Mortgage Broker, Title Attorney, and Loan Officer Sentenced in $37 Million Florida Mortgage Fraud Scam
Three real estate industry insiders have been sentenced in Florida for their roles in a humongous real estate fraud conspiracy. Richard Crowder, II, a former licensed mortgage broker and owner of America’s Best Mortgage Services, along with former title attorney Gary Mills (who owned Four Star Title) and a former Wachovia Bank loan officer (Karen Sullivan), all received stiff sentences on Wednesday from U.S. District Judge Jose Martinez. Crowder received nine (9) years’, while Mill and Sullivan received three years’ and eight months and four years’ and one month imprisonment, respectively. All three are scheduled to appear again in court on May 29 for a hearing to determine the amount of restitution they must pay to the victims in this case.
To carry out their scheme, mortgage broker Crowder identified residential properties, including luxury condominiums on South Beach in Miami, Florida, that were available for purchase. He then recruited buyers for the properties, representing that he could obtain 100% financing for their purchase. After finding a purchaser, Crowder would apply for equity lines of credit on their behalf with Wachovia Bank. To induce Wachovia to issue the equity lines of credit, Crowder and title attorney Mills prepared fraudulent HUD-1 settlement forms stating the buyers already owned the properties and also significantly understated the amount of the first mortgages on the properties. The fraudulent HUD-1 settlement forms were then given to Wachovia Bank loan officer Sullivan, who used the forms to facilitate the issuance of equity lines of credit from the bank.
Simultaneously, or shortly after obtaining the equity lines of credit from Wachovia, Crowder applied for the first mortgages on the properties. These applications overstated the buyers’ assets and income, and also included false verification of deposit forms prepared by Wachovia Bank loan officer Karen Sullivan. To further induce the lenders to issue the loans, title attorney Gary Mills prepared documents falsely representing that the buyers were using their own money for the down payments and closing costs. In fact, the buyers were using funds from the fraudulently obtained Wachovia equity lines credit or funds provided by mortgage broker Richard Crowder.
At the end of the day, Crowder, Mills and Sullivan caused the fraudulent purchase of 17 different luxury condominiums at The Continuum on South Beach and at The Point of Aventura using more than $37,000,000 in fraudulently obtained mortgage loans.
Filed under: Mortgage Fraud, Real Estate Fraud, Florida, Attorneys, Trial





In the end greed isn’t good afterall. Seriously, did these idiots think they wouldn’t get caught? Hmm, any EPD and FPD audit wouldn’t take long to piece this puzzle together. Several deals with the same broker, same bank, same L/O and same title company,kind of a lesson on what not to do if you’re going to commit mortgage fraud.
Comment by Former Underwriter — April 29, 2008 @ 10:58 pm
What if the same person owned all companies involved who would report them?
Who would know what they are doing?
Comment by Bob — April 30, 2008 @ 11:45 am
What makes you think it DOESN”T pay? $37,000,000 / 17 yrs = $2.2million/year served. If they can get out on good behavior in 1/2 the time that brings it closer to $4.0million per year served.
The real question is WHERE’s THE MONEY???? That is the question that nobody seems interested to ask….after all it didn’t evaporate; why can’t we get it back, and why don’t we spend more time talking about that? It was also a question not pursed in the wake of the BCCI scandal.
Comment by inter party — April 30, 2008 @ 4:08 pm