Brown glances down at the layers of documents. He leans back and exhales.
"If you got money, you could stay here in San Francisco," he says. "If you don't, don't even think of coming back here, 'cause San Francisco is too expensive. You don't like it, you can get with it or you don't. That's the way I see it. It's not gonna change for me or you or anybody. Either you can handle it or you can't. And me right now, I'm just tryna hold on 'cause I love this house, it's me and my wife's house, our first house and I can afford it."
Michael Short
Geary Brown, a trucker, saw his monthly mortgage payment shoot up from $1,800 to $2,800 around the time the recession hit. He faces eviction this month.
Michael Short
Since Dexter Cato took back his Bayview house, it has become the rallying point for local homeowners facing foreclosure, a hub for fliers and barbecue.
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He looks up and smiles.
"And I'm fittin' to push it up a notch," he goes on. "Buy me a few more pieces of property. I'm a rent this out, probably six, seven, eight months down the road. Take up this carpet, do this floor, and probably rent it out, buy me another house."
"The banks got bailed out!"
"We got sold out!"
The chanting continues at the rally on the City Hall steps — around the corner from the steps where the auctions take place. Shuffling through the crowd, Brown runs into another acquaintance, a twentysomething in a blue V-neck. The two shake hands.
Since getting that letter a few weeks ago, Brown has heard again from Bank of America.
"The bank made a judgment," Brown discloses, unprompted.
"Yeah?"
"They said they're not gonna modify."
He must vacate his house by May 2.