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Son of Black Panther Fred Hampton Races to Preserve Icon’s Home (PHOTOS)

The childhood home of Black Panther leader Fred Hampton, who was killed 48 years ago by the Chicago Police Department at the behest of the FBI, will not be up for auction this week, as originally planned, after efforts by the Hampton family and other supporters bought more time to save the civil rights icon’s home from foreclosure.
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On Monday, Fred Hampton Jr., chairman of the Black Panther Party Cubs and Fred Hampton's son, joined Radio Sputnik's By Any Means Necessary to talk about the efforts to save his father's boyhood home, discussing the intersection between place, space and political movements.

​Around a month ago, Hampton Jr. discovered that his father's childhood home was on an auction listing. Along with a coalition of community members, Hampton Jr. started a fundraising campaign to raise the money owed to three banks for the home.

An investigation by the Village Free Press into the Cook County Recorder of Deeds records revealed that Hampton's parents took out a $265,000 adjustable rate subprime loan on the house in 2007. A subprime mortgage is a loan provided to borrowers with impaired credit records. Such loans are usually accompanied by high interest rates to compensate lenders for offering loans to risky borrowers.

"One of the things that was striking about this was that the loan in 2007 is by far one of the worst loans that [Cook County Recorder of Deeds Karen] Yarbrough or myself has ever seen and we've seen thousands of mortgages," Mario Reed, the recorder's director of public information, told the Village Free Press Sunday.

"This was a several hundred thousand-dollar mortgage, with a 9.8 percent interest rate. And because it was an adjustable rate mortgage, the interest rate could go all the way up to 15.8 percent. That's predatory lending," he added. Predatory lending refers to lending practices that convince borrowers to accept unfair or abusive loan terms.

Records obtained from the Recorder of Deeds by Village Free Press revealed that US Bank, LaSalle Bank and Bank of America currently own the loan on the house, with US Bank owing the majority of the loan. US Bank foreclosed on the house without contacting the owner's home. The home currently belongs to Iberia Hampton, Hampton's mother, who passed away in 2016.

​"In Cook County, most foreclosure cases take between 12 and 18 months, on average, because banks are required to negotiate with the owner — something that came out of the 2008 foreclosure crisis," Reed told the Village Free Press. "We don't want banks to take people's houses without having to negotiate with the owner of the properties."

"We're now in the process of getting Fred Hampton Jr. and his cousins to become the rightful owners of the property. The process has to go through probate court, which is typically a lengthy process, but there are some ways, such as a proof of heirship, by which you can make the process go faster," Reed continued.

According to Hampton Jr., this experience is "a microcosm of what is happening to black communities all over."

"We have brought people from all walks of life to come support us about saving this landmark. In the last two months, the transformation that we have had in the community is phenomenal. Tomorrow was supposed to be the date for the auction, we just received a late last-minute word that the US banks and mortgage companies are sending us a tentative continuance," Hampton Jr. told Radio Sputnik.

The home's foreclosure sale, which was originally scheduled to be at 10:30 a.m. on October 23, has been canceled for now, according to the Judicial Sales Corporation website, which conducts foreclosure sales throughout the Illinois and neighboring states.

​"Our call is to the community, to the people, to mobilize and maintain the legacy of [Fred Hampton]. Legacies are, in fact, more important than our lives," Hampton Jr. added.

Hampton Jr. and fellow supporters have already raised almost $12,000 through two GoFundMe campaigns started by community activists.

Another fundraiser, called "Save the Hampton House," was also established to help money for the cause. It is a fiscally sponsored project of Affect Real Change, Inc.

Hampton Jr.'s initial fundraising goal of $80,000 is the amount required to end the foreclosure action. He also hopes to eventually raise another $200,000 to pay for repairs required to bring the building up to code so that the home can be turned into a museum.

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