NJ Homeowners Claim Fraud In Sale Leaseback, Foreclosure Rescue Lawsuit; Pattern Of Activity Should Qualify As Racketeering, Says Attorney
- [Little Egg Harbor resident Michael] Moreno says he was stripped of nearly $70,000 in equity in the February 2006 [sale leaseback, foreclosure rescue] deal, and he faces eviction from the house he thought he saved. He also is one of two former homeowners suing [Robert] Heath and related companies in an attempt to undo deals they claim are fraudulent.(1) Their attorney, Kevin Carlin of Hamilton, said the documents on the deals list transactions that never happened, a violation of federal law. Carlin also said there are more than 40 similar real estate transactions involving Heath in the state. In the lawsuit, Carlin argues "the pattern" of activity should qualify as racketeering.
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- Deborah and Lawrence Mayo of Brick also have joined the lawsuit against Heath, and they also claim there was a fraudulent transaction. Carlin said at least three other families have contacted him about allegedly bad deals with Heath's businesses. Two of those families already were evicted from their homes, Carlin said.
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- "On paper it looks like a typical real estate transaction with a purchase and a sale, but when you look behind the paper — which is what courts of equity will do — what you see is that the transaction was actually the granting of an equitable mortgage; they were really just refinancing the property," Carlin said. "And they accomplished it by using an attorney who gave the appearance of a disinterested party while she was the wife of the principal [Heath]."
For more, see Eviction looming, man sues over deal (He, others say they feel cheated).
(1) According to the story, Heath's Marlboro-based company, MGT Group, would offer to sell the home back to Moreno at a later date.
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