
Italic: *this text will be italic* = this text will be italic
Link: [text to be linked](http://www.ajc.com) = text to be linked



There will be a delay of up to 5 minutes before your comment appears.


*HTML not allowed in comments. Your e-mail address is required.

Request a comment be removed

 

Inside AJC.COM

Week in Entertainment

Week in Entertainment

Whatever happened to Klinger from M*A*S*H*? That answer and more celeb photos of the week.

Six deals for the Braves

Six deals for the Braves

Mark Bradley shows us ESPN.com's Top 6 teams the Braves could wheel-and-deal with for trades.

Southern desserts

Southern desserts

RECIPE: Some say it's pecan pie. But if there's a classic pie to come from the South, it's chess pie.

Private Quarters Splurge

Private Quarters Splurge

The Appletons kept the historic feel of Kirkwood with their newly constructed home.

'Housewives' sneak peek

'Housewives' sneak peek

Season Two starts July 30, and we got a copy of the first episode. Here's some juicy tidbits.

Can you see the change?

Can you see the change?

What's altered in the two photos? See how you score when you play the Find 5 challenge!

Kudzu Services » Find the right people for the job