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May 11, 2011

Loan Officer Sentenced to 21 Months in Prison for Mortgage Fraud Scheme

PITTSBURGH—A resident of Allegheny County has been sentenced in federal court to 21 months of incarceration followed by two years of supervised release on his conviction of wire fraud conspiracy, United States Attorney David J. Hickton announced today.

United States District Judge Joy Flowers Conti imposed the sentence yesterday on Constantino Papastergous, 40, of Allison Park, Pa. Judge Conti’s sentencing order also requires Papastergous to repay more than $1,000,000 in restitution.

According to information presented to the court, Papastergous was a loan officer for Steel City Mortgage, which was a mortgage broker company. Papastergous and other individuals associated with Steel City Mortgage used Kenneth Cowden, an unlicensed appraiser who submitted fraudulent appraisals using the names of licensed appraisers, to prepare more than $85 million of fraudulent appraisals for Steel City Mortgage. The appraisals were fraudulent in that they falsely represented that they were prepared by a licensed appraiser and because they overstated the value of the property serving as collateral for the loans. Papastergous and other individuals associated with Steel City also submitted loan applications and supporting documents that misrepresented the financial status of the borrowers, including their income and assets.

Assistant United States Attorney Brendan T. Conway prosecuted this case on behalf of the government.

U.S. Attorney Hickton commended the Mortgage Fraud Task Force for the investigation leading to the successful prosecution of Papastergous. The Mortgage Fraud Task Force is comprised of investigators from federal, state, and local law enforcement agencies and others involved in the mortgage industry. Federal law enforcement agencies participating in the Mortgage Task Force include the Federal Bureau of Investigation; the Internal Revenue Service – Criminal Investigation; the United States Department of Housing and Urban Development, Office of Inspector General; the United States Postal Inspection Service; and the United States Secret Service. Other Mortgage Fraud Task Force members include the Allegheny County Sheriff’s Office; the Pennsylvania Attorney General’s Office, Bureau of Consumer Protection; the Pennsylvania Department of Banking; the Pennsylvania Department of State, Bureau of Enforcement and Investigation; and the United States Trustee’s Office.

Mortgage industry members with knowledge of fraudulent activity are encouraged to call the Mortgage Fraud Task Force at (412) 894-7550. Consumers are encouraged to report suspected mortgage fraud by calling the Pennsylvania Attorney General’s Consumer Protection Hotline at (800) 441-2555.

May 5, 2011

Maple Grove Loan Officer Pleads Guilty to Participating in Mortgage Fraud Scheme

Earlier today in federal court in Minneapolis, a former loan officer for Wells Fargo Bank pleaded guilty to participating in a $4.3 million mortgage fraud scheme. Larry Gene Hillard, age 56, of Maple Grove, pleaded guilty to one count of conspiracy to commit wire fraud. Hillard, who was charged on March 10, 2011, entered his plea before United States District Court Judge Ann D. Montgomery.

In his plea agreement, Hillard admitted that between 2007 and August 21, 2008, he participated in 12 fraudulent transactions with Truang Quang Tran and Thanh Van Ngo, owners of Invescorp. Hillard admitted that in his capacity as a loan officer, he received from Tran and Ngo personal information regarding several people for the purpose of running run credit reports on them. He then gave those reports to Tran and Ngo. He subsequently received a loan application in the name of one of the individuals who had a good credit score. In addition, he provided Tran and Ngo with specific information about the assets and income required to qualify for a particular loan. Then, a short time later, he received loan applications that contained the information he previously provided. Hillard also admittedly completed fraudulent loan applications. The loan amounts for the 12 properties involved in this fraud scheme totaled more than $4.3 million. The loss amount was more than $1.4 million.

For his crime, Hillard faces a potential maximum penalty of five years in prison. Judge Montgomery will determine his sentence at a future hearing, yet to be scheduled. This case is the result of an investigation by the Federal Bureau of Investigation. It is being prosecuted by Assistant U.S. Attorney Christian S. Wilton.

Tran was earlier sentenced to 24 months in federal prison for his role in the scheme. On April 20, 2011, Ngo was sentenced to 12 months and one day in prison. Three co-defendants also have been sentenced.

This law enforcement action is in part sponsored by the interagency Financial Fraud Enforcement Task Force. The task force was established to wage an aggressive, coordinated, and proactive effort to investigate and prosecute financial crimes. It includes representatives from a broad range of federal agencies, regulatory authorities, inspectors general, and state and local law enforcement who, working together, bring to bear a powerful array of criminal and civil enforcement resources. The task force is working to improve efforts across the federal executive branch and, with state and local partners, investigate and prosecute significant financial crimes, ensure just and effective punishment for those who perpetrate financial crimes, combat discrimination in the lending and financial markets, and recover proceeds for victims of financial crimes.

April 14, 2011

CEO of Home Start America and Associated Loan Officer Admit Roles in $1.5 Million Fraud Conspiracy

NEWARK, NJ—Michael Kaufman, the CEO and founder of purported real estate investment firm Home Start America, Inc. (“HSA”), and loan officer David Wynn admitted yesterday and today to directing a long-running, large-scale wire fraud conspiracy through Kaufman’s company, U.S. Attorney Paul J. Fishman announced.

Kaufman, 43, of Reading, Pa., pleaded guilty Monday, April 11, 2011, to a superseding indictment charging both men with conspiracy to commit wire fraud. Wynn, 45, of Englewood, N.J., pleaded guilty today to the same charge. Both defendants entered their guilty pleas before U.S. District Judge Dennis M. Cavanaugh in Newark federal court.

According to documents filed in this case and statements made in court:

Kaufman founded HSA in Bloomfield, N.J., and at one time employed more than 30 people. Kaufman, through HSA, purchased and sold residential real estate properties. As part of the scheme, Kaufman and others recruited people—often first-time home buyers—to purchase properties quickly, with promises of no money down, no closing costs, and repairs paid for by HSA. Kaufman would then steer the purchasers to loan officers, including Wynn.

Many of the properties sold by HSA had actually been bought by HSA shortly before, and then “flipped” to the unsuspecting buyers for far more than HSA paid. Kaufman, Wynn, and others falsely inflated the buyers’ income and assets on loan documents to make it appear that the buyers could afford the properties HSA was selling, when the purchasers did not have the means to buy the properties.

Victim financial institutions—relying on the false figures in the loan documents—then issued the mortgage loans, unaware of the purchasers’ true financial conditions. HSA and Kaufman received illicit profits when the transactions closed, and Wynn and other loan officers received commissions for their fraudulent work. After the closings, the buyers could not make the payments on the properties, and nearly always lost the properties to foreclosure.

The fraud, which began as early as 2002 and lasted through June 2005, caused over $1.5 million in loss to the banks, and earned hundreds of thousands of dollars in profits for Kaufman and HSA.

At sentencing, Kaufman and Wynn each face a maximum of 20 years in jail and a fine of $250,000, or twice the gain or loss derived from their offenses.

U.S. Attorney Fishman praised the Department of Housing and Urban Development’s Office of Inspector General, under the direction of Joseph W. Clarke, Special Agent in Charge for the Mid-Atlantic Region; and the FBI, under the direction of Special Agent in Charge Michael B. Ward, for the investigation of this case.

The government is represented by Assistant U.S. Attorneys Bohdan Vitvitsky and Zach Intrater of the U.S. Attorney’s Office Criminal Division in Newark.

Defense counsel:
Kaufman: Robert De Groot, Esq., Newark, N.J.
Wynn: Stephen N. Dratch, Esq., Livingston, N.J.

