Sunday, January 22, 2012

Illinois AG Tags Two With Criminal Charges For Allegedly Promising To Save Homeowners From Foreclosure By Peddling Sale Leaseback Schemes

From the Office of the Illinois Attorney General:
  • Attorney General Lisa Madigan announced the arrest of a Chicago man who stole more than $350,000 in a wide-reaching mortgage fraud scheme in which they promised to help desperate homeowners avoid foreclosure.


  • Madigan said defendant Warren Jackson, 41, of Chicago, was arrested late Thursday and is being held in Cook County jail. Yolanda King, 46, of Chicago, who was also charged in the scheme, was arrested on Jan. 10. Both were formally indicted earlier this month.


  • Jackson was charged with one count of organizing a continuing financial crimes enterprise, four counts of financial institution fraud and three counts of theft by deception, one count of criminal mortgage rescue fraud, one count of forgery by delivery, and one count of false impersonation of an attorney. King was charged with two counts of financial institution fraud and one count of forgery by delivery.
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  • Jackson and King are facing six to 30 years and four to 15 years in the Illinois Department of Corrections, respectively.


  • Madigan alleges that Jackson orchestrated two mortgage-related schemes involving Chicago homeowners. King was charged for her role in helping Jackson perpetuate these schemes. The first scam targeted homeowners at risk of foreclosure, promising to save their homes by negotiating lower mortgage payments. Madigan alleges that after collecting upfront fees, Jackson failed to negotiate or perform any services on behalf of the homeowners, placing their victims at even greater risk of foreclosure.


  • In the second scheme, called a sale-leasebackto purportedly save the homeowner’s home,(1) Jackson used straw buyers to purchase homes from distressed homeowners, sometimes falsely promising them that they could pay rent for a year and then could potentially buy back the property. Jackson also tricked homeowners into unknowingly selling their homes to straw buyers by leading them to believe that they were signing paperwork for a new loan to help them avoid foreclosure.


  • Madigan alleges that Jackson used the sale-leaseback scheme to transfer title from homeowners to straw buyers for the purpose of stripping the remaining equity from the home. Individual homeowners lost from $70,000 to $150,000 of equity in their homes as a result of the schemes.(2)
For the Illinois AG press release, see Madigan: Two Chicago Con Artists Arrested In Criminal Mortgage Scheme.
(1) For more on this type of foreclosure rescue ripoff, see:
(2) At one time, many in state and local law enforcement (particularly those with untrained eyes and who were otherwise clueless in handling 'semi-sophisticated' white collar crimes - for some, anything more complex than investigating a 'rubber check' case is 'semi-sophisticated') once passed on prosecuting these sale leaseback equity stripping ripoffs that under the flimsy pretense that these cases were merely 'civil matters.'

Over the last couple of years, it's been primarily the Feds (U.S. Attorneys, FBI, Secret Service, etc.) that have been bringing prosecutions in these equity stripping ripoffs. However, as this story reflects, more and more state court prosecutors now appear to be stepping up to the plate and showing some guts by bringing criminal charges against these scammers. See, for example: