Thursday, February 22, 2007

Arizona Deed Theft Ring Out Of Business

The operations of a six member deed theft ring was the subject of a recent article in The Arizona Republic, reported at azcentral.com.

The scheme was very straightforward. The ring would "steal a house" by recording a forged deed to the property, unbeknownst to the true owner, and then proceed to obtain a mortgage loan against it. Needless to say, the ring would take the mortgage proceeds and start the process over with another property. The true owners would only find out about the fraud when the mortgage lender, who was duped into making the loan, attempts legal action.

Reportedly, seven families were fleeced out of half a million bucks. Four of the six ring members were recently sentenced by authorities, including ex-real estate agent Lesley Romero, whose real estate license was revoked.

The other two ring members, Jessica Alvarado and Robert Mora, have yet to be apprehended and are currently on the lam. To read the article, see Beware of mortgage-fraud scam.

For links to recent stories on deed theft by forgery in Detroit and Boston, see Detroit Area Law Enforcement Targeting Deed Theft With Dedicated Units.

For a Philadelphia story, click here to see an NBC Channel 10 deed theft video report.

For a Chicago story, click here to see a CBS 2 video report on deed theft.

For a Lee County, Florida story, click here to see an NBC 2 deed theft video report.

For similar stories over the last couple of years, see this collection of deed theft by forgery reports on The Mortgage Fraud Blog, presented by The Prieston Group.

Go here for other deed theft posts. deed theft zorro
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Indiana Foreclosure Rescue Legislation Pending

Indiana Senate Bill 390, which proposes to regulate foreclosure rescue consultants and purchasers, is currently working its way up the Indiana state legislature. One feature in the proposed bill, which is similar to the newly enacted statutes in Illinois and New York, is that there is a provision requiring a "foreclosure purchaser" to pay to a homeowner 82% of the proceeds of any resale of property.

Click here to view Indiana Senate Bill 390.
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North Carolina Modular Home Dealer Fined $1 Million For Fraudulently Financed Home Sales

The now-defunct CMR Properties and Home Finance Group of Fayetteville, North Carolina has been court-ordered to pay fines and penalties of approximately $1 million in connection with legal action brought by the state Attorney General's office, where the company was alleged to have misled dozens of families, many of whom had less than perfect credit, into buying modular homes they couldn't afford and falsified loan application and appraisal forms, according to WTVD Channel 11 (Raleigh - Durham - Fayetteville) on their website at abc11tv.com.

The fallout of the scam includes homeowners either facing foreclosure or stuck with making house payments on a home they can't sell or refinance.

For the full story, including the Channel 11 video report, see Home Dealer Ordered to Pay.
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Wednesday, February 21, 2007

Equitable Mortgage Defense In Homeowner - Tenant Eviction

The fourth and fifth installments of a multi-part post regarding the defense against an eviction of a tenant in possession of real property who claims to be the equitable owner of said property under the equitable mortgage doctrine have been posted.

The 4th installment involves a 2001 decision of the Colorado Supreme Court involving a financially strapped homeowner who entered into a foreclosure rescue transaction with an investor. For more, see Equitable Mortgage Defense In Homeowner - Tenant Eviction - Part 4.

The 5th installment involves a 1991 New Jersey court decision also involving a financially strapped homeowner who entered into a foreclosure rescue transaction with an investor. For more, see Equitable Mortgage Defense In Homeowner - Tenant Eviction - Part 5. equitable mortgage zebra

Dozen Defendants Sentenced In Hattiesburg Flipping Scam

The remaining seven defendants (out of a dozen) implicated in a property flipping operation were sentenced in a Hattiesburg, Mississippi Federal Court for their roles in the scheme.

Richard Lucas, the ringleader of the scheme, was sentenced to 14 years in jail. Lucas must also make more than $1.3 million in restitution to Countrywide Home Loans and other companies defrauded in the scheme and will serve five years of probation after his release.

Closing attorney Kimberly Castle was sentenced to two concurrent 48-month jail terms followed by a concurrent three- and five-year probation. Castle must also make more than $1.3 million in restitution to Countrywide Home Loans and other companies defrauded in the scheme.

Ken Stalnaker was sentenced to 28 months in prison and must make $938,767 in restitution to companies defrauded in the scheme. Stalnaker will also be subject to five years of probation.

Lucas, Castle, and Stalnaker did not plead guilty to the charges; rather, they went to trial and were found guilty by a jury. Lawyers for the three say they plan to appeal the guilty verdicts.

In addition:

Kenneth Fairley Jr. was ordered to make restitution of $97,055.17 to Countrywide Mortgage, and sentenced to six months of house arrest and five years of probation for his role in the mortgage flipping case.

Loretta Champ was sentenced to nine months incarceration and three years of probation, and must make $152,089.29 in restitution to Countrywide Mortgage and $21,612.60 to another company defrauded in the scheme.

Michael Cox was sentenced to three years of probation, nine months of house arrest and must pay more than $91,000 to companies defrauded in the scheme.

Jacqueline Mosley was sentenced to three years probation, six months of house arrest and to pay restitution.

The remaining defendants, who agreed to plead guilty to charges of conspiracy to commit wire fraud in lieu of going to a trial, waived the right to appeal.

Five other defendants, who all agreed to plead guilty in lieu of going to trial, were sentenced about three weeks ago for their participation in the scam. Their sentences ranged from 60 months probation to 19 months in prison. In addition, they were each ordered to pay restitution to Countrywide Mortgage in an amount totaling almost $1.7 million.

For the whole story on the latest developments on the final seven defendants to be sentenced, see:

See Five sentenced in mortgage fraud scheme for the earlier sentencing of the first five defendants involved in the flipping scam.
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Tuesday, February 20, 2007

Two Virginia Residents Allege Property Flipping In Class Action Suit

A class action lawsuit filed in October by two Martinsville residents who allege to have been scammed in a property flipping operation is the subject of a media report in today's Martinsville (Virginia) Bulletin, at martinsvillebulletin.com.

The suit, filed and currently working its way up the system in an Indiana Federal Court, alleges that some of the defendants bought modestly priced homes, inflated the property appraisals, and resold them to unwitting buyers for the inflated price.

The alleged ringleaders have been accused of recruiting unwitting "straw buyers" by inviting them to participate in a real estate investment club and who were told the club would buy rental property in the Indianapolis area, finance the purchases with loans that required no down payment or cash contribution from participants, and manage the properties at no cost to participants. Further, the participants were told that the properties would throw off enough rental income to both cover the house payments and pay profits to them, according to court filings.

Included in the allegations for one or more of the 21 named defendants are charges of fraud, theft by deception, civil conspiracy, negligence against the appraisers, negligent misrepresentation against the appraisers, and violations of both state and federal racketeering (RICO) statutes.

Indiana resident Robert Penn and Ace Appraisal Services are listed on the suit as the lead defendants among the 21 defendants named in the suit. To read more, see Another lawsuit alleges fraud.

To read the lawsuit, click here for Copy of Lawsuit - Watkins, Hairston, et. al. v. Robert Penn, Ace Appraisal Services, et al.

For a related ABC News Nightline story, see Giant Scam? Real Estate Dreams Dashed (Investment Club Turns Into a Nightmare Idea); or watch video - Nightline Online: Town's Boom & Bust.

Is The Sub-Prime Mortgage Market In Trouble?

It appears that the sub-prime mortgage market, which reportedly accounts for 20% of all new loans, is currently in the throes of a meltdown as ResMae Mortgage Corp. of Brea, California, filed for bankruptcy last week, becoming at least the 20th mortgage company to be sold or closed as delinquencies rise and the market for home loans to high-risk borrowers contracts.

Apparently, $308 million in loans that the company originated and sold off to Wall Street powerhouse Merrill Lynch & Company have gone sour prior to the expiration of the "early payment default" buy back period, during which Merrill can demand that ResMae buy back the loans. Merrill has exercised its rights to demand of ResMae a buy back of those bad loans. In bankruptcy filings, the company attributes its "crippled" operations on the buyback demands that have been made of it.

Reportedly, other Wall Street big shots like J.P. Morgan Chase & Co., HSBC Holdings PLC and others are also trying trying to force mortgage originators to buy back the same high-risk, high-return mortgages that the big banks were eagerly buying over the last couple of years. In particular, HSBC, which has recently added $1.76 billion to cover unanticipated losses from delinquencies and foreclosures on the sour mortgages it's stuck with, has reportedly sued several small mortgage originators in federal court in Illinois after they refused HSBC's repurchase requests.

In addition, other mortgage companies have either announced cutbacks in subprime production, quarterly losses, or sharply-elevated delinquency rates. Some major banks have announced staff reductions in subprime and moved to tighten underwriting rules.

(I wonder if these sub-prime mortgage market problems have anything to do with the proliferation of inflated, bogus appraisals, see Is The Real Estate Appraisal Profession In Trouble?, or so-called "stated income" loans (aka liars' loans), see Problems With Stated Income (Liars') Loans???)

Fasten your seat belt. The problems are only just beginning.

Sources:
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Missouri FBI Active In Mortgage Fraud Investigations

Receipt of numerous allegations about mortgage fraud schemes in the Springfield area has resulted in active investigations by the FBI, according to an article in the Springfield Business Journal Online Edition, reported at sbj.net.

Disproportionately high list prices for homes in some subdivisions and an upsurge in foreclosures has the local real estate community buzzing with speculation about possible widespread fraud.

Reference to one incident is made where, subsequent to a 2005 civil lawsuit against Realtor Charles Walker filed by a former business partner in which possible fraud-related allegations were made, authorities (local, state and federal) seized computers and documents from Walker's office pursuant to a search warrant.

To date, Walker has not been arrested, no charges have been filed against him, and officials will not comment on any possible criminal investigation of Walker himself, although reportedly, a joint FBI and IRS investigation into his business dealings is active.

To read the entire article, see:

FBI investigating alleged mortgage fraud in Springfield
(Abnormally high sale prices and foreclosures cause concern in real estate circles)
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Monday, February 19, 2007

New Hampshire Couple Battling Foreclosure Rescue Operator Over Home

A Manchester, New Hampshire couple with five young children is currently engaged in two court battles with MAK Investments, a local foreclosure rescue operator, over title and possession of the couple's home, according to a story on the Concord Monitor Online, at concordmonitor.com.

Further, the New Hampshire Banking Department issued a cease-and-desist order to the company last summer, in which it claims that MAK's lending practices violate state banking laws. The Department's staff attorney handling the case also asserts that MAK has used unethical business practices, like changing the terms of loans discussed verbally with homeowners when it comes time to sign the paperwork.

In investigating the company, the state found that over 10 homeowners facing foreclosure have lost their homes to MAK. A March hearing is scheduled where fines could be issued, restitution could be ordered and, in a few of the cases, homeowners might be able to get their homes back, according to a state spokesman. The state is also reportedly investigating two other companies for engaging in similar foreclosure rescue practices. For the whole story, see

Predatory lenders
(A growing fear of foreclosure has led many to lose their property to mortgage 'rescuers')
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South Carolina Manufactured Home Dealer Facing Fraud Allegations

Glenn Vaught, owner of Conway, South Carolina manufacured home dealer G&E Home Center has been named in two lawsuits by mortgage lenders in the past five months containing allegations that, in ten deals, he took over $1.5 million in loan proceeds for non-existent homes, according to an article in The Sun News' online presence, MyrtleBeachOnline.com. Two mortgage brokers have also been named in the suits as participants in the alleged fraud. No home buyers or appraisers were named in either suit.

The following points were reported in the article:

One of the brokers, Nancy Peterson, claims to have been duped by Vaught in the transactions she was involved in and, reportedly, is cooperating with the mortgage lender in one case (although she remains as a named defendant). She reportedly did confess, however, to being "a little too trusting and a little too lazy" in the application process by obtaining prospective buyers' loan application documentation from Vaught rather than getting the paperwork directly from the home buyer/borrowers thmselves.

The other broker, Mike Fortenberry, was unlicensed to originate these loans, now lives in Tennessee, and did not return telephone calls and e-mail messages.

Vaught is facing at least three other lawsuits brought by his home buyer customers, in addition to the two by the lenders.

Falsified borrowers' income statements, altered bank balances, phantom downpayments, and altered appraisals were involved in the fraud, according to court documents. The appraisers whose property valuations were allegedly altered are reportedly cooperating with the mortgage lender in one suit.

(There is no indication in the article as to the existence of any law enforcement investigations into the allegations made in the civil suits.) For the entire story, see

Conway home seller accused of loan fraud
(Horry's manufactured house problems continue to mount)
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Sunday, February 18, 2007

Is The Real Estate Appraisal Profession In Trouble?

In his blog, Whitecaps, blogger Bill McCrory of Coeur d'Alene, Idaho writes of appraisal fraud in real estate in which he includes links to a series of Realty Times articles that describe ways that appraisers are both:
  • pressured by lenders, loan officers, mortgage brokers and real estate agents to "not come up short" on their property valuations, and
  • stifled in their attempts to do something about ongoing frauds.

Links are also included to:

  • a 69 page report by the Federal Financial Institutions Examining Council that listed appraisal fraud "at the top of a list of third party mortgage fraud schemes that included such intriguing names as builder bailout, chunking, double selling, equity skimming, false down payment, fictitious mortgage loan, land flip, phantom sale, and straw borrower" and
  • a 12 page article that explains how widespread appraisal fraud puts homeowners at risk.