April 10, 2011

Man Sentenced to More Than Three Years in Federal Prison in Mortgage Fraud Scheme

Defendant Apprehended on a Shrimp Boat in Caribbean Sea

DALLAS—James Ragnauth, a defendant charged in a mortgage fraud case, who was on the lam for about six weeks and apprehended on a shrimp boat in the Caribbean Sea by the U.S. Coast Guard in March 2009, was sentenced today by U.S. District Judge Sidney Fitzwater to 37 months in federal prison, announced U.S. Attorney James T. Jacks of the Northern District of Texas. Judge Fitzwater also ordered Ragnauth to pay approximately $205,000 in restitution.

Ragnauth pleaded guilty in September 2009 to one count of causing false entries to deceive the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD). According to the indictment, Ragnauth incorporated J.R. Mortgage, located in Dallas, and was in charge of the company’s day-to-day loan operations and supervised several loan officers, including co-defendant Rosa Irene Galvan and Ignacio Juan Jasso, charged in a related case.

Ragnauth admitted in documents filed in court that in 1997 and 1998, he and loan officer Jasso knowingly and willfully made false entries in HUD statements in connection with several residential loans. As part of their scheme to defraud HUD, Ragnauth and Jasso created, and caused others to create and later submit to HUD, several false and fraudulent documents, such as a Uniform Residential Loan Application which contained false information, a fraudulent W-2 form and a fraudulent credit report. At the sentencing hearing today, Ragnauth was found to be the organizer leader of a mortgage fraud scheme that caused the fraudulent funding of 30 residential loans, totaling more than $1.8 million.

Both Galvan and Jasso have pleaded guilty to their roles and are scheduled to be sentenced on February 26, 2010.

While Ragnauth was a fugitive in the Beaumont, Texas area, the U.S. Marshals Service in Beaumont featured Ragnauth’s photo on local newscasts along with information that he might be leaving the U.S. on a boat from Port Arthur, Texas. Ragnauth, a naturalized citizen, was captured by the U.S. Coast Guard when he was attempting to flee to his native Guyana. Guyana is located just east of Venezuela on the northern coast of South America. Ragnauth made it about half way to Guyana, being arrested in international waters between Cuba and Haiti.

The case was investigated by the FBI and HUD-Office of Inspector General. Assistant U.S. Attorney David Jarvis was in charge of the prosecution.

March 23, 2011

Former Bank President and Senior Loan Officer Indicted in Multi-Million-Dollar Fraud Conspiracy

Failed Stockbridge Bank Allegedly Fleeced Before Being Seized By Feds

ATLANTA—An indictment unsealed today charges two former top officers of FirstCity Bank of Stockbridge, Georgia—MARK A. CONNER, 44, formerly of Canton, Georgia, and CLAYTON A. COE, 44, of McDonough, Georgia—with a variety of offenses, including conspiracy to commit bank fraud and bank fraud in connection with misconduct at FirstCity Bank in the years before the bank’s seizure by state and federal authorities on March 20, 2009. In addition to the conspiracy and bank fraud charges, the indictment charges CONNER with conducting a continuing financial crimes enterprise at the bank between February 2006 and February 2008, during which CONNER’s and his co-conspirators’ crimes allegedly generated over $5 million in unlawful gross proceeds.

A federal grand jury in Atlanta returned the sealed indictment against CONNER and COE on March 16, 2011. CONNER was arrested on the charges and taken into custody by federal agents at Miami International Airport yesterday morning, the two-year anniversary of FirstCity Bank’s failure, upon his arrival in Miami from the Turks and Caicos Islands in the West Indies. CONNER made his initial appearance today before a federal magistrate judge in Miami, who preliminarily ordered CONNER to be detained as a flight risk pending his transfer by Deputy U.S. Marshals from Miami to Atlanta for trial. A formal detention hearing will take place in Miami on Thursday, March 24, 2011, at 1:30 p.m. COE’s initial appearance on the indictment in the Northern District of Georgia has not yet been scheduled.

United States Attorney Sally Quillian Yates said, “The entire country has felt the deep economic impact of failed banks. At the heart of this indictment is an abuse of power by key insiders, who are charged with tricking their own colleagues into approving millions of dollars in commercial loans to fund the defendants’ own personal business activities, and to enrich themselves at the bank’s expense. Along the way, these defendants also allegedly defrauded state and federal bank regulators and examiners, and at least 10 other federally insured banks in Florida and Georgia that invested in the fraudulent multi-million-dollar loans.”

FDIC Inspector General Jon Rymer said, “The Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation (FDIC) Office of Inspector General (OIG) is pleased to join the United States Attorney’s Office for the Northern District of Georgia and our law enforcement colleagues in announcing this indictment. We are particularly concerned when former senior bank officials, who have held positions of trust within their institutions, are alleged to have been involved in criminal activity. We will continue to aggressively pursue bank officials and others who victimize financial institutions.”

Neil Barofsky, SIGTARP Special Inspector General for the Troubled Asset Relief Program said, “Today’s indictment marks yet another occasion where bank executives are alleged to have turned to criminal fraud in the midst of the financial crisis, including an attempt to obtain millions of dollars from the American taxpayer through the Troubled Asset Relief Program. SIGTARP will continue to work with our law enforcement partners to bring those who engage in such crimes to justice.”

IRS-Criminal Investigation Special Agent in Charge Reginael McDaniel said of the case, “Honest and law abiding citizens are fed up with the likes of those who use deceit and fraud to line their pockets with other people’s money. Those individuals who engage in this type of financial fraud should know they will not go undetected and will be held accountable.”

According to United States Attorney Yates, the charges, and other information presented in court: CONNER served in a variety of top positions at FirstCity Bank between 2004 and 2009, including as vice-chairman of the board of directors, as a member of the banks’ loan committee, as president, and later as acting chairman and chief executive officer. COE served as a vice-president and as FirstCity Bank’s senior commercial loan officer. While serving in these positions, CONNER, COE, and their co-conspirators allegedly conspired to defraud FirstCity Bank’s loan committee and board of directors into approving multiple multi-million-dollar commercial loans to borrowers who, unbeknownst to FirstCity Bank, were actually purchasing property owned by CONNER or COE personally.

The indictment charges that CONNER, COE, and their co-conspirators misrepresented the essential nature, terms, and underlying purpose of the loans and falsified documents and information presented to the loan committee and the Board of Directors. CONNER, COE, and their co-conspirators then allegedly caused at least 10 other federally insured banks to invest in, or “participate in” the fraudulent loans based on these and other fraudulent misrepresentations, shifting all or part of the risk of default to the other banks. COE’s bonus compensation was tied to the origination of FirstCity Bank loans, including the fraudulent loans with which he and CONNER allegedly assisted each other.

In the process of defrauding FirstCity Bank and the “participating” banks, CONNER, COE, and their co-conspirators allegedly routinely misled federal and state bank regulators and examiners to conceal their unlawful scheme. They also unsuccessfully sought federal government assistance through the U.S. Treasury Department’s Troubled Asset Relief Program (“TARP”) and engaged in other misconduct in an attempt to avoid seizure by regulators and prevent the discovery of their fraud.

The charge against CONNER for conducting a continuing financial crimes enterprise carries a mandatory minimum sentence of 10 years in federal prison, a maximum sentence of life in prison, and a potential fine of up to $10 million. The conspiracy and bank fraud charges against CONNER and COE, and a remaining charge against COE for fraudulently influencing the actions of a federally insured bank, carry a maximum sentence of 30 years in prison and a potential fine of up to $1 million on each count. In determining the actual sentences for each defendant, the court will consider the United States Sentencing Guidelines, which are not binding but provide appropriate sentencing ranges for most offenders.

Members of the public are reminded that the indictment only contains charges. The defendant is presumed innocent of the charges and it will be the government’s burden to prove the defendant’s guilt beyond a reasonable doubt at trial.

President Obama established the interagency Financial Fraud Enforcement Task Force to wage an aggressive, coordinated, and proactive effort to investigate and prosecute financial crimes. The task force includes representatives from a broad range of federal agencies, regulatory authorities, inspectors general, and state and local law enforcement who, working together, bring to bear a powerful array of criminal and civil enforcement resources. The task force is working to improve efforts across the federal executive branch, and with state and local partners, to investigate and prosecute significant financial crimes, ensure just and effective punishment for those who perpetrate financial crimes, combat discrimination in the lending and financial markets, and recover proceeds for victims of financial crimes.

This case is being investigated by special agents of the FDIC, Office of Inspector General; the Office of the Special Inspector General for the Troubled Asset Relief Program (“SIGTARP”), the Federal Bureau of Investigation, and Internal Revenue Service-Criminal Investigation.

Assistant United States Attorneys Douglas W. Gilfillan and David M. Chaiken are prosecuting the case.

For further information please contact Sally Q. Yates, United States Attorney, or Charysse L. Alexander, Executive Assistant United States Attorney, through Patrick Crosby, Public Affairs Officer, U.S. Attorney’s Office, at (404) 581-6016. The Internet address for the HomePage for the U.S. Attorney’s Office for the Northern District of Georgia is www.justice.gov/usao/gan.

March 16, 2011

Twin Cities-Area Brothers Plead Guilty to Operating a $4 Million Mortgage Fraud Scheme

Earlier today in federal court in Minneapolis, two brothers pleaded guilty to orchestrating a $4 million mortgage fraud scheme that defrauded 24 area lenders. Baretta Dean Bork, age 35, of Mound, and Xavier Willis Bork, age 32, of Eden Prairie, pleaded guilty to one count of conspiracy to commit mortgage fraud through the use of wires and income tax refund fraud. The pleas were entered before United States District Court Judge Ann. D. Montgomery. The defendants were charged on January 31, 2011.

In their plea agreements, the defendants admitted that between December of 2003 and March of 2008, they engaged in a scheme that resulted in more than $4 million in losses to mortgage lenders. The brothers worked as loan officers through several mortgage brokerage companies. Through their work, they recruited straw buyers to purchase 33 properties. They also completed false mortgage loan applications on behalf of those straw purchasers.

To prompt lenders to grant loans to the straw buyers, the Borks exaggerated the incomes and lied about the employment status of those straw buyers. They also omitted from the loan applications information regarding other loan obligations the straw buyers already had incurred. As part of the scheme, the properties were purchased at inflated prices, and upon receipt of the mortgage loans, the loan proceeds were distributed to the straw buyers and the defendants.

In addition, the Borks admittedly recruited 26 people to file false U.S. Individual Income Tax Returns, claiming refunds totaling more than $154,000. The defendants provided those filers with false W-2 forms that indicated they worked for the Borks. To facilitate their tax scheme, the Borks also established two shell companies.

For their crimes, the defendants face a potential maximum penalty of five years in prison. Judge Montgomery will determine their sentences at a future hearing, yet to be scheduled.

This case is the result of an investigation by the Federal Bureau of Investigation and the Internal Revenue Service-Criminal Investigation Division. It is being prosecuted by Assistant U.S. Attorney David J. MacLaughlin.

This law enforcement action is in part sponsored by the interagency Financial Fraud Enforcement Task Force. The task force was established to wage an aggressive, coordinated, and proactive effort to investigate and prosecute financial crimes. It includes representatives from a broad range of federal agencies, regulatory authorities, inspectors general, and state and local law enforcement who, working together, bring to bear a powerful array of criminal and civil enforcement resources. The task force is working to improve efforts across the federal executive branch and, with state and local partners, investigate and prosecute significant financial crimes, ensure just and effective punishment for those who perpetrate financial crimes, combat discrimination in the lending and financial markets, and recover proceeds for victims of financial crimes.

February 23, 2011

New London Man Charged with Operating Mortgage Fraud Scheme

David B. Fein, United States Attorney for the District of Connecticut, today announced that a federal grand jury sitting in New Haven has returned an indictment charging SYED A. BABAR, also known as “Ali,” 28, of Ledyard Street, New London, with one count of conspiracy to commit wire fraud and two counts of wire fraud. The charges stem from a mortgage fraud conspiracy that BABAR is alleged to have headed.

The indictment alleges that, between February 2007 and April 2010, BABAR, along with a mortgage broker, a real estate appraiser, two attorneys, and others, engaged in a scheme to obtain millions of dollars in residential real estate loans, including loans insured by the Federal Housing Administration, through the use of sham sales contracts, false loan applications and fraudulent property appraisals.

The indictment alleges that BABAR recruited and paid straw purchasers to nominally purchase homes. BABAR and his co-conspirators then directed the straw purchasers to enter into sales contracts with the sellers of homes for a price higher than the actual price that the seller would receive. Members of the conspiracy submitted false documentation in connection with loan applications that were submitted, including fraudulent appraisals of the properties being purchased in order to justify the inflated sales price and the loan amount being sought to fund each purchase. The indictment further alleges that BABAR and others created a fictitious construction company called “Sheda Telle Construction, LLC,” in order to divert fraud proceeds to it and, in some cases, to falsely justify the artificially inflated sales price of houses based on renovations purportedly made to the property that, in fact, did not occur. BABAR and his co-conspirators then split the fraud proceeds.

Contrary to the representations made on the loan applications, it is alleged that the straw purchasers never occupied the houses as their primary residences. They defaulted on the loans they obtained and let the houses go into foreclosure.

According to statements made in court, it is alleged that BABAR and his co-conspirators conducted this scheme on more than 25 properties in New London, New Haven, and other locations in Connecticut. As a result, it is alleged that various lenders suffered a loss of at least $2.5 million.

The indictment was returned on April 27, 2010, and unsealed today. BABAR was arrested on May 12. Today, United States Magistrate Judge Donna F. Martinez in Hartford ordered BABAR detained while the case is pending.

The charges of conspiracy to commit wire fraud and wire fraud carry a maximum term of imprisonment of 20 years on each count.

U.S. Attorney Fein stressed that an indictment is only a charge and is not evidence of guilt. The defendant is entitled to a fair trial at which it is the government’s burden to prove guilt beyond a reasonable doubt.

U.S. Attorney Fein stated that the investigation is ongoing.

This case is being investigated by the Federal Bureau of Investigation and is being prosecuted by Assistant United States Attorney Eric J. Glover.

In July 2009, the U.S. Attorney’s Office and the Federal Bureau of Investigation announced the formation of the Connecticut Mortgage Fraud Task Force to investigate and prosecute mortgage fraud cases and related financial crimes occurring in Connecticut. In addition to investigating past mortgage fraud schemes, the Task Force will focus on emerging crime trends that are associated with the growing tide of foreclosures, including foreclosure rescue schemes, and short sale schemes. Citizens are encouraged to report any suspected mortgage fraud activity by calling 203-333-3512 and requesting the Connecticut Mortgage Fraud Task Force, or by sending an e-mail to ctmortgagefraud@ic.fbi.gov.

The Connecticut Mortgage Fraud Task Force includes representatives from the U.S. Attorney’s Office; Federal Bureau of Investigation; Internal Revenue Service – Criminal Investigation; U.S. Postal Inspection Service; U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development, Office of Inspector General; Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation, Office of Inspector General, and State of Connecticut Department of Banking.

To report financial fraud crimes, and to learn more about the President’s Financial Fraud Enforcement Task Force, please visit www.stopfraud.gov.

February 21, 2011

Attorney and Loan Officer Charged with Mortgage Fraud

LAS VEGAS—A local attorney and a mortgage loan officer have been charged with conspiracy to commit bank, mail and wire fraud for allegedly participating in a scheme to obtain mortgage loans from financial institutions using straw buyers and false loan applications, announced Daniel G. Bogden, United States Attorney for the District of Nevada.

Stanley Walton, 52, and Pamela Black, 62, both of Las Vegas, were indicted by the federal grand jury on Wednesday, February 16, 2011, on one count of conspiracy to commit bank, mail and wire fraud and criminal forfeiture. They were summoned to appear for an arraignment and plea on Wednesday, February 23, 2011, at 3:00 p.m. before U.S. Magistrate Judge Robert J. Johnston.

According to the indictment, from about September 22, 2004, to January 24, 2007, Walton, an attorney who practices in Las Vegas, Black, a mortgage loan officer, and other unindicted co-conspirators, allegedly conspired to recruit straw buyers with good credit to purchase houses in Henderson and Las Vegas. The indictment does not charge Walton with acting as an attorney when he engaged in the alleged fraudulent conduct. The straw buyers were paid by Walton to place the homes in their names, and they did not intend to occupy the homes.

Walton and Black then allegedly created and submitted loan applications containing false and fraudulent information about the straw buyers’ employment, income, intent to occupy the property, and disposition of the loan proceeds. Walton allegedly assisted in this regard by providing false employment verifications for some of the straw buyers at a company he owned.

Walton and Black concealed from the lenders that Walton and his companies were receiving the cash back monies at closing and also concealed that, in some instances, Walton intended to use the cash to make mortgage payments and to pay straw buyers for participating in the scheme.

Black received commissions from her employer as a result of the fraudulently obtained loans.

The indictment specifically identifies six homes in Henderson and two homes in Las Vegas for which mortgage loans were obtained using fraudulent documents submitted by the defendants. The indictment alleges that upon conviction, the defendants shall forfeit up to approximately $2.5 million of proceeds traceable to these alleged crimes.

The investigation is being conducted by the FBI, and the case is being prosecuted by Assistant U.S. Attorney Kathryn C. Newman.

The public is reminded that an indictment contains only charges and is not evidence of guilt. The defendants are presumed innocent and are entitled to a fair trial at which the government has the burden of proving guilt beyond a reasonable doubt.

February 15, 2011

Mortgage Broker, Loan Processors, and Straw Buyer Sentenced in Multi-Million-Dollar Mortgage Fraud Scheme

Wifredo A. Ferrer, United States Attorney for the Southern District of Florida; John V. Gillies, Special Agent in Charge, Federal Bureau of Investigation, Miami Field Office; Henry Gutierrez, Postal Inspector in Charge, U.S. Postal Inspection Service; and J. Thomas Cardwell, Commissioner, State of Florida Office of Financial Regulation, announced that defendant Anson Joachin, 39, of Parkland, Florida, was sentenced today to 41 months’ imprisonment, to be followed by three years of supervised release for his role in a multi-million-dollar mortgage fraud scheme. In addition, U.S. District Judge Ursula Ungaro ordered Joachin to pay $2,352,310 in restitution.

Four other defendants were previously sentenced in the case. John Fisher, 35, of Jupiter, Florida, a licensed mortgage broker, was sentenced to 20 months’ imprisonment and was ordered to pay $1,614,927 in restitution. In addition, Fisher agreed to surrender his mortgage broker license. Tracey Balli, 35, of Pembroke Pines, Florida, a loan processor, was sentenced to three years’ probation, one year of home detention, and was ordered to pay $1,187,082 in restitution; Justina Bryan, 35, of Hollywood, Florida, a loan processor, was sentenced to three years’ probation, one year of home detention, and was ordered to pay $1,165,227 in restitution; and Delano McLennon, 33, of North Lauderdale, Florida, a straw buyer, who was sentenced to three years’ probation, six months home detention, and was ordered to pay $489,405 in restitution.

Defendants Anson Joachin and John Fisher previously pled guilty to conspiracy to commit mail and wire fraud and to one count of mail fraud, respectively, in violation of Title 18, United States Code, Sections 1349 and 1341 in connection with a mortgage fraud scheme. Defendants Tracey Balli, Justina Bryan, and Delano McLennon previously pled guilty to one count of making false statements on a HUD-1 Real Estate Settlement Form in connection with a mortgage fraud scheme, in violation of Title 18, United States Code, Section 1001.

According to records filed with the court and statements made during court hearings, the defendants and other conspirators engaged in a scheme to enrich themselves by fraudulently causing houses in Fort Lauderdale, Jupiter, Cape Coral, and Royal Palm Beach, Florida to be bought and sold through straw buyers who obtained high value mortgages based upon fraudulent mortgage loan applications. Defendant Anson Joachin orchestrated the scheme, in which defendant John Fisher, a licensed mortgage broker, Tracey Balli, and Justina Bryan, both loan processors, joined. Balli and Bryan, along with other conspirators, recruited straw buyers, including Delano McLennon, to join the scheme.

In order to obtain mortgages on these properties, the defendants submitted and caused to be submitted fraudulent documents to various mortgage lenders across the United States. Based on these false documents, the mortgage lenders issued approximately $2,350,000 in loans to the defendants and their co-conspirators.

Mr. Ferrer commended the investigative efforts of the FBI, the U.S. Postal Inspection Service, and the State of Florida Office of Financial Regulation. This case is being prosecuted by Assistant U.S. Attorneys Randy Katz and Jeffrey H. Kay.

A copy of this press release may be found on the website of the United States Attorney’s Office for the Southern District of Florida at www.usdoj.gov/usao/fls. Related court documents and information may be found on the website of the United States District Court for the Southern District of Florida at www.flsd.uscourts.gov or http://pacer.flsd.uscourts.gov.

February 3, 2011

Tucson Loan Officer and a Real Estate Agent Both Indicted in a Mortgage Fraud Conspiracy

TUCSON—U.S. Attorney Dennis K. Burke announced a federal grand jury in Tucson returned a six-count indictment against Scott Tyson, age 43, and Susan Levy, age 69, of Tucson, Arizona. The indictment charges the defendants with wire fraud and conspiracy to commit wire fraud.

According to the indictment, Levy, a licensed Arizona real estate agent, received approximately $1.2 million dollars in loans to purchase multiple real estate properties between February, 2006 and July, 2007. In obtaining her loans, Levy failed to disclose that she had purchased other properties during this time period and/or understated her liabilities, thus constituting a material omission of fact submitted to the lenders. Scott Tyson was the loan officer used by Levy in each of these transactions.

“The defendants conspired to obtain multiple mortgages based upon fraudulent representations. The goal of the conspiracy was to profit from either the commissions received from the loans or the future sale of the properties or ‘flip’,” said U.S. Attorney Dennis K. Burke. “This office is dedicated to prosecuting mortgage fraud related offenses and this indictment is another example of our partnership with the FBI to prosecute and hold industry insiders accountable.”

An indictment is simply the method by which a person is charged with criminal activity and raises no inference of guilt. An individual is presumed innocent until competent evidence is presented to a jury that establishes guilt beyond a reasonable doubt.

“Arizona has been greatly impacted by all facets of mortgage fraud in the last few years,” said FBI Special Agent in Charge Nate Gray. “The indictment of Tyson and Levy illustrates the FBI’s commitment to investigate those within the mortgage industry who allegedly conspired to profit from mortgage fraud. The FBI will continue to make mortgage fraud a priority and will pursue those who participate in various mortgage fraud schemes.”

A conviction for conspiracy to commit wire fraud and wire fraud carries a maximum penalty of 20 years’ imprisonment, a $250,000 fine or both for each count. In determining the actual sentence, the judge will consult the U.S. Sentencing Guidelines, which provide appropriate sentencing ranges. The judge, however, is not bound by those guidelines in determining a sentence.

The investigation preceding the Indictment was conducted by the Federal Bureau of Investigation’s Mortgage Fraud Task Force. The prosecution is being handled by Assistant U.S. Attorney Jonathan Granoff of the U.S. Attorney’s Office for the District of Arizona in Tucson.

February 1, 2011

Crofton Loan Officer Sentenced to 27 Months in Prison in Mortgage Fraud Scheme

BALTIMORE, MD—U.S. District Judge J. Frederick Motz sentenced James William Fox II, age 40, of Crofton, Maryland today to 27 months in prison, followed by three years of supervised release, for conspiracy to commit wire fraud in connection with a mortgage fraud scheme which he promised to help homeowners facing foreclosure keep their homes, but left them with no equity and no longer holding the title to their properties. At today’s sentencing hearing Judge Motz also ordered that Fox pay restitution in the full amount of the loss, which the government contends is between $1 million and $2.4 million.

The sentence was announced by United States Attorney for the District of Maryland Rod J. Rosenstein; Special Agent in Charge Richard A. McFeely of the Federal Bureau of Investigation; and Special Agent in Charge Ken Taylor, Jr. of the Housing and Urban Development Office of Inspector General—Office of Investigations.

According to Fox’s plea agreement, he met James Hooper Dan, age 45, of Annapolis, Maryland, when both were loan officers at a mortgage brokerage in Annapolis. Beginning in 2006, Fox began to identify prospective borrowers who owned and had equity in their homes, but who could not afford their mortgage payments and were at risk of losing their homes because they were either in foreclosure, bankruptcy or financial distress. Fox, and sometimes Fox and Dan, told potential victims that they could “rescue” them and save their houses. The promises involved transferring the home to Fox or Dan, who would obtain a new mortgage loan. Fox and Dan promised to make the payments on the new mortgage loan for six months or a year, during which time the individual would “repair” their credit, refinance the property and reacquire it. During this six month or one-year period, the individual was to continue living in the house.

In order to obtain the mortgage loans in their names, Fox and Dan made materially false and fraudulent loan applications including falsification of their intent to occupy the property, annual income, savings, other properties owned, and source of the borrower’s funds for closing. Fox was typically the loan officer for Dan’s loans and was aware of Dan’s material misrepresentations.

According to the plea agreement, from April 20, 2006 through July 5, 2007, Fox and Dan transferred eight properties from financially distressed homeowners to themselves or straw purchasers they recruited. The properties were located in Waldorf, Capitol Heights, Baltimore, Silver Spring, Pasadena and Hagerstown, Maryland, as well as Glen Rock, Pennsylvania and Chesterfield, Virginia. The settlement statements (sometimes called HUD-1s) used at the settlements were false. In each instance, Fox, Dan, or the straw purchaser was supposed to produce the buyer’s funds to close at settlement from their own resources. These funds actually came from the seller’s proceeds, or from money borrowed from others, so that Fox invested no funds of his own in any transaction. Although Fox and Dan were the buyers of the properties, they obtained proceeds from the equity in the properties by making material false representations to financial institutions making the loans. In addition, the sellers paid over to Fox and Dan, or one of their companies, monies that were identified on the HUD-1 as the sellers’ proceeds of the property sales. Fox and Dan shared some of these proceeds with the sellers either directly or by paying off sellers’ debts, but put the remainder in their own bank accounts. Although Fox and Dan made some mortgage payments on each of the properties, they eventually defaulted on the mortgage loans, and all eight properties went into default. The victims do not have title of their homes.

Dan previously pleaded guilty to the same charge and is scheduled to be sentenced on February 25, 2011 at 10:30 a.m.

The Maryland Mortgage Fraud Task Force was established to unify the agencies that regulate and investigate mortgage fraud and promote the early detection, identification, prevention and prosecution of mortgage fraud schemes. This case, as well as other cases brought by members of the Task Force, demonstrates the commitment of law enforcement agencies to protect consumers from fraud and promote the integrity of the credit markets. Information about mortgage fraud prosecutions is available http://www.justice.gov/usao/md/Mortgage-Fraud/index.html.

This law enforcement action is part of President Barack Obama’s Financial Fraud Enforcement Task Force. President Obama established the interagency Financial Fraud Enforcement Task Force to wage an aggressive, coordinated and proactive effort to investigate and prosecute financial crimes. The task force includes representatives from a broad range of federal agencies, regulatory authorities, inspectors general, and state and local law enforcement who, working together, bring to bear a powerful array of criminal and civil enforcement resources. The task force is working to improve efforts across the federal executive branch, and with state and local partners, to investigate and prosecute significant financial crimes, ensure just and effective punishment for those who perpetrate financial crimes, combat discrimination in the lending and financial markets, and recover proceeds for victims of financial crimes.

United States Attorney Rod J. Rosenstein thanked the Maryland Crime Victims’ Resource Center, Inc. for their assistance to victims in this case.

United States Attorney Rod J. Rosenstein thanked the FBI and HUD-OIG, Office of Investigations for their work in this investigation and commended Assistant U.S. Attorney Joyce K. McDonald, who prosecuted the case.

January 28, 2011

Attorney, Title Company Employee and Builder Found Guilty of Wire Fraud and Money Laundering in a Multi-Million Dollar Mortgage Fraud Scheme

HOUSTON—Today, a jury sitting in United States District Judge Sim Lake’s Courtroom found Vincent Wallace Aldridge, former fee attorney for First Southwestern Title Company and attorney for Aldridge and Associates, along with Tori Elyse Aldridge, a former employee of First Southwestern Title Company and Gilbert Barry Isgar, a co-owner of Waterford Homes, guilty of charges of wire fraud and money laundering in a scheme to defraud residential mortgage lenders of more than $3.7 million in loans in connection with home purchases in the Houston area, United States Attorney José Angel Moreno announced today along with FBI Special Agent in Charge Richard C. Powers and Internal Revenue Service-Criminal Investigations (IRS-CI) Special Agent in Charge Rodney E. Clarke.

Vincent Aldridge, 45, and Tori Aldridge, 32, both of Fresno, Texas (right outside of Houston), were found guilty of 19 counts which included conspiracy to commit wire and mail fraud, wire fraud, conspiracy to commit money laundering and money laundering charges. Isgar, 50, of Katy, Texas, was found guilty of 13 counts which included conspiracy to commit wire and mail fraud, wire fraud and conspiracy to commit money laundering.

Both of the Aldridges and Isgar conspired to devise and execute a scheme during 2004 and 2005 to receive proceeds from real estate transactions based upon materially fraudulent information that was intentionally supplied to at least four lending institutions as the basis for an agreement between the lending institutions and borrowers. Vincent Aldridge lured borrowers by representing the scheme as an investment opportunity. For the use of their credit to obtain mortgage loans, the borrowers were promised $10,000 after the closing of their respective property and that the property would be sold after a year for a profit. Once a borrower agreed to the deal, then Vincent Aldridge and Tori Aldridge, acting as an escrow officer and as a loan processor, met with the borrower to obtain the necessary personal identifying information to complete the borrower’s lending package. Prior to the Aldridges submitting the lending packages to the lending institutions, the Aldridges modified the lending package to enhance the borrower’s ability to qualify for the requested loan. These enhancements included fraudulently overstating the borrower’s income, misrepresenting the borrower’s principal residence as rental property and misrepresenting the purchase property as the principal residence. The mortgage loans totaled approximately $3,700,000. Each property sold in amounts between $344,000 and $360,000 and were funded to First Southwestern Title Company by wire.

As a part of the scheme, Isgar, co-owner of Waterford Custom Homes, inflated the sales price of the properties to be purchased by the aforementioned recruited borrowers. As a part of the agreement between the Aldridges and Isgar, disbursement authorizations for attorney’s fees and additional contractor fees on brand new homes for amounts of $60,000 to more than $80,000 were signed by Isgar. These documents were provided to First Southwestern Title, which was controlled by the Aldridges. These disbursement authorizations were not provided to the lender and were not listed on the HUD Settlement Statement. The disbursements for additional attorney’s fees were in addition to the attorney’s fees stated on the attorney fee line in HUD Settlement Statement.

Once the loans were funded to the title company, the Aldridges caused several checks to be drawn on the account of the title company, each totaling amounts of $60,000 to more than $80,000, to Aldridge & Associates IOLTA bank account. The checks totaled approximately $442,089 and represented a portion of the illicit proceeds obtained through the mortgage fraud scheme. On one occasion, Isgar wired approximately $81,000 back to Vincent Aldridge’s account after he received the funds from the closing. The total amount of the money laundering was more than $500,000.

United States District Judge Sim Lake pronounced the defendants guilty and reset the case for sentencing on May 25, 2011, at 2:00 p.m. All of the defendants were permitted to remain on bond pending their sentencing hearings.

The maximum penalty for each wire fraud count is 20 years in prison as well as substantial fines. The maximum penalty for each money laundering count is 10 years in prison. A conviction for money laundering carries the most significant fine of $250,000 or twice the amount of the criminally derived property, whichever is greater.

The investigation leading to the charges was conducted by the FBI and IRS-CI. Assistant United States Attorneys Jennifer Lowery and Andrew Leuchtmann are prosecuting the case.

January 20, 2011

Property developer indicted in mortgage lending fraud

Westport Man Indicted for Alleged Role in Fairfield County Mortgage Fraud Scheme

The United States Attorney for the District of Connecticut today announced that a federal grand jury sitting in Bridgeport has returned a nine-count indictment charging WILLIAM A. TRUDEAU, JR., 47, of Westport, with bank fraud, wire fraud, and mail fraud offenses stemming from his alleged participation in a Fairfield County mortgage fraud scheme. The indictment was returned yesterday, November 18.

The indictment alleges that TRUDEAU, a property developer, was an unnamed principal in both Aspetuck Building & Development and Huntington South Associates, LLC, the latter of which was a shell company that TRUDEAU used to pay for personal expenses and to secure loans fraudulently. From approximately February 2004 to April 2010, it is alleged that TRUDEAU conspired with Joseph Kriz, Heather Bliss, Fred Stevens, Thomas Preston, and others to defraud federally insured financial institutions and mortgage lenders. Through this scheme, it is alleged that TRUDEAU and his co-conspirators submitted false mortgage loan applications to financial institutions to obtain mortgages on various properties in Fairfield County in order to develop and sell the properties for profit, and to pay off debts owed to “hard money” lenders from whom they had previously obtained high interest loans. The mortgage applications, which included false income information and omitted the mortgage applicants’ true indebtedness, caused the financial institutions to issue mortgage loans on properties that TRUDEAU and his co-conspirators would not have otherwise been qualified to purchase, allowing the applicants to qualify for mortgages that far exceeded their ability to repay the loans.

The indictment further alleges that TRUDEAU’s name did not appear on any documentation related to the loans or the properties for which the loans were obtained, and that money was hidden in bank accounts that were not in TRUDEAU’s name, in part to prevent the collection of more than $450,000 in restitution that a court ordered TRUDEAU to pay in July 2003.

Through this scheme, it is alleged that TRUDEAU and his co-conspirators fraudulently obtained more than $3.5 million in mortgage loans.

The indictment charges TRUDEAU with one count of conspiracy commit bank fraud, mail fraud, and wire fraud; two counts of bank fraud; three counts of mail fraud; and three counts of wire fraud. If convicted, TRUDEAU faces a maximum term of imprisonment of 240 years.

An indictment is not evidence of guilt. Charges are only allegations, and each defendant is presumed innocent unless and until proven guilty beyond a reasonable doubt.

Kriz, Bliss, Stevens, and Preston have pled guilty to charges related to their involvement in this scheme. Each awaits sentencing.

This matter is being investigated by the Federal Bureau of Investigation. Citizens with information about this case are encouraged to contact FBI Special Agents McNamara or Bowery at 203-333-3512.

The case is being prosecuted by Assistant United States Attorney Rahul Kale.

In July 2009, the U.S. Attorney’s Office and the Federal Bureau of Investigation announced the formation of the Connecticut Mortgage Fraud Task Force to investigate and prosecute mortgage fraud cases and related financial crimes occurring in Connecticut. In addition to investigating past mortgage fraud schemes, the Task Force will focus on emerging crime trends that are associated with the growing tide of foreclosures, including “foreclosure rescue” schemes, and “short sale” schemes.

Citizens can report mortgage fraud activity by contacting the Connecticut Mortgage Fraud Task Force at 203-333-3512, or by sending an e-mail to ctmortgagefraud@ic.fbi.gov.

The Connecticut Mortgage Fraud Task Force includes representatives from the U.S. Attorney’s Office; Federal Bureau of Investigation; Internal Revenue Service – Criminal Investigation Division; U.S. Postal Inspection Service; U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development, Office of Inspector General; Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation, Office of Inspector General, and State of Connecticut Department of Banking.

January 3, 2011

Former Fee Attorney Indicted in Alleged Multi-Million-Dollar Mortgage Fraud Scheme

HOUSTON—Vincent Wallace Aldridge and Tori Aldridge, both of Fresno, Texas, surrendered themselves to federal authorities as a result of the return of a 19-count indictment arising from an alleged scheme to defraud residential mortgage lenders of more than $3.7 million in connection with home purchases in the Houston area, United States Attorney José Angel Moreno, FBI Special Agent in Charge Richard C. Powers, and Internal Revenue Service-Criminal Investigation (IRS-CI) Special Agent in Charge Rodney E. Clarke announced today. Vincent Aldridge, 45, is a former fee attorney of First Southwestern Title Company and attorney with Aldridge and Associates, while Tori Aldridge, 32, is a former employee of the same title company.

Vincent and Tori Aldridge surrendered to special agents of the FBI and IRS-CI at the FBI this morning and both are expected to make their initial appearances before U.S. Magistrate Judge John R. Froeschner in Houston later today. A third defendant, Gilbert Barry Isgar, 50, of Katy, Texas, the co-owner of Waterford Homes, appeared before U.S. Magistrate Judge John R. Froeschner earlier this week pursuant to a summons. Isgar was arraigned and his case was set for jury selection and trial before U.S. District Court Judge Sim Lake on May 24, 2010.

The 19-count indictment returned by a Houston grand jury on Thursday, March 25, 2010, accuses Vincent Aldridge, Tori Aldridge, and Isgar of conspiracy to commit wire fraud, wire fraud, conspiracy to commit money laundering, and money laundering.

According to the allegations in the indictment, Vincent and Tori Aldridge and Isgar conspired to devise and execute a scheme during 2004 and 2005 to receive proceeds from real estate transactions based upon materially fraudulent information that was intentionally supplied to at least three lending institutions as the basis for an agreement between the lending institutions and borrowers.

Vincent Aldridge allegedly lured borrowers by representing the scheme as an investment opportunity. For the use of the borrowers’ credit to obtain mortgage loans, they were promised $10,000 after the closing of their respective property. They were also allegedly told that the property would be sold after a year for a profit. Once a borrower agreed to the deal, Vincent Aldridge and Tori Aldridge acting as both an escrow officer and a loan processor and met with the borrower to obtain the necessary personal identifying information to complete the borrower’s lending package.

Prior to the submission of the lending packages to the lending institutions, it is alleged that Vincent and Tori Aldridge modified the lending package to enhance the borrower’s ability to qualify for the requested loan. These enhancements, according to the indictment, included fraudulently overstating the borrower’s income, misrepresenting the borrower’s principal residence as rental property and misrepresenting the purchase property as the principal residence. The mortgage loans totaled approximately $3,700,000. Each property sold in amounts between $344,000 and $365,000 and were funded to First Southwestern Title Company by wire.

As a part of the scheme, the indictment alleges that Isgar, co-owner of Waterford Custom Homes, inflated the sales price of the properties to be purchased by the aforementioned recruited borrowers. As a part of the alleged illicit agreement between the Aldridges and Isgar, the Aldridges were to receive the proceeds of their scheme by including disbursement authorizations for attorney’s fees signed by Isgar to the title company prior to closing. These amounts were listed on the loan closing documents as seller disbursements for attorney fees and were in addition to the attorney’s fees stated on the attorney fee line in the closing documents.

Once the loans were funded to the title company, the Aldridges are accused of causing several checks to be drawn on the account of the title company, each totaling more than $10,000, payable to a bank account controlled by Aldridge & Associates. The checks totaled approximately $442,089 and represented a portion of the illicit proceeds obtained through the mortgage fraud scheme.

The maximum penalty, upon conviction, for the conspiracy to commit wire fraud and each of the 11 wire fraud counts is 20 years in prison as well as substantial fines. The maximum penalty for the conspiracy to launder money and for each of the six money laundering counts is 10 years in prison. A conviction for money laundering carries the most significant fine of $250,000 or twice the amount of the criminally derived property, whichever is greater.

Assistant United States Attorney Jennifer Lowery is prosecuting the case.

The investigation leading to the charges was conducted by the FBI and IRS-CI, members of President Obama’s Financial Fraud Task Force. The President established the interagency Financial Fraud Task Force to wage an aggressive, coordinated, and proactive effort to investigate and prosecute financial crimes. The task fforce includes representatives from a broad range of federal agencies, regulatory authorities, inspectors general, and state and local law enforcement, who, working together, bring to bear a powerful array of criminal and civil enforcement resources. The task force is working to improve efforts across the federal executive branch and with state and local partners, to investigate and prosecute significant financial crimes, ensure just and effective punishment for those who perpetrate financial crimes, combat discrimination in the lending and financial markets and recover proceeds for victims of financial crimes.

December 30, 2010

Attorney, Mortgage Loan Officers Create Loan Mortgage Fraud Scheme

Nora R. Dannehy, United States Attorney for the District of Connecticut, announced that GEORGE HAJATI, also known as Gjergji Hajati, 31, of Westerly Terrace, Rocky Hill, pleaded guilty today before United States District Judge Mark R. Kravitz in New Haven to one count of conspiracy to commit wire fraud and eight counts of wire fraud stemming from a Hartford-area mortgage fraud scheme.

According to court documents and statements made in court, between September 2003 and November 2007, HAJATI, using his company Connecticut Partners Mortgage (“CPM”), conspired with Justin Williams, a CPM employee; Douglas Sheehan, an attorney; and others to deceive mortgage lending financial institutions into providing falsely inflated mortgage loans to real estate buyers for the purchase of property that was worth less than the amount of the loans. CPM provided fraudulent financial statements to the lending institutions that inflated the sales prices of the properties, the down payments made by purchasers and the amount due to sellers, as well as other fraudulent information, in order to induce the institutions to provide the funds.

The various lenders have suffered a loss of more than $1 million due to this mortgage scheme.

On November 14, 2007, Federal Bureau of Investigation agents conducted a court-authorized search of Connecticut Partners Mortgage on Weston Street in Hartford. On November 21, 2007, HAJATI fled the United States. In January 2008, HAJATI met Williams in Australia and, in May 2008, the co-defendants traveled to Albania, where HAJATI had lived until he was 17 years old, has relatives, and is fluent in the language.

On March 17, 2009, approximately one month after HAJATI and Williams were indicted by a grand jury in Hartford, HAJATI was arrested by Albanian authorities after he attempted to cross the border of Albania and Montenegro. He was extradited to the United States on July 24.2009.

Judge Kravitz has scheduled sentencing for June 24, 2010, at which time HAJATI faces a maximum term of imprisonment of 30 years and a fine of up to $1 million, on each count.

Williams, of Newington, voluntarily returned from Albania. On October 21, 2009, he pleaded guilty to one count of conspiracy to commit wire fraud and three counts of wire fraud. He awaits sentencing.

On November 20, 2008, Sheehan waived his right to indictment and pleaded guilty to one count of conspiracy to commit wire fraud and four counts of wire fraud. He also awaits sentencing.

This case is being investigated by the Federal Bureau of Investigation and is being prosecuted by Assistant United States Attorney Paul H. McConnell.

In July 2009, the U.S. Attorney’s Office and the Federal Bureau of Investigation announced the formation of the Connecticut Mortgage Fraud Task Force to investigate and prosecute mortgage fraud cases and related financial crimes occurring in Connecticut. In addition to investigating past mortgage fraud schemes, the Task Force will focus on emerging crime trends that are associated with the growing tide of foreclosures, including foreclosure rescue schemes and short sale schemes. Citizens are encouraged to report any suspected mortgage fraud activity by calling 203-333-3512 and requesting the Connecticut Mortgage Fraud Task Force, or by sending an email to ctmortgagefraud@ic.fbi.gov.

The Connecticut Mortgage Fraud Task Force includes representatives from the U.S. Attorney’s Office; Federal Bureau of Investigation; Internal Revenue Service – Criminal Investigation; U.S. Postal Inspection Service; U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development, Office of Inspector General; Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation, Office of Inspector General, and State of Connecticut Department of Banking.

November 14, 2010

Former Loan Officer and Document Forger Plead Guilty to Roles in Mortgage Fraud Scheme

TRENTON, NJ—Edivaldo dos Santos and Rosa Damasceno each pleaded guilty today to conspiring to commit mortgage fraud, admitting that they attempted to use false documents to secure a fraudulent mortgage loan, U.S. Attorney for the District of New Jersey Paul J. Fishman announced.
Dos Santos, 52, of Harrison, N.J.; and Damasceno, 59, of Belleville, N.J., were originally charged in June 2010 as part of a coordinated mortgage fraud takedown in which 28 defendants were charged for their alleged roles in various mortgage fraud schemes in northern New Jersey.
The defendants entered their guilty pleas to informations charging them with conspiracy to commit wire fraud before U.S. District Judge Freda L. Wolfson in Trenton, N.J., federal court.
According to documents filed in this case and statements made during the defendants’ guilty plea proceedings, dos Santos was a former loan officer holding himself out as a mortgage consultant; Damasceno was the owner of a Newark-based company that provided tax services and driver education in Belleville, N.J.
In August 2009, dos Santos asked a loan officer at a New Jersey mortgage company to act as a loan officer on a real estate transaction in which a client would buy a property and then receive money back from the seller at closing. The prospective purchaser was not qualified to obtain the loan, so dos Santos and others provided falsely inflated income information in support of his application. Damasceno created fraudulent W-2 forms in furtherance of the fraud.
At sentencing, dos Santos and Damasceno each face up to 30 years in prison and a fine of $1 million, or twice the gross gain or loss from the conspiracy. Sentencing is currently scheduled for both defendants on Feb. 16, 2011.
U.S. Attorney Fishman praised agents of the FBI, under the direction of Special Agent in Charge Michael B. Ward in Newark, and the Hudson County Prosecutor’s Office, under the direction of Prosecutor Edward J. De Fazio, for their work leading the investigation of this case. He also credited the other members of the Mortgage Fraud Task Force, including the Department of Housing and Urban Development Office of Inspector General; the Internal Revenue Service; the U.S. Secret Service; and the U.S. Postal Inspection Service for their important contributions to the investigation. Fishman also thanked the Department of Homeland Security’s Customs and Border Protection and U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services; the U.S. Social Security Administration; and the New Jersey Attorney General’s Office for their assistance.
The government is represented by Assistant U.S. Attorneys Christine Magdo and Charlton A. Rugg of the U.S. Attorney’s Office Economic Crimes Unit in Newark.
This case was brought in coordination with President Barack Obama’s Financial Fraud Enforcement Task Force. President Obama established the interagency Financial Fraud Enforcement Task Force to wage an aggressive, coordinated, and proactive effort to investigate and prosecute financial crimes. The task force includes representatives from a broad range of federal agencies, regulatory authorities, inspectors general, and state and local law enforcement who, working together, bring to bear a powerful array of criminal and civil enforcement resources. The task force is working to improve efforts across the federal executive branch, and with state and local partners, to investigate and prosecute significant financial crimes, ensure just and effective punishment for those who perpetrate financial crimes, combat discrimination in the lending and financial markets, and recover proceeds for victims of financial crimes.

