Wednesday, November 04, 2009

Nevada Regulator Orders Shutdown Of 26 Loan Modification Outfits For Failure To Comply With Licensing, Bonding Requirements

In Las Vegas, Nevada, the Las Vegas Review Journal reports:
  • The Nevada Mortgage Lending Division said Monday that it is ordering 26 residential mortgage loan modification consultant companies to close and refund unearned payments from customers. Another 18 firms are allowed to continue working while their licenses are processed. Law firm Frederickson, Mazeika & Grant is the only firm that has obtained a license. The division is forcing companies to close if they failed to obtain a $75,000 surety bond required by a new state law.

***

  • The Nevada Legislature this year enacted a law requiring licenses and bonds for loan modification companies. [...] The Legislature required bonds and licensing because of reports that homeowners paid mortgage modification firms upfront for assistance, received no help and were unable to get a refund. "We will not allow those companies who have not met their legal obligations to operate," Commissioner Joseph Waltuch said in a statement Monday. "If consumers are going to pay for loan modification assistance, they must be able to trust that there's recourse if they've been harmed in some way."(1)(2)

For more, see Agency closes alterers of loans (Division calls for shutdown of 26 mortgage modifiers).

For the Nevada Mortgage Lending Division press release, see As bonding deadline passes, State Mortgage Lending Division moves to close down some loan modification providers.

In a related story, see Las Vegas Business Press: State trying to stop the scams (Government agency says complaints about unethical mortgage loan modifications mounting).

(1) The story states that many loan modification consultants have been unable to get or pay for surety bonds because they lack financial strength or have bad credit, according to Cynthia Duffy, part owner and the qualified employee for All Vegas Foreclosure Prevention. Duffy reportedly paid $3,000 for a $75,000 bond but some were quoted $15,000 for bonds.

(2) The Nevada Division of Mortgage Lending recently released this list of companies authorized to work with consumers in modifying home loans.

Home Lending Industry's "Waterfall Of Excuses" & "Abysmal Numbers Of Modifications" Force State AGs Closer To Filing Consumer Fraud Lawsuits

The New York Times reports:
  • Newly empowered by the Supreme Court, the attorneys general of several states hit hard by the housing collapse are exploring consumer fraud suits against major mortgage lenders. Frustrated by the banks’ inability or unwillingness to stop an avalanche of foreclosures, the states are considering lawsuits over the creation and marketing of millions of bad loans as well as the dismal pace of mortgage modifications.

  • Such cases would have been impossible until recently, because federal regulators had exclusive oversight of national banks. But a 5-to-4 Supreme Court decision in June allowed the states to exercise their own supervision, giving them significant leverage.(1)(2)We tried to use the tool to be persuasive with the banks,” Arizona’s attorney general, Terry Goddard, said in an interview. “But their waterfall of excuses, the abysmal numbers of modifications, tells us persuasion is not working.” As a result, he said, “we’re moving much closer to litigation.”

  • While statutes vary, those of every state prohibit fraud in consumer lending. The attorneys general are considering the theory that the banks essentially perpetrated a vast fraud on consumers by marketing exotic loans that would prove impossible to pay back.

For more, see States Are Pondering Fraud Suits Against Banks.

(1) According top the story, the states’ new power to sue banks arose from an effort in 2005 by Eliot Spitzer, then the New York attorney general, to discover whether several banks had violated the state’s fair-lending laws. The banks balked at surrendering any information. The Clearing House Association, a consortium of national banks, and the federal Office of the Comptroller of the Currency filed suit, asserting the states had no authority over national lenders. Mr. Spitzer’s successor, Andrew M. Cuomo, took up the battle. Lower courts agreed with the banks, but the Supreme Court, narrowly, did not. Already, the states’ victory in Cuomo v. Clearing House is beginning to affect the legal landscape. “The handcuffs are off,” said Ann Graham, a professor of banking law at Texas Tech University. “The states can pursue justice now.”

(2) For the U.S. Supreme Court's ruling, see Cuomo v. Clearing House Assn., L.L.C., 129 S. Ct. 2710; 174 L. Ed. 2d 464; 2009 U.S. LEXIS 4944 (June 29, 2009).

Report: Goldman Sachs Peddled $40B+ In Subprime Securities While Betting On Housing Market Crash

In Washington, D.C., McClatchy Newspapers reports:
  • In 2006 and 2007, Goldman Sachs Group peddled more than $40 billion in securities backed by at least 200,000 risky home mortgages, but never told the buyers it was secretly betting that a sharp drop in U.S. housing prices would send the value of those securities plummeting. Goldman's sales and its clandestine wagers, completed at the brink of the housing market meltdown, enabled the nation's premier investment bank to pass most of its potential losses to others before a flood of mortgage defaults staggered the U.S. and global economies.

  • Only later did investors discover that what Goldman had promoted as triple-A rated investments were closer to junk. Now, pension funds, insurance companies, labor unions and foreign financial institutions that bought those dicey mortgage securities are facing large losses, and a five-month McClatchy investigation has found that Goldman's failure to disclose that it made secret, exotic bets on an imminent housing crash may have violated securities laws.(1)

For more, see How Goldman secretly bet on the U.S. housing crash.

Thanks to Mike Dillon at GetDShirtz.com for the heads-up on the stories.

(1) In a related story from McClatchy, see Mystery: Why did Goldman stop scrutinizing loans it bought?

  • Before they bought pools of thousands of mortgages, Goldman and other Wall Street firms hired contractors to comb through sample batches of the loans to weed out unsound or fraudulent applications. Not much weeding occurred, however, several of the contractors said, because the Wall Street firms had agreed to accept mortgage lenders' relaxed credit guidelines. Melissa Toy and Irma Aninger, among scores of contract risk analysts who thumbed through mortgage files for the San Francisco-based Bohan Group from 2004 to 2006, said that supervisors overrode the bulk of their challenges to shaky loans on behalf of Goldman and other firms. They couldn't recall specific examples involving loans bought by Goldman, but they said their supervisors cleared half-million-dollar loans to a gardener, a housekeeper and a hairdresser.

State-Sanctioned Ripoffs Of The Elderly By Government Agencies Running Rampant On Both Sides Of The Atlantic?

In Great Britain, the Daily Mail reports:
  • A secret court that seizes the nest eggs of the elderly and vulnerable has triggered 3,000 complaints in the 18 months since it was set up, it was revealed [last month]. The obscure Court of Protection [of the Office of the Public Guardian] has taken control of £3.2billion in assets from those deemed unable to look after their own financial affairs because they are suffering from dementia or another mental incapacity. It adjudicates on contentious cases handled by the Office of the Public Guardian, a Ministry of Justice department which appoints 'deputies' to act for the mentally impaired when they have not written a living will.
***
  • The OPG often appoints relatives as deputies, but it also gives the role to solicitors or local authority officials if family members are deemed unsuitable. Families of those suffering from dementia complain that they have been treated like criminals and sent bullying letters from the court. The OPG has also charged £23million in fees from the bank accounts of those suffering from dementia to supervise the activities of deputies. The court, which is held in private, also pays just 0.5 per cent interest on savings it has seized, far lower than can be found at many high street banks.(1)
For more, see Anger as court seizes £3.2bn from elderly.
See also:
(1) For similar stories of alleged state-sanctioned ripoffs of the elderly, infirm and others deemed unable to take care of themselves by government agencies from the North American side of the Atlantic, see:

Tenant Charged With Ripping Off Elderly Landlord; Rental House Lost To Foreclosure, Cash Taken From Investment Property Refinancings

In Pekin, Illionois, the Pekin Daily Times reports:
  • A South Pekin woman was arrested [...] for allegedly bilking an elderly man out of cars, loans and his pension money. Gina Y. Robinson, 38, [...] was arrested for financial exploitation of the elderly, forgery and altering titles, according to Pekin Police Public Information Officer Mike Sanders.

