Monday, October 01, 2007

Chicago Ex-Con In Trouble Again - This Time For Mortgage Fraud

In Chicago, Illinois, The Chicago Tribune reports:
  • After serving prison stints for rape and armed robbery, Edwin Evans reinvented himself as a financial adviser. Driving around town in a Lexus sedan and pin-striped suit, he promised cash-strapped homeowners that he could help them stave off foreclosure. But after Evans was featured in a 2005 Tribune series on mortgage fraud, federal authorities opened a criminal investigation. On Thursday, prosecutors announced an indictment charging Evans with fraud. Federal prosecutors allege that Evans, 41, used phony documents and bogus credit reports to prepare two home loan applications for a Chicago woman in 2002. A company Evans controlled took unspecified cash payments from those land deals, the indictment said.

[...]

  • Evans specialized in controversial bailout deals, in which a homeowner deeded his house to Evans or an investor for a year, believing the reprieve would allow time to get out of debt and repurchase the home with a fresh mortgage. But the home is often lost in the process, not rescued, court records show. Because the houses typically fall vacant, the crime can threaten entire neighborhoods, as well as the homeowners and lenders.

  • With a dollar sign tattooed on his right hand, Evans had an unlikely pedigree as a mortgage broker. As a teenager, he was repeatedly found delinquent for burglarizing his Morgan Park neighbors. He spent 7 years in Illinois prisons for raping a 14-year-old girl, then 4 more for hijacking a delivery truck at gunpoint. Paroled in 1999, Evans went into the mortgage business.
For more, see Lender accused of fraud (Ex-convict used fake documents in mortgage scheme, U.S. says).