Wednesday, November 14, 2007

Erie, Pennsylvania Mortgage Fraud Scam Alleged In Both Criminal & Civil Proceedings

In Erie, Pennsylvania, the Erie Times-News reports that last Friday, mortgage broker Frank Conti, who used to head the local office of Regal Financial Services, was at the center of a series of claims that one of his customers -- Eloise Woodsbey, made in a civil case filed in Erie Federal Court. Woodsbey claims that she was defrauded when she bought her home in 2004.

Earlier on Friday, Regal Financial Services was mentioned in court documents outlining a federal criminal case against Erie home redeveloper Robert L. Dodsworth, who is accused of helping to run a mortgage fraud scheme. Conti has not been charged in the criminal case, and he has said he did nothing wrong in the civil case. According to the story:

  • Court filings in the Dodsworth and Woodsbey cases claim Conti or Regal Financial, which also has an office in Pittsburgh, participated in mortgage transactions that have led to allegations of fraud. Both cases will unfold in U.S. District Court in Erie in the coming weeks. Dodsworth, 60, the owner of RLD Enterprises, is scheduled to appear at a plea hearing on Nov. 19, and court records indicate he plans to plead guilty to the felonies of money laundering and conspiracy to commit mail fraud, wire fraud and bank fraud.

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  • Woodsbey's house ... was one of nearly 200 properties that became the focus of the FBI and Internal Revenue Service as agents investigated the suspected fraud scheme. And Woodsbey's civil suit makes claims similar to the allegations the U.S. Attorney's Office in Erie is making against Dodsworth.

  • In the criminal case, the government is alleging Dodsworth and other "unnamed co-conspirators" manipulated financial records to make prospective homeowners, many of them unsophisticated and poor, eligible for mortgages they otherwise would have been unable to afford between January 2003 and March 2006. The criminal information filed against Dodsworth alleges he and the others artificially inflated customers' bank accounts.

Representing Woodsbey in her civil case is Margaret Schuetz, of the nonprofit Community Justice Project in Pittsburgh.

For more, see Suit names mortgage broker (Man headed office also mentioned in criminal housing fraud case).

For story update, see:

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