  • In August the son of an 83-year-old Pekin man called police saying he feared his elderly father had been the victim of forgery by the father’s power of attorney, Robinson. [...] The victim owned several properties in Pekin and one of the properties had been foreclosed on in May. The elderly man had been renting the house to Robinson, said Sanders.

***

  • During the investigation, police learned that Robinson had also convinced the victim to make her his beneficiary at the time of his death. The victim told police he had been coerced by Robinson to take out loans on the homes he owned to help Robinson open a business, [...] which never opened, said Sanders.

For the story, see Woman allegedly scams elderly man. DeedContraTheft FinancialAbuseOfElderlyAlpha

Tuesday, November 03, 2009

Nightmare Continues For Some Foreclosed Homeowners As Lenders, Collection Firms Begin Chasing Unpaid Loan Balances

In Boston, Massahusetts, the Boston Herald reports:
  • Hank Lane figured that when he lost his Groton home to foreclosure in 2008, at least his long-running financial nightmare had come to an end. He was wrong. The $550,000 that Lane’s home fetched at auction covered most of his $650,000 first mortgage, but none of his $200,000 second mortgage - and the second lender wants its money. “I thought this was finally over, but it’s one of these things where there’s no end in sight,” said Lane, a 65-year-old biotech executive who fell on hard times after losing his job and coming down with cancer.

  • Massachusetts homeowners who’ve lost properties to the state’s foreclosure crisis are finding that their troubles don’t necessarily end when the auctioneer’s gavel falls. That’s because foreclosure auctions in today’s weak housing market rarely net enough to pay off properties’ first mortgages, let alone any second liens. Bay State consumers are often technically on the hook for any remaining balances under laws lenders haven’t traditionally enforced, but are beginning to employ more and more. For instance, Bank of America keeps billing Lane for the $200,000 he owes on his second mortgage, plus some $10,000 in penalties and interest. The ex-homeowner also recently began getting a second set of bills from Dyck O’Neal, a Texas firm that buys bad debts on the cheap and tries to collect them. "They want a quarter-of-a-million dollars from me, but I don’t have it and I don’t know how to get it unless I rob one of their banks,” Lane said.

***

  • Unfortunately for consumers, [Massachusetts] state law allows second-lien holders to go after some post-foreclosure debts for as long as 20 years. Firms can also go to court and get “deficiency judgments” good for a second 20 years. With such judgments in hand, collectors can place liens against any future properties foreclosed homeowners buy, or even seek court orders garnishing debtors’ wages. Typically, collection activities begin months or years after people have lost homes to foreclosure and moved on. [...] Experts say consumers faced with such collections often end up declaring bankruptcy, sullying credit scores that had just begun recovering from the underlying foreclosures. Even when lenders don’t try to collect unpaid second liens, merely having one on your credit report can disqualify you from future loans.

For the story, see Banks, collection firms pursue claims after homes foreclosed (Nightmare returns).

Lien Stripping Of Completely Underwater 2nd Mortgages, HELOCs Can Convert Some Home Loans To Unsecured Debts In Chapter 13 Bankruptcy Proceedings

In Bradenton, Florida, bankruptcy attorney Cynthia A. Riddell writes in the Bradenton Herald:
  • The current law prohibits stripping or modification of first mortgage liens on a Chapter 13 debtor’s primary residence. However, in many bankruptcy districts, [...] you can modify or “lien strip” a second or other subordinate mortgage which is not supported by any value in the property over the amount owed on the first mortgage. Under the current bankruptcy law, a second mortgage that is completely [underwater] can be stripped and reclassified as unsecured in a Chapter 13 bankruptcy case and, in most cases, paid only pennies on the dollar, while the homeowner keeps the home! The caveat is that the debtor in Chapter 13 must complete the plan in order to benefit from this action.

***

  • This lien stripping tool may be helpful to homeowners with home equity lines of credit secured by a second mortgage on their primary residence or homeowners that purchased the home using the 80/20 loans with the simultaneous second mortgage funding that enabled borrowers to get 100 percent financing. If such a lien is stripped in a Chapter 13, it can be treated as an unsecured debt in the Chapter 13 plan and paid the dividend amount provided for all unsecured claims over five years. The second mortgage holder would be paid only a fraction of the total amount of the loan.

For the column, see Lien stripping among Ch. 13 provisions.

In a related story, see Court Strips Second Mortgage In Chapter 7 Bankruptcy. Is It Precedent?

New Service Promises To Alert Homeowners Of Possible Deed Thefts

The New York Times reports:
  • MORTGAGE fraud continues to expand, in both the number of incidents and the methods that criminals use to strip equity from homeowners and lenders. Now a new online service offers free help to keep homeowners safe from an emerging form of fraud known as “house theft.”

  • Like other real estate Web sites, this new service, called ePropertyWatch.com, provides informal home appraisals and other information to help track neighborhood real estate activity. But unlike the others, it also monitors public documents associated with a home and promises to alert homeowners to possible criminal activity, like a forged deed that purports to transfer a home’s title in order to release an existing mortgage. In this form of fraud, thieves take “ownership” of the home so they can “sell” it to nefarious associates who have taken out another loan on the property. The “seller” then splits the sale proceeds with the fraudulent buyer.

  • Industry analysts called ePropertyWatch’s service a useful tool for homeowners, though it is being offered only in major metropolitan areas right now. EPropertyWatch is owned by First American CoreLogic, a company based in Santa Ana, Calif., which, among other things, collects real estate and mortgage data from municipalities and sells it to businesses.

For more, see Fraud Watch for Homeowners. DeedContraTheft

Jury Convicts Scammer Of Illegally Taking Title To Home With Forged Deed & Pocketing Proceeds Of Subsequent Mortgage Refinance

From the Office of the San Bernardino County, California District Attorney:
  • On Tuesday, October 27, 2009, [...] 9 guilty verdicts were read in the case of People v. Oralia Hidalgo, 46, of Colton. The jury found the defendant guilty on felony counts ranging from forgery, grand theft, filing of false instruments, and a grand theft enhancement.

  • In July 2003, Hidalgo forged the victim’s name on a Grant Deed illegally taking title to a residence in Colton. She encumbered the property by taking a loan on it. Subsequently, the victim discovered the fraud and confronted Hidalgo at the property. Hidalgo immediately sold the property to an unsuspecting real estate agent for $125,000.

  • The defendant falsified several real estate deeds and forged the signature and stamp of a notary public. Hidalgo, a tax preparer who owned her own business, was extremely sophisticated in falsifying several deeds. The fraudulent deeds were later recorded at the San Bernardino County Recorder's Office.

For the San Bernardino County DA press release, see Guilty Verdicts in Real Estate Fraud Case. DeedContraTheft

Disbarred NH Lawyer Expected To Cop Plea To $2.3M Ripoff Of Heirs Of Now-Deceased Client; Use Of Bogus POA To Sell Family Home Among Alleged Bad Acts

In Manchester, New Hampshire, the New Hampshire Union Leader reports:
  • A once-prominent, politically connected Manchester lawyer has been charged with bilking a client of more than $2.3 million and is expected to plead guilty to fraud-related charges [...] in U.S. District Court, federal prosecutors said [last week].(1) Thomas J. Tessier, 71, [...] is expected to appear in court [...] and enter guilty pleas to bank fraud, mail fraud and money laundering, said Assistant U.S. Attorney Robert Kinsella.

***

  • The case involves the family of Beatrice Jakobiec, who died in 2001 and had set up trusts for her two sons. [...] According to documents provided by the IRS Criminal Investigation Division, Tessier allegedly submitted documents to banks with forged signatures, which gave him access to certificates of deposit. He also allegedly used a fraudulent power of attorney to sell the family home. Finally, he alledgedly cashed in Jakobiec insurance policies, investment accounts and trust accounts, allegedly claiming he had the legal right to do so.

  • Although he funneled small amounts to the family, Tessier is accused of keeping more than $2.3 million for himself. Kinsella said Tessier spent most of the money on personal expenses. A substantial amount of money has been repaid to the victims, Kinsella said.

For the story, see Once at top, now disgraced.

For the U.S. Attorney press release, see Fraud And Money Laundering Charges Filed Against Former Lawyer And Resident Of Manchester.

(1) Reportedly, Tessier was disbarred in December 2008. Still unresolved are a civil suit filed by the Jakobiecs and state charges out of the Cheshire County Attorney's Office, the story states. DeedContraTheft

Monday, November 02, 2009

California AG Requests Details Of Home Loan Industry Plans To Defuse Pay Option ARM "Ticking Time Bombs"

From the Office of the California Attorney General:
  • Concerned about a "new wave" of foreclosures, Attorney General Edmund G. Brown Jr. [...] called on ten major banks and loan servicers to detail their plans to assist homeowners facing dramatic monthly payment increases on Pay Option Adjustable Rate Mortgages.(1) "Homeowners with Pay Option ARMs are sitting on ticking time bombs that the lending industry has the power to defuse," Brown said. "Unless these banks and loan servicers act quickly, hundreds of thousands of mortgages will reset across the state, creating a new wave of foreclosures."

***

  • California homeowners hold almost 60 percent of the nation's exotic Pay Option ARMs originated between 2004 and 2008. Approximately one million of these mortgages will reset nationwide in the next four years, resulting in higher payments and a dramatic increase in foreclosures.

For the California AG press release, see Brown Calls on Banks and Loan Servicers to Detail Plans to Stem New Wave of Foreclosures.

(1) Brown's request was made in a letter sent to: Bank of America Home Loans & Insurance; Wells Fargo & Company; JP Morgan Chase & Co.; Litton Loan Servicing; ResCap, LLC; Ocwen Financial Corporation; OneWest Bank; American Home Mortgage Servicing; Saxon Mortgage Services, Inc.; and Select Portfolio Servicing. Banks and loan servicers are asked to respond by November 23, 2009.

Disbarred Attorney Cops Plea In Fraudulent Rescue Scam; Homes Drained Of Equity, Then Fall To Foreclosure; Owners Get Boot; Investors Left Holding Bag

In Worcester, Massachusetts, the Worcester Telegram & Gazette reports:
  • Disbarred lawyer Raymond A. Desautels III of Oxford, awaiting sentencing on wire fraud charges in U.S. District Court, pleaded guilty [...] in Worcester Superior Court to charges related to his role in what prosecutors said was an elaborate mortgage fraud scheme. Mr. Desautels, 43, [...] is to be sentenced Dec. 1 [...] after entering guilty pleas [...] to five counts of inducing a mortgage lender to part with property by false pretenses. The former real estate lawyer was one of four people indicted last month in what authorities said was a scheme organized by Allen J. Seymour of Oxford under which Mr. Seymour transformed apparent equity in distressed properties into cash after targeting homes in danger of foreclosure and offering the owners various rescue options.(1)

***

  • On five occasions [...], Mr. Desautels was an active participant in a plan to obtain mortgage lender funds through fraudulent real estate transactions, Assistant Attorney General Andrew Doherty told Judge [James R.] Lemire [...]. Nearly $3 million in loans were obtained for such purchases and Mr. Desautels conducted the closings for Mr. Seymour, according to Mr. Doherty. The homeowners were not present and their documents were signed using a false power of attorney, the prosecutor said.

For the story, see Disbarred Oxford lawyer pleads guilty in mortgage fraud scheme.

For the Massachusetts Attorney General press release, see AGO Announces Guilty Plea of Former Real Estate Lawyer and Arraignment of Worcester Woman in Complex Mortgage Rescue Scheme.

(1) According to the Massachusetts AG, Seymour allegedly found individuals with good credit who were looking to begin investing in real estate. Many of these “investors” were allegedly told they would be helping homeowners in danger of foreclosure. Seymour allegedly told several investors that the purchase would only be temporary, and the homeowners would purchase the property back from them after Seymour repaired the homeowner’s credit (ie. sale leaseback arrangements). After the closing, several investors state that Seymour abandoned them to the mortgage payments. Without Seymour’s assistance, the investors were unable to pay the loans, and these mortgages themselves fell into foreclosure. Some homeowners, allegedly promised lifetime leases, have been evicted from their homes by these foreclosures. foreclosure rescue equity stripping sale leaseback

Loan Modification Outfits Begin Charging For Services In Steps In Attempt To Dodge Upfront Fee Prohibition

In Southern California, the Orange County Register reports:
  • Some companies that advertise help avoiding foreclosure are trying to avoid a ban on advance fees by charging consumers in steps, according to loan brokers and state regulators. That’s illegal, said Tom Pool, a spokesman for the California Department of Real Estate (DRE).

  • The bill, dubbed SB 94, clearly prohibits loan modification companies from collecting any money until all services are performed, Pool said. He said the DRE will investigate any consumer complaints related to companies skirting the advance-fee ban. “We knew folks were going to be looking for ways around the bill, and we are seeing these creative and clever approaches,” Pool said. “We are not buying it.”

For the story, see Loan aid firms skirt ban on advance fees.

Brooklyn Court Rulings Void Deeds & Subsequent Mortgages Used To Drain Home Equity In Bogus Sale Leaseback Foreclosure Rescue Scams

A pair of 2008 Brooklyn, New York lower court rulings may provide some guidance to those seeking an approach to undoing bogus sale leaseback, foreclosure rescue scams on behalf of financially strapped homeowners who have been screwed over in these equity stripping rackets.

In each case, both the deed that was unwittingly signed over by the victims to the scammers, as well as the subsequent mortgage that was put on the subject home by the operator and used to drain the equity out of it, were successfully voided by the attorney for the homeowners, Brooklyn Legal Services Corporation A.(1)(2)

The cases are both fact-heavy, and describe the convoluted fact patterns that are typical of these sale leaseback scams.(3) There's no easy-to-read media report for this post; for those interested in the reading the rulings themselves, see:

(1) However, the lenders left holding the bag with the voided mortgages were entitled to be subrogated to the rights of existing lienholders to the extent the new money they supplied to the scam was applied to satisfy the homeowners' existing mortgages on the homes that were encumbering the properties immediately prior to the ripoff.

