Corey Beck has practiced real estate law in Las Vegas for 26 years — through the Boom, through the Bust, and through everything in between. That experience matters. Las Vegas real estate cycles create unique legal situations that attorneys without local history simply don't recognize. Corey has seen them all, and knows how to position clients to protect their property, resolve disputes, and make sound decisions at every stage.
My practice areas in real estate include:
• Stopping foreclosure — including TROs, Preliminary Injunctions, and Mortgage Mediation
• Selling real property — protecting your interests through title review, lien issues, and timing
• Real estate litigation — wrongful foreclosure, Quiet Title, and rogue creditor cases
• Property disputes — boundary, ownership, and contract issues resolved in or out of court
Can I stop a foreclosure sale after receiving a Notice of Default?
Yes, in many cases. Nevada law allows you to petition for the Mortgage Mediation Program within 30 days of a Notice of Default. Filing for Chapter 13 bankruptcy also immediately stops a foreclosure sale. The key is acting quickly.
Do I need an attorney to sell my home in Nevada?
Nevada does not require an attorney to sell property, but having one protects you. Corey reviews title history, identifies liens, and makes sure nothing delays or derails your closing.
What is a Quiet Title action?
A Quiet Title action is a lawsuit that clears a disputed ownership claim on a property. If a creditor or title defect is preventing you from selling your home, a Quiet Title action is often the solution.


When a homeowner falls behind on their mortgage due to a temporary setback, there are legal options before foreclosure becomes final. If you can resume payments now, contacting the bank directly for a loan modification is often the fastest path. Nevada also allows a Petition for Referral to the Mortgage Mediation Program — a formal process that must be filed within 30 days of a Notice of Default. The bank must respond, and modification can be approved if the homeowner can show regular income and a hardship that caused the arrears. If the bank moves forward anyway, a Petition for Judicial Review is also available.
Selling a home or property is one of the largest financial decisions most people make. Having an attorney review the transaction protects your interests at every step — from evaluating comparable sales and reviewing title history to identifying liens that could delay or derail a closing. Corey's advice is straightforward: slow down, do your homework, and don't let anyone rush you. Anyone pushing you to decide immediately is a warning sign. Your circumstances — health, income, timing — should drive the decision, not pressure from the other side.
Some real estate disputes can only be resolved in court. Corey is currently Counsel of Record in active wrongful foreclosure cases in Las Vegas, and has successfully obtained Temporary Restraining Orders and Preliminary Injunctions to stop foreclosure sales and give clients time to fight back. He also handles Quiet Title actions — cases where a rogue creditor or title defect is blocking a client from selling their property. Litigation is sometimes the only mechanism that clears the path forward.