hipatia condor is also from ecuador. she's outraged, too. the banks are nothing but thugs and thieves, she says. back at home, hipatia condor and her family are knee deep in boxes. after fourteen years in spain, they're packing up and leaving. over the past decade, they've paid off 100-thousand euros on the mortgage for their apartment here in madrid. the bank now says all that money went towards interest. hipatia and her husband william lost their jobs a year ago. now the bank is demanding they pay off a second loan of over 30,000 euros -- a loan they didn't even know existed. >> at the notary office back then, they told us to hurry up and sign. they didn't let us read the documents and they told us that if we didn't sign quickly, we'd also have to pay the notary fees, too. we always thought corruption happened only in latin america, that it didn't happen here in europe. we never thought that we would be cheated and lied to here, in spain, which is such a developed country. >> while we were filming here, the phone rang. it was the bank, sug