(2) Brooklyn A is a non-profit law firm that provides high-quality, neighborhood-based civil legal services to low-income individuals and groups in North and East Brooklyn. For more, see Wagner Casts Shadow over BLS Consolidation.

(3) These cases serve as a reminder that, when attepting to undo a foreclosure rescue scam, it's not enough to simply void the deed used by the foreclosure rescue scammer to swipe the title to the home; the mortgage placed on the property by the scammer to drain out the home equity as well has to be voided as well. In one case, this was done by establishing that the deed transfer involved was void ab initio, in which case the lender's mortgage was never a valid mortgage to begin with, and therefore, void as well. In the other case, it was established that the deed involved, while not void ab initio, was nevertheless voidable. In that case, because the deed was only consisdered voidable, it was then necessary to establish that the mortgage lender providing the financing for the equity stripping scam was on notice of the scam, thereby disqualifying it from status as a bona fide purchaser / bona fide encumbrancer and, accordingly, not entitled to the protection of the state recording statutes.

One point in this regard not addressed by these cases but deserves mentioning anyway is the effect, on the mortgage lender providing the financing for the equity stripping transaction, of the scammed homeowner's continued possession of the premises after signing away title to the property. Generally, when ordinary inspection of the premises by a purchaser or mortgage lender, followed by reasonable inquiry, would reveal the existence any right held by persons in possession, the title transfer, and any mortgage given contemporaneous therewith or subsequent thereto, would be subject to those rights (whether recorded or unrecorded). "Actual possession of real estate is sufficient notice to a person proposing to take a mortgage on the property, and to all the world of the existence of any right which the person in possession is able to establish." Phelan v. Brady, 119 N.Y. 587; 23 N.E. 1109; (NY 1890).

The following excerpt describing the fact pattern involved in Phelan v. Brady captures this point:

  • At the time of the execution and delivery of the mortgage to the plaintiff, the defendant Mrs. Brady was in the actual possession of the premises under a perfectly valid but unrecorded deed. Her title must, therefore, prevail as against the plaintiff. It matters not, so far as Mrs. Brady is concerned, that the plaintiff in good faith advanced his money upon an apparently perfect record title of the defendant John E. Murphy. Nor is it of any consequence, so far as this question is concerned, whether the plaintiff was in fact ignorant of any right or claim of Mrs. Brady to the premises. It is enough that she was in possession under her deed and the contract of purchase, as that fact operated in law as notice to the plaintiff of all her rights.

  • It may be true, as has been argued by the plaintiff's counsel, that when a party takes a conveyance of property situated as this was, occupied by numerous tenants, it would be inconvenient and difficult for him to ascertain the rights or interests that are claimed by all or any of them. But this circumstance cannot change the rule. Actual possession of real estate is sufficient notice to a person proposing to take a mortgage on the property, and to all the world of the existence of any right which the person in possession is able to establish. Governeur v. Lynch, 2 Paige, 300; Bank of Orleans v. Flagg, 3 Barb. 318; Moyer v. Hinman, 14 N. Y. 184; Tuttle v. Jackson, 6 Wend. 213; Trustees of Union College v. Wheeler, 61 N. Y. 88, 98; Cavalli v. Allen, 57 id. 517.)

(It should be obvious that, based on the foregoing, the importance to a real estate purchaser or mortgage lender of determining who, if anyone, is in possession of the subject property on the date of closing (ie. by conducting a so-called "walk-through" on the closing date, whether it be on a purchase transaction or a refinancing transaction, and by obtaining estoppel certificates from anyone in possession of the premises on that date attesting to the nature of their rights, if any) can't be emphasized strongly enough. If, on the date of closing, the homeowner being scammed has yet to move his/her belongings out of the premises and is still in possession thereof, this fact would appear to be enough to lead a reasonably prudent purchaser or mortgage lender to make further inquiry as to the true nature of the transaction - and obtain estoppel certificates from those in possession fully disclosing the nature of their occupancy).

For some relatively recent New York cases referencing the effect of continued possession of an occupant on the status of a buyer or lender as a bona fide purchaser / bona fide encumbrancer, see:

  • Ward v. Ward, 503624,2008 NY Slip Op 4984; 52 A.D.3d 919; 859 N.Y.S.2d 774; 2008 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 4816 (App. Div. 3d Dept. 2008;
  • Doyle v. Siddo, 31 A.D.3d 697, 818 N.Y.S.2d 474, 2006 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 9569 (N.Y. App. Div. 2d Dep't, 2006).

For other states, see Bona Fide Purchaser Doctrine, Possession Of Property By Occupants Other Than The Vendor & The Duty To Inquire.

Brooklyn Judge Weighs In With State Lawmakers On "Rescue Scams, Straw Men, Fraudulent Loans"

In Brooklyn, New York, the Brooklyn Daily Eagle reports:
  • A local judge and prosecutor who have worked on real estate crime in Kings County told state senators at a special joint committee hearing [last week] that more legal steps may need to be taken to protect Brooklyn families and homeowners. Brooklyn Supreme Court Justice Arthur M. Schack, who is known for his experience handling a vast number of foreclosure motions, testified before a special joint Senate hearing about “rescue scams, straw men, fraudulent loans.” These are real estate crimes that are typical in Brooklyn, according to Schack. “These are the people who go after people who are in financial trouble, and say, ‘We’ll save your house,’” Justice Schack explained to the Eagle. "We see some bizarre things.”

For the story, see Three Branches of Government Converge in Mortgage Fraud Fight.

Sunday, November 01, 2009

California Man Gets 32 Months For Filing Phony Deeds To Illegally Claim Title To Homes In Foreclosure

In San Diego, California, XETV-TV Channel 6 reports:
  • An ex-con who filed bogus grant deeds with the county Recorder's Office on six properties he claimed he owned was sentenced Friday to two years and eight months in prison. Maurice Antoine Simmons, 32, was convicted Aug. 31 of 15 counts, including filing and possessing false documents and forgery.

***

  • [Prosecutor Marlene] Coyne said Simmons and co-defendant King Solomon II, also known as Terry Lee Herron, would lay claim to properties that were in default, foreclosure or where the owners were behind in their payments. [...] She said Simmons showed great "braggadocio" by testifying that he had the right to claim the properties if they weren't cared for.

***

  • Defense attorney Jeff Carver said Simmons had a legitimate belief that he had a right to file the grant deeds on the troubled properties in Chula Vista and San Diego. "He was incorrect," Carver told the judge, noting Simmons paid $5,000 to get into the program to claim the properties under the guise of a religious order known as the Sovereign Solomon Brothers Archbishop Corporation Sole. Carver said Simmons made no effort to hide what he was doing.

For the story, see Man Who Filed Bogus Grant Deeds Sentenced to Prison.

Ex-Real Estate Agent Cops Plea To Duping Dementia Suffering Senior Into Signing Away Title To Home

From the Office of the Arizona Attorney General:
  • Attorney General Terry Goddard [...] announced that former real estate agent Ammar Dean Halloum, 46, of Phoenix, has pleaded guilty to felony charges in connection with a fraudulent real estate transaction with an elderly Tucson resident. At a hearing before Judge Richard S. Fields in Pima County Superior Court, Halloum pleaded guilty to one count of theft/financial exploitation of a vulnerable adult and one count of fraudulent schemes and artifices, both felonies. Halloum also agreed to pay over $200,000 in restitution to the victim and over $30,000 to the Attorney General’s Office for prosecution costs.

***

  • At the hearing, Halloum admitted that while working as a licensed real estate agent, he obtained title to a Gilbert home through misrepresentations and omissions. The homeowner he victimized was suffering from dementia and living in a nursing home at the time the sales documents were signed. Halloum subsequently flipped the property and kept the profit. Halloum was indicted following an investigation by Tucson Police Detective Jim Williamson, who is assigned to the Elder Abuse Task Force of the Attorney General’s Office. The Arizona Department of Real Estate has revoked Halloum’s license.

For the Arizona AG press release, see Ex-Real Estate Agent Pleads Guilty in Fraudulent Sale. DeedContraTheft FinancialAbuseOfElderlyAlpha

Colorado AG: Mortgage Broker Misrepresented Loan Terms, Inflated Borrower Income Levels, Worked With Appraisers To Create Inflated Home Values

In Colorado Springs, Colorado, The Gazette reports:
  • A Colorado Springs mortgage company and two of its officials have been sued by the Colorado Attorney General’s office for misrepresenting the interest rates, monthly payments and other terms of loans they made, many of which ended up in foreclosure. The lawsuit, [...] alleges that 84 of the 192 loans made by April Bigler, the top loan originator for Alternative Lending of Colorado, [...] ended up in foreclosure because she led borrowers to believe they were taking out a fixed-rate loan and instead found later they had gotten two variable-rate loans with much higher interest rates and monthly payments than they expected.(1)

***

  • The lawsuit also names James W. Dale III, 64, also of Pueblo West and who is managing general partner of Alternative Lending of Colorado, as a defendant for failing to enforce the company’s policies or discipline Bigler for violating them. The civil lawsuit charges Bigler with 15 violations of Colorado consumer protection laws, Dale with nine such violations and the company with four violations, and seeks fines of up to $10,000 per violation and restitution to all victims of the alleged scheme.

For the story, see State sues mortgage lenders alleging misrepresentation.

For the Colorado AG press release, see Attorney General announces lawsuit against Colorado Springs mortgage company engaged in deceptive trade practices.

For the Colorado AG lawsuit, see State of Colorado v. Independence Planning LLLP, et al.

(1) According to the story, Bigler, 29, also failed to tell borrowers that their loan payments didn’t include property tax and insurance costs, repeatedly delayed closings to leave borrowers with few alternatives to the loans she arranged, inflated borrowers’ incomes on loan applications and worked with appraisers to inflate the value of homes being mortgaged, the lawsuit alleges. As a result, borrowers ended up with loans they could not afford, according to the lawsuit.

Texas AG Files Civil Suit Against Real Estate Broker Accused Of Creating Rent To Own Deals For Customers Falsely Promised Legal Title To Homes

From the Office of the Texas Attorney General:
  • Texas Attorney General Greg Abbott [...] charged Fern Hernandez Realty, Inc., with defrauding Hispanic home buyers. The state’s enforcement action names the corporation; its owner, real estate broker Jose Fernando “Fern” Hernandez and his wife, Odessa S. Hernandez. According to court documents filed [...] in Travis County, the defendants falsely promised their customers home ownership when, in fact, the customers’ homes were actually owned by the defendants.(1)

***

  • When Spanish-speaking clients did not qualify for traditional financing, Mr. Hernandez would offer them financing through a group of “investors.” He promised them if they made monthly payments to this group for a year, the house would be transferred to the home buyer. Investigators discovered there were no outside “investors.” Mr. Hernandez would close on the houses, with either he or his wife acting as the official buyer and taking title to what the home buyers thought was their property.

***

  • According to state investigators, at least six properties in the defendants’ names were leased to individuals who thought they owned the home in which they resided.

For the entire Texas AG press release, see Attorney General Abbott Takes Legal Action Against Housing Scam That Targeted Austin-Area Hispanic Home Buyers (Fraudulent real estate scheme promised customers homeownership but never gave purchasers title to their homes).

For the Texas AG lawsuit, see State of Texas v. Hernandez, et al.

(1) The Office of the Attorney General is seeking restitution for affected home buyers and a civil penalty of up to $20,000 for each of the defendants’ violations of the Deceptive Trade Practices Act. rent to own lease purchase option scams yellowstone

Nevada AG Indicts Las Vegas Man In Alleged Refinancing Scam Targeting Strapped Homeowners; Accused Of Illegally Pocketing Proceeds From Mortgage Loans

From the Office of the Nevada Attorney General:
  • Nevada Attorney General Catherine Cortez Masto announced [...] that Wayne Goldenbaum, also known as Robert King, of Las Vegas, Nevada, has been indicted on multiple charges of theft, including theft from an individual over the age of 60. The charges stem from instances where King fraudulently obtained the proceeds from his victims’ mortgage loans or obtained money for the lease of property which he did not own. The case is being prosecuted by the Attorney General’s Mortgage Fraud Task Force.

***

  • The indictment alleges that King, through his company, King Highway Estates, promised to obtain refinancing for local homeowners who wished to use the proceeds to clear up outstanding debts or make improvements on their homes. After arranging the loans with hard money lenders, King would withhold most of the proceeds under the pretense of using them to pay off the homeowner’s bills or authorizing the home improvement projects.

For the entire press release, see Attorney General Masto Announces Indictments In Connection With Mortgage Scam.

Saturday, October 31, 2009

Elderly Couple "Snatched" By State Of Texas Celebrate Homecoming After One Year Of Nursing Home "Captivity" - Home Went Into Foreclosure, Car Repo'd

In Richardson, Texas, Fox 4 News reports:
  • It’s an emotional and long awaited homecoming for an elderly Richardson couple whose battle with the state for their freedom triggered a FOX 4 Investigation. Michael and Eugenia Kidd say the State of Texas has held them captive in a nursing home for months. But after a court ruling [...] the Kidds are finally saying “home sweet home.”

***

***

  • Community activist Russell Fish jumped on board when he heard about the Kidds’ story. He started a Web site for the Kidds and has organized volunteers to help. He says there is still a lot of work to do because the state has destroyed the Kidds’ finances. “We need to clean that up. Their credit is destroyed. Their house went in to foreclosure. They had their car repossessed. These are people who had done all the right things,” said Fish. “They just made the mistake of getting old.”

***

  • I’m really infuriated by the way it all came about,” Michael Kidd told FOX 4. “At our age, when we were retired and enjoying our retirement, and suddenly snatch a year out of our lives…for what reason? There are criminals out there that get less time in jail,” Kidd continued.

For more, see Kidds Leave Facility, Return Home.

Tenant Cops Plea To Forgery After Befriending Elderly Landlord, Then Looting Her Bank Account, Leaving Homes In Foreclosure

In Vista, California, San Diego News Network reports:
  • A woman who forged her landlord’s checks and temporarily forced the victim’s two homes into foreclosure pleaded guilty [...] to four counts of passing forged checks. Jacqueline Mastrodimos, 38, agreed to a four-year prison term when she is sentenced on March 1 by Superior Court Judge Daniel Goldstein, Deputy District Attorney Anna Winn said.

