Sunday, December 30, 2007

Twin Cities Loan Officer Gets 4+ Years In Cash Back Scam; Indoor Pot Farm Bust Smoked Out Bogus Mortgage Deals

In Minneapolis, Minnesota, the Pioneer Press reports:
  • The first of four defendants tied to the LHS Mortgage Inc. fraud scandal was sentenced Friday to 4½ years in prison. Mario Lewis, 37, a loan officer at the LHS office in Burnsville, had pleaded guilty to drug charges, wire fraud and money laundering. Judge John Tunheim also ordered Lewis on Friday to pay restitution of $437,000. Lewis pocketed almost that much money from nine properties he bought in the Twin Cities area between 2004 and 2006. [...] Most of the homes Lewis bought are in various stages of foreclosure. That has delayed the identification of actual losses so far, but there will be lenders who suffer consequences from LHS' actions, [Federal prosecutor Joseph] Dixon said.

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  • The LHS case involved about 40 separate real estate transactions and is one of the largest mortgage fraud operations uncovered recently as the Twin Cities' real estate market soured. The LHS case had its roots in the bust of a large marijuana-growing operation found in a rental property in 2006, which involved Lewis. When investigators looked into Lewis' finances they found the questionable mortgage transactions.

For more, see Lender gets prison time (First in LHS case took plea).

See also, Minneapolis Star Tribune: Pot grower given 4½ years in prison on charges related to mortgage fraud (Reports that another defendant in this case, Ronald Joseph, who has also pleaded guilty and is awaiting sentencing, reportedly was hospitalized Thursday after ingesting antifreeze; the hospital reportedly refused to discuss Joseph's condition. Mortgage closing agent Jill Lehn, 40, of Prior Lake, has also pleaded guilty and awaits sentencing.). pot grow ops alpha