For more, including the aforementioned links, see:

Appraisal Fraud in Real Estate
("You cannot participate in the real estate business without committing felonies.")

In related Information...

1) See an online Appraiser's Petition containing the names of approximately 9,500 appraisers petitioning the Appraisal Subcomittee of the Federal Financial Institutions Examination Council ("FFIEC") for assistance in dealing with the pressure put upon them by lenders and others in the real estate industry to satisfactorily "hit the mark" on their property appraisals.

The mission of the FFIEC Appraisal Subcomittee "[i]s to ensure that real estate appraisers, who perform appraisals in real estate transactions that could expose the United States government to financial loss, are sufficiently trained and tested to assure competency and independent judgment according to uniform high professional standards and ethics." (see Mission of the ASC)

2) See Senate panel backs bill to crack down on appraisal fraud, an Associated Press article reporting about Senate Bill 85 currently pending in the Colorado state legislature that, if passed, would seek to prosecute anyone who pressures an appraiser to inflate property values.

The measure would prohibit mortgage brokers from pressuring or compensating an appraiser for an inflated appraisal. Violators would be fined $1,000 for their first offense and between $1,000 and $2,000 for later offenses. Appraisers, real estate agents and investors who participate in an appraisal scheme could also be prosecuted or sued and subject to triple damages. Mortgage brokers who have been sued and prevented from working in other states for unfair trade practices would lose their right to practice in Colorado as well.

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Saturday, February 17, 2007

Houston Area Law Enforcement Going Undercover To Fight Mortgage Fraud

The division chief over major fraud in the Harris County, Texas District Attorney’s Office has announced that they are beginning to go undercover to infiltrate mortgage fraud groups to fight mortgage fraud. “If you are involved in this type of crime, you just might be dealing with a Houston police officer,” said division chief Lester Blizzard. One undercover bust, involving an investigation of a title closing agent, has recently been made. To read more, see Mortgage fraud: the new white-collar crime, reported by KHOU-TV Channel 11 at their website, KHOU.com.

Click here for KHOU-TV's video report on the new undercover investigations, by Jeff McShan.

For a recent undercover bust involving Boston police and federal investigators, see

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Friday, February 16, 2007

New York Lawyer Pleads Guilty To Stealing $20 Million From Clients, Banks

Pleasantville attorney Anthony Bellettieri pleaded guilty in a White Plains Federal Court to one count of bank fraud and one count of mail fraud. A plea agreement entered into with federal prosecutors calls for a likely sentencing range of 10 years and one month to 12 years and seven months. In addition, Bellettieri agreed to pay up to $22 million in restitution to those he bilked and forfeit the properties he purchased with the ill gotten gains. Reportedly, the stolen money was lavishly spent on vacation condos, home improvements, a family wedding, high salaries for his law firm's employees, and new cars. Sentencing is May 18. To read more, see:

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Former NBA Great Mentioned In Atlanta Mortgage Fraud Trial

Former Atlanta Hawk great Dominique Wilkins has had his name thrown around in sworn testimony in the Atlanta Federal Court trial of Phillip E. Hill, Sr. and others involving an alleged "straw buyer" mortgage fraud flipping scam that has reportedly cost mortgage lenders tens of millions of dollars. To read more, see:


Go here for other posts on the Phillip E. Hill property flipping operation.

"Straw Scams" Lure Home Sellers & Buyers

Home sellers can find themselves lured into a "cash back" mortgage fraud "straw scam" by an unethical "buying team" (comprised of an agent, a knowing straw buyer, loan officer, and appraiser) making "above asking price" purchase offers (see for example, "Cash Back" Mortgage Fraudsters Target Home Sellers In Weak Markets).

Home buyers can also get lured into this scam. Sometimes, the scam will involve identity theft (see for example, Two charged with identity theft), where a knowing "straw buyer," when applying for the mortgage loan, uses the stolen identity of someone else who ends up being an "unknowing buyer" (and who only finds out about his/her victimization after the transaction is funded). Other times, the buyer is simply duped into believing that they are making a "hassle-free" real estate investment (see for example, Dayton Area Task Force Fighting Flipping). At times, the buyer will purchase the property and be paid a "fee" after the transaction is funded (see for example, Guilty plea in mortgage scam, where "buyers" were offered $1,000 for each deal they participated in).

These are just some examples of how people can unwittingly find themselves involved in mortgage fraud scams.
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Five Reverse Mortgage Scams To Watch Out For

For those looking for a basic understanding of what to look out for when protecting yourself against a possible reverse mortgage scam, see Five Reverse Home Mortgage Scams To Watch Out For.

Go here for other posts on reverse mortgage problems. zebra
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