  • Authorities said Mastrodimos rented a room in 2005 in the Carlsbad home of Julie Johansen, who is in her 60s, and soon became involved in the victim’s finances.(1) The mortgage on the Dehesa Court home went unpaid from January to August 2008, and Johansen didn’t realize there was a problem until she saw a notice on her front gate that the property would be sold at auction in three weeks, police said. A Carmel Valley condominium was in foreclosure for the same reason. Johansen was able to avoid losing the properties but had to pay substantial penalties. [...] Meanwhile, Johansen still has “a horrible financial condition” because of Mastrodimos’ actions, Winn said. She is unable to open a new bank account and has seen her credit score plunge, according to the prosecutor.

For the story, see Plea deal reached in Carlsbad rental forgery.

(1) Reportedly, Mastrodimos wrote checks to herself from the victim’s account, took out credit cards in Johansen’s name and used the woman’s automated teller machine card at casinos, detectives said.

More Phony Landlord Rent Scams Promoted On Craigslist

In Chandler, Arizona, ABC 15 reports:
  • After her husband lost her job, Ava Padilla said she was looking for a solution because they couldn't afford to keep the home they were renting. [...] She said the man who posted an ad on Craigslist told her the deal was legitimate. For $500 down, her family could live rent free in a foreclosed home for 6 to 18 months. "He said pay $250 first and then you pay the other $250 once we release the keys to you," said Padilla. All he said she needed to do was find a vacant home from a list he gave her. So, in good faith, she gave him the $250 up front. After she received the list, she realized there were some problems with it because either the phone numbers were disconnected or worse, "The people were yelling and screaming, 'How did you get my number, our house is not for sale.'" Initially, she said she was scared because she had to sign a contract swearing to keep the deal secret from family and friends.

  • All of this is now part of a police report and a complaint turned in to the attorney general's office. The attorney general's office tells ABC15 this story has several serious warning signs including the secrecy, money up front and the fact they would be living in a foreclosure without a rental agreement.

Source: Foreclosure traps duping Valley families. KappaPhonyLandlordScam

Foreclosure Crisis Exacerbates Lead Based Paint Problem For Chicago Tenants With Young Children

In Chicago, Illinois, CBS 2 Chicago reports:
  • A Chicago couple says their two young boys are sick, and their own home and landlord are to blame. The problem? Lead paint. And as CBS 2's Mike Puccinelli reports, it's even worse now because of the foreclosure crisis. The foreclosure crisis is making an already bad problem even worse in Chicago. That's because many of the foreclosed properties are contaminated with lead paint. Lead abatement experts say many cash-strapped landlords have essentially stopped repairing properties. Nina Woods says that's what happened in her apartment where two of her children were poisoned with lead. She blames her landlord for failing to inform her of the lead paint problem and then failing to correct it.

***

  • Lead abatement assistance is available to homeowners, often free of charge. Homeowners or property owners of buildings with four units in them or less can apply for financial assistance covering up to 100 percent of the lead abatement costs.

***

  • In Chicago, one out of every five children screened for lead actually tests positive for an elevated level of lead in their blood. That's especially disturbing when you consider the fact that the effects of lead poisoning are irreversible.

For the story, see 1 In 5 Chicago Kids Has Elevated Lead In Blood (City Lead Abatement Program Helps Homeowners With Costs).

Property Used As Meth Lab Spells Disaster For Homebuyer; Forced To Quit Job Due To Illness, Home Now In Foreclosure

In Fort Wayne, Indiana, The Journal Gazette reports:
  • The headaches, muscle aches and breathing problems began shortly after she moved in, but Julie McCoy Sabatino was slow to blame her house for making her sick. She was shocked to realize she should: Methamphetamines had been produced in the house, just months before she bought it. Several years after the state began requiring counties to maintain records, Indiana’s accounting of its meth houses remains patchwork and incomplete. And because those public records go back only a couple of years in a state where meth has been a major problem for more than a decade, they are no help to people like McCoy Sabatino.

***

  • The previous owner – who had rented out the home to tenants who were arrested in connection with producing meth – said she had washed the walls of the home with bleach and other cleaners six times in an effort to properly clean it, according to a copy of the correspondence provided by McCoy Sabatino. That probably wasn’t enough, according to federal guidelines on meth-lab cleanup recently issued by the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency. The drug can seep into countertops and drywall. Most carpeting should probably be replaced. The remaining surfaces should be professionally tested for contamination, according to the guidelines. All this can come at wildly variable cost to the homeowner – from $5,000 to $150,000, the EPA report said. Property owners, even those not cooking meth themselves, typically foot the bill.

  • McCoy Sabatino said the health effects from living with meth’s ghosts forced her to quit her factory job and apply for disability benefits. [...] Three years after she bought the home, it’s gone into foreclosure. McCoy Sabatino said she couldn’t afford payments because of her family’s medical bills and her job loss. She said she doesn’t see the point in paying on a house she’s come to see as a death trap.

For the story, see Old meth lab poisons dream home (State recordkeeping largely outpaced by makers of drug).

In related stories, see:

Friday, October 30, 2009

BofA Revokes Loan Modification Agreements Despite Having Collected Timely Payments On Reworked Terms, Complaining Homeowners Tell Florida AG

In South Florida, the South Florida Sun Sentinel reports:
  • Hundreds of struggling Florida homeowners have filed complaints with Florida Attorney General Bill McCollum in the past year about failed or stalled home mortgage loan modifications with Bank of America. Angry borrowers, desperate to hold on to their homes, say they've made dozens of calls to their lender and spent months asking for a change in their loan terms, only to be denied or to learn that Bank of America revoked their loan modifications a few months after they reached a deal.

  • "I wrote letters to the governor, I called the bank every single month," said Yvonne McBride, a disabled former state worker who received a loan modification for the Sunrise home she shares with husband Herman Acosta. But the bank retracted the deal after, she said, she'd paid more than $9,200 to cover mortgage payments through next January.

For more, see Hundreds of loan modification complaints filed against Bank of America (Hundreds of complaints about Bank of America have been filed with the Florida attorney general over mortgages and stalled loan modifications. Other major lenders have few complaints).

In a related post, see South Florida Couple Files Suit Against Lender, Saying B of A Welched On Loan Modification Agreement.

Arizona Woman Dodges BofA's Foreclosure Sale Of Home Out From Under Her; Servicer Failed To Cancel Auction Despite Granting Loan Modification Deal

In Scottsdale, Arizona, KPHO-TV Channel 5 reports:
  • Debbie Obroc nearly lost her home to foreclosure, despite being granted a government loan modification. “I just can’t believe that your home could be sold out from under you,” Obrock said. Obrock said Bank of America failed to stop the foreclosure process, even after signing her up for modified payments in July. She learned her house was up for auction last week by coincidence when a neighbor saw Debbie’s home on a list of foreclosure sales and called to let her know she was about to lose her home. “I was shocked,” Obrock said. “I thought it was a mistake.”

  • Last minute calls complaining to Bank of America stopped the sale, but Obrock fears she could lose her home. “I ended up going to the trustee sale just to make sure I could see for myself my home wasn’t being sold,” she said. “I’m still extremely nervous. I can’t believe that this is the system.”(1)

For the story, see House Accidentally Put Up For Auction.

(1) One attorney called banks “blind octopus.” He said they have many tentacles that are unaware of what is going on with each other. “They don’t know what one hand is doing with another and they don’t communicate very clearly,” he said “They don’t say, ‘Oh I see you’re working on a modification so I won’t go forward with the trustee sale.’ You have to specifically request that. You have to be diligent with that.” He said homeowners should be aware that even as they continue to negotiate for a modification with their bank, the foreclosure process is moving forward. ForeclosureLockOuts

Florida AG Tags Five Debt Settlement Firms In Two Separate Lawsuits Alleging Deceptive Practices, Upfront Fee Ripoffs

From the Office of the Florida Attorney General:
  • Attorney General Bill McCollum [...] announced his office has filed two lawsuits on behalf of Florida consumers against five debt settlement-related companies.(1) According to the Attorney General’s lawsuits, the businesses promised consumers they could pay off their debts for a fraction of the amount owed, but instead collected large up-front fees and left customers with little or no money to pay creditors. “These victims were hit with a one-two punch: they paid substantial up-front fees for services not provided as promised, then ended up with increased debt, ruined credit, lawsuits, bankruptcy and more,” said Attorney General McCollum. [...] Both lawsuits petition the court for full victim restitution, injunctive relief, and civil penalties for each violation of Florida’s Deceptive and Unfair Trade Practices Act.

For the entire press release, see Attorney General McCollum Targets Debt Relief Industry Abuses (Two lawsuits filed alleging excessive fees and conduct defrauding consumers and damaging credit).

(1) One of the lawsuits was filed against Texas-based CSA-Credit Solutions of America, Inc., a self-proclaimed debt settlement industry leader. The lawsuit alleges that CSA unlawfully charges significant advance fees before completing or, in many instances, commencing performance of its debt settlement services. For the lawsuit, see State of Florida v. CSA-Credit Solutions of America, Inc.

The second lawsuit filed names Clearwater-based ADA of Tampa Bay, Inc., which does business as American Debt Arbitration. The lawsuit also names the company’s principal Glenn P. Stewart, as well as Arizona-based entities Nationwide Asset Services, Inc., Service Star, LLC, and Universal Debt Reduction, LLC. The lawsuit alleges the defendants promise to help consumers pay off their debts at significant savings, but fail to adequately disclose the true cost of their services. Also allegedly withheld from consumers is the fact that the companies collect at least the first three months’ of payments as fees, in violation of Florida law, before the consumer can start accumulating any funds for settlement and before any services begin. For the lawsuit, see State of Florida v. Nationwide Asset Services, Inc., et al.

41 State Attorneys General Join To Seek FTC Rules Amendments To Address Upfront Fee Debt Relief Ripoffs

In a recent letter to the Federal Trade Commission, 41 state Attorneys General have expressed their concerns regarding the sale of debt relief services to consumers and the complaints they've received about alleged deceptive trade practices and upfront fee ripoffs engaged in by these operators, and the need for amendments to the FTC's Telemarketing Sales Rule to address these concerns.(1)

For the letter, see Telemarketing Sales Rule - Debt Relief Amendments.

For a related report from the National Consumer Law Center, see An Investigation of Debt Settlement Companies: An Unsettling Business for Consumers.

(1) The AGs describe, in pages 2-4 of their letter to the FTC, the debt relief business models that are the cause for their concern:
  • In contrast to debt management plans in which consumers make monthly payments to creditors, the debt settlement business model generally requires that a consumer stop making regular payments to creditors. Instead, the consumer makes payments directly to the debt settlement company or into a separate account arranged by the settlement company. The consumer continues to pay into the account until the debt settlement company believes there are sufficient funds to attempt to negotiate and settle the consumer’s debts. Debt settlement companies do not disburse regular payments to consumers’ creditors. Presumably, withholding all payments from the creditor increases the company’s bargaining position. Almost all debt settlement companies charge a large portion of their fees in advance before they perform any significant services on behalf of the consumer. It is this business model which has been reported to be growing rapidly and has come under increased scrutiny by the media, regulators, consumer advocates, and federal, state and local enforcement agencies.

***

  • [Another] type of debt relief business [causing concern] is a relatively new breed: the debt negotiation model. These companies often represent that they can negotiate dramatic and immediate interest rate reductions on behalf of consumers and that the renegotiated credit terms will save the consumers thousands of dollars in a matter of months. Debt negotiation companies further claim that their counselors are specially trained and possess industry-insider knowledge and that consumers will not achieve similar results working directly with their credit card companies. The written agreements between debt negotiation companies and consumers, however, typically disavow the debt negotiation companies’ ability or obligation to secure reduced interest rates and merely promise to “show” consumers savings of thousands of dollars. After the consumer completes a financial profile, debt negotiation companies typically “show” the promised savings in an accelerated payment schedule. The “savings” are usually based on assumed interest rate reductions and increased monthly payments, which the debt negotiation companies’ customers usually cannot afford to pay. Like the debt settlement model, most debt negotiation companies charge all of their fees in advance, before any services are performed on behalf of the consumer.

Internet Rent Scams Target Renters Using Phony Listings Based On Legitimate Information

In Nokomis, Florida, the Sarasota Herald Tribune reports:
  • Real estate agent Nicki Conway has spent the past week trying to steer people away from a rental fraud involving a house she is working to sell. Information about the house has been posted on the Web site craigslist.com by someone with no connection to the property who is trying to collect money from the bogus rental listing. The site offers the low rent price of $790 a month for a three-bedroom, two-bath unit, including utilities.

  • The too-good-to-be-true terms are generating considerable attention, and Conway fears for any would-be tenants who fail to check out the property before sending money to the online scammer. "Obviously the ad is working because they're getting a big response," Conway said this week, after fielding three calls from people who saw the fraudulent posting for a house that she says would command at least $1,600 in monthly rent.

  • Similar online rental property scams that hit other parts of Florida are apparently cropping up in Sarasota County. The scammers base their fake listings, e-mails and phone calls on photos and details gleaned from legitimate sales listings.

For more, see Internet scammers take aim at renters (THE STING: Con artists are using data on real homes to create fake ad listings). KappaPhonyLandlordScam

Thursday, October 29, 2009

Nevada AG's Mortgage Fraud Task Force Raids Title & Escrow Company

In Henderson, Nevada, KLAS-TV Channel 8 reports:
  • A Henderson title and escrow office was the focus of a raid by the Nevada Attorney General's Office. Mortgage fraud investigators took over the office Tuesday morning to investigate. The office of American United Title and Escrow had a steady stream of investigators in and out of the business all day. The AG's office is not releasing any details about the investigation because charges have not been filed. Agents were seen going through paperwork in several of the offices. Also, an SUV parked in front of the office was being taken away on a tow truck.

  • The mortgage fraud task force is conducting this raid -- a group that was formed about a year ago as a response to the rise mortgage scams around the state.

For the story, see Mortgage Fraud Task Force Raids Title Company.

Suspected Colorado Home Hijacker May Be Federal Fugitive Accused Of Rent Skimming In Utah

In Parker, Colorado, KUSA-TV Channel 9 reports on an alleged rental scam involving a man who approaches homeowners facing foreclosure and allegedly cons them, under color of an official having some connection with the foreclosure action, into moving out and turning over possession of their homes to him. He then allegedly rents the home to unsuspecting tenants and milks the rent out of the home.
  • On Craigslist, 9NEWS discovered [Greg] Castle listed at least 21 homes from the metro area and several in Florida, Nevada, Arizona and Kansas. New homes continue to appear each month. Homeowner after homeowner told 9NEWS Castle convinced them to sign an "Assignment of Surrender and Possession" document they thought was the final paperwork from their banks. [...] In fine print at the bottom it says Associated Home Inspection, Castle's supposed company, has the right to take possession of the house and move new people in to "house sit" the property. Castle collects the rent, homeowners don't get a cent.

***

  • [O]ne of Castle's renters forwarded 9NEWS a letter from Castle with a return address for a home in Ogden, Utah. The address traced back to Gordon Miller - a man charged in 2005 with equity skimming, mail fraud and wire fraud after prosecutors say he ran a scheme very similar to what victims claim he runs now. When it came time for Miller to face a jury, he never showed up for court. U.S. Marshals now consider him a fugitive.

  • After 9Wants to Know showed United States Marshal deputies in Utah the evidence it uncovered linking Castle to Miller, deputies tell us they believe Castle and Miller are the same person. "It appears from your investigation, and what you guys have in Colorado, that he's up to his new tricks. Same thing, just different state," Supervisor Deputy U.S. Marshal Mike Wingert said. 9Wants to Know has learned when Miller was charged in 2005, the first name of one of the attorneys involved in the case was Greg and the last name of a prosecutor was Castle.

For more, see Who is Greg Castle?

For follow-up stores, see:

  • More victims of Castle rental scheme come forward: 9Wants to Know has also learned that officials in Gillette, Wyoming have joined the Parker Police Department, Arapahoe County District Attorney's office and the Colorado Attorney General's office investigating Castle. [...] 9NEWS viewers in Milliken, Greeley and Castle Rock say they too were victims of Castle's scheme. 9Wants to Know has identified homes listed by Castle in Colorado, Kansas, Florida, Arizona, Nevada and now possibly Wyoming.

  • Man accused of foreclosure scheme responds: The man 9Wants to Know exposed for running a sophisticated rental scheme won't turn himself over to authorities, but responded to our story in the comment section on 9NEWS.com. KappaPhonyLandlordScam

Suspected Home Hijacking Case Once Considered "Civil Matter" Will Now Be Treated As Criminal Trespass, Say Cops

In Boise, Idaho, the Idaho Statesman reports:
  • Caroline Werner may finally get some help in getting a stranger out of her mother-in-law's house. A Boise man named David Foldesi claims he owns the house, even though Ada County officials have repeatedly told Werner and the Idaho Statesman he does not.(1) Marcella Boylan, Werner's mother-in-law, owns the Sunset Avenue home, county records and officials say. But she lives in a nursing home and suffers from Alzheimer's. She cannot sell the house because the equity is being used to pay for her health care. Werner has sole power of attorney and is Boylan's last remaining relative.

  • Initially, Boise police said it was a property dispute and therefore a civil matter. But an attorney contacted by Werner said it looked like criminal trespass, and therefore a police matter. On Wednesday, Boise police confirmed Boylan is the rightful owner and they consider it a criminal matter.(2)
For more, see Dispute over ownership of home in Boise's North End may be resolved (Boise police now agree the man who claims to own it — and has been renting it out, does not, so they can pursue criminal charges if he returns to the house).

For the initial report in this story, see Stranger rents out Boise woman's home without her permission (A Boise house belongs to a nursing-home resident, officials say, but a man profits from renting it out).

(1) According to the story, for almost two years, Foldesi has been renting out the house, which he says he owns since paying unpaid property taxes on it in 2007. He has not made any property tax payments for the property since then.

(2) Regrettably, a victim of this type of scam may sometimes need to retain an attorney to "communicate with" (ie. light a fire under) the local cops, such as in this story. I suspect that the ideal attorney to retain to communicate with police in this type of case would be an ex-prosecutor who is now in private practice - one who is experienced in the criminal justice process, well-versed in the "language of law enforcement," and one who won't allow local cops to dismiss cases like this as "civil matters." hijack

Another Foreclosure Misidentification Screw-Up Results In Pair "Cleaning Out" Wrong Home; DA Declines Prosecution - Says It's A Civil Matter

In Statesville, North Carolina, the Statesville Record & Landmark:
  • A case in which two men took items from a house and encouraged neighbors to do the same is the result of a mistaken address. That's what Statesville Police Chief Tom Anderson said happened at the home of Gene and Linda Medlin [...] in August. Two men came to the Medlin's home, which is not their primary residence, and told neighbors that they were with the IRS and were seizing the house. The two men told neighbors they were going to take some of the items, and the neighbors could have the rest. During the next several hours, on a Sunday afternoon, neighbors cleaned out the house.

***

  • Anderson said during the subsequent investigation it was learned that the two actually said they were working for a bank that was seizing the house. [...] Investigators questioned the man and found he was working for Citizens South Bank in Monroe and was hired to clean out a house in foreclosure. The only problem was, the house was at 532 Davis St., not East Front Street, Anderson said.

  • The man said he relied on his GPS unit, which indicated he was at the right address on both Aug. 2 and Oct. 17, and did not look at the street signs. Anderson said investigators spoke with the bank, and learned the two men were hired contractors, and the custom was to seize whatever was of value and to put anything else out to be picked up as garbage. That's the reason the two invited neighbors to take what was left. Anderson said most of Medlin's stolen property — including a John Deere lawn mower and trailer — were recovered. Some items, including a handgun, some restaurant chafing dishes, a weed trimmer and chain saw — are still missing.

  • Anderson said the case was reviewed by the district attorney's office and the decision was made not to press charges. He said the man lacked criminal intent and therefore the case is a civil matter. Any action on the case will have to be taken by the Medlins in civil court.(1)

For the story, see Wrong address: Home seizure case solved.

(1) In a 2008 story, the Nevada Supreme Court approved a damages award of over $1 million (including a punitive damages award of $968,000 - reduced from an original award of $2.5 million) to a homeowner couple who were subjected to a similar indignity resulting from a lender/mortgage servicer screw-up involving the misidentification of a home in foreclosure. See Nevada High Court OKs Damage Award To Homeowner Due To Mortgage Company Misidentification Of Home In Foreclosure.

For the Nevada Supreme Court ruling, see Countrywide Home Loans v. Thitchener, 192 P.3d 243; 2008 Nev. LEXIS 79; 124 Nev. Adv. Rep. 64 (September 11, 2008). ForeclosureLockOuts

Escrow Agent Cops Plea To $470K+ Closing Proceeds Ripoff; Insurance Premiums, Closing Costs Left Unpaid; Title Underwriter Left Picking Up The Tab

In Minneapolis, Minnesota, Minnesota Public Radio reports:
  • A Prior Lake woman pled guilty Friday to stealing more than $470,000 in a mortgage fraud scam. Roseann Wagner admitted operating a scheme to defraud mortgage lenders, borrowers, and a title insurance underwriter in 2007. Wagner, a licensed insurance agent, accepted more than $470,000 from lenders at hundreds of closings, and then pocketed the money.

  • As a result, title insurance premiums, title search costs, and recording fees on hundreds of residential mortgage transactions went unpaid. Wagner owned and operated Tri-Star Title, a title insurance agency. Tri-Star was the insurance agent for Stewart Title Guaranty Co., a Texas-based title insurance underwriting company. When Stewart Title Guaranty discovered that Wagner had stolen the funds, it absorbed the losses of the borrowers, and paid the premiums and other expenses.

  • Wagner also admitted that she failed to file a tax return or pay taxes on more than $270,000 in 2007. She owes the Internal Revenue Service at least $70,000.

For the story, see Woman pleads guilty to $470,000 mortgage fraud scam. EscrowRipOffKappa