October 12, 2010

38 People Indicted by Federal Grand Juries in Arizona This Month

PHOENIX, AZ—United States Attorney Dennis K. Burke joined members of the Arizona Financial Fraud Task Force to announce multiple indictments charging 38 people—among them loan officers, escrow officers, real estate appraisers and agents, and “straw buyers”—in various mortgage fraud schemes, including “cash back” and loan origination scams.

The announcement of the indictments in Arizona followed a press conference in Washington, D.C., where Attorney General Eric Holder announced the results of a nationwide coordinated takedown of mortgage fraudsters, the largest collective enforcement effort ever brought to bear in confronting mortgage fraud. The sweep was organized by President Obama’s interagency Financial Fraud Enforcement Task Force, which was established to lead an aggressive, coordinated and proactive effort to investigate and prosecute financial crimes. Starting on March 1, to date Operation Stolen Dreams has involved 1,215 criminal defendants nationwide, including 485 arrests, who are allegedly responsible for more than $2.3 billion in losses. Additionally, to date the operation has resulted in 191 civil enforcement actions which have resulted in the recovery of more than $147 million.

“Mortgage fraud ruins lives, destroys families and devastates whole communities, so attacking the problem from every possible direction is vital,” said Attorney General Holder. “We will use every tool available to investigate, prosecute, and prevent mortgage fraud, and we will not rest until anyone preying on vulnerable American homeowners is brought to justice.”

“These are the most indictments ever in one month for mortgage fraud,” said U.S. Attorney Dennis K. Burke. “It reflects both how pervasive the problem is and how committed we are to investigate, prosecute and convict these scam artists. We have heard many of the stories from the community about how mortgage fraud has affected their lives by undermining the housing industry. Now we are aggressively targeting ‘foreclosure rescue,’ reverse mortgage, and other scams designed to profit from the misery of people desperate to remain in their homes.”

U.S. Attorney Burke also announced the launch of an initiative to educate consumers about the risks of mortgage fraud and other scams. “We want to give the tools to people so they can prevent these disasters before they begin,” he said. To request a presentation on fraud from the U.S. Attorney’s Office, send an e-mail to usaaz.community@usdoj.gov or call 602-514-7629.

Special Agent in Charge Nathan Gray, FBI Phoenix Division, stated “The FBI’s Mortgage Fraud Task Force as a part of the Arizona Financial Fraud Task Force has continued to address mortgage fraud matters since 2008. Operation Stolen Dreams represents a second successful wave of indictments for the task force targeting individuals committing fraud in the housing market. The FBI and our law enforcement partners are committed to working with local, state, and federal prosecutors in combating mortgage fraud.”

In Arizona since the beginning of March 2010, Operation Stolen Dreams has resulted in 51 defendants indicted, convicted or sentenced. In addition to the 38 indicted this month, 13 others have been convicted and sentenced. In March, the U.S. Attorney’s obtained a 17-year prison sentence against Mario Bernadel for mortgage fraud. Bernadel, a Haitian citizen, caused nearly $9 million in losses to the banks, and caused the foreclosure of 36 properties. Also in March, Jeffrey Crandell, a loan officer, was sentenced to five years in prison, and ordered to pay over $1.4 million in restitution, and a co-defendant, escrow officer Erin Michelle Leastman, was ordered to pay $2.4 million. In May, April Lucero, a loan officer, was sentenced to two years in prison.

“The last number of years have seen enormous and damaging developments in the mortgage and housing markets with an urgent reliance on the government to bolster unstable marketplaces and devastated communities, said Kenneth M. Donohue, Inspector General of the Department of Housing and Urban Development. “The HUD OIG, in partnership with other federal agencies, is deeply committed to ensuring that scarce resources are not diverted to those who seek to enrich themselves at the expense of those who so desperately need assistance today.”

Unlike previous mortgage fraud sweeps, Operation Stolen Dreams focused not only on federal criminal cases, but also on civil enforcement, restitution for victims and increasing cooperation with state and local partners.

“The financial impact on Arizona as a result of these schemes has been severe, which is demonstrated by buyers driven into foreclosure, lenders burdened with bad loans, neighborhoods with abandoned and deteriorating properties, and as with all financial crimes, a significant loss in tax revenue,” said IRS-CI Special Agent in Charge Dawn Mertz. “IRS Criminal Investigation is committed to pursuing those individuals who commit financial fraud.

“Home ownership has been a part of the American dream for decades. Industry insiders and opportunists who commit mortgage fraud erode the infrastructure so that dream becomes less attainable for some,” said Pete Zegarac, Phoenix Division Inspector in Charge of the U.S. Postal Inspection Service. “Operation Stolen Dreams highlights the efforts of law enforcement to bring to justice those who sought to defraud desperate homeowners.”

The President’s Financial Fraud Enforcement Task Force includes representatives from a broad range of federal agencies, regulatory authorities, inspectors general, and state and local law enforcement who, working together, bring to bear a powerful array of criminal and civil enforcement resources. The task force is working to improve efforts across the federal executive branch, and with state and local partners, to investigate and prosecute significant financial crimes, ensure just and effective punishment for those who perpetrate financial crimes, combat discrimination in the lending and financial markets, and recover proceeds for victims of financial crimes. For more information on the task force, visit StopFraud.gov.

The Arizona Financial Fraud Task Force represents the efforts of the U.S. Attorney’s Office, FBI, Internal Revenue Service-Criminal Investigation Division, U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement, Department of Housing and Urban Development Office of the Inspector General, U.S. Marshals Service, U.S. Postal Inspection Service, U.S. Secret Service, the FDIC-OIG, Arizona Department of Financial Institutions, Arizona Attorney General’s Office , the Phoenix and Mesa police departments, the Maricopa Country Sheriff’s Office, and Maricopa Country Attorney’s Office.

Mortgage Fraud case examples in the District of Arizona:

United States vs. Lawler, et al.

On Tuesday, June 15, 2010, a federal grand jury in Phoenix returned a 30-count indictment against JamieLee Lawler, 41, a former Countrywide loan officer and real estate investor of Phoenix and Brett Matheson, 44, of Scottsdale, for Wire Fraud, Conspiracy, Money Laundering and Conspiracy to Commit Money Laundering related to their leadership roles in a Mortgage Fraud scheme.

The indictment alleges from January 2005 through December 2007, Lawler and Matheson conspired to commit mortgage fraud by holding seminars to recruit straw buyers that did not intend to live in the homes or be responsible for the loan payments. The defendants would obtain financing to purchase homes in the names of the straw buyers by submitting fraudulent applications that misrepresented assets, income, employment status, and other information. Loans would be in excess of the sale price and once the funds were obtained from the lender, the extra proceeds known as “cash-back,” would be directed to bank accounts in the defendants’ control.

During the period of the conspiracy and scheme, the defendants defrauded the banks of over $38 million of which $8.7 million was directed to bank accounts under their control. Lawler and Matheson used the “cash-back” for personal expenses, including luxury vehicles and homes for themselves. Each conviction for Wire Fraud or Conspiracy carries a maximum penalty of 30 years in prison, a $1 million fine or both. Each conviction for Money Laundering or Conspiracy to Commit Money Laundering carries a maximum penalty of 10 years in prison, a fine or both.

United States vs. Jackson , et al.

In one indictment filed in early June, resulting from an ICE investigation, six individuals are alleged to have conspired in a scheme to defraud financial institutions by using straw buyers to purchase luxury homes in Paradise Valley, North Scottsdale, Arcadia, Fountain Hills and other upscale areas in the Phoenix area. One of the primary motivations for the scam was large cash back payments upon the purchase of the houses. However, even larger illicit profits were obtained upon the sale of a house from one controlled straw buyer to another. The scheme resulted in the foreclosure of more than 100 houses and losses of more than $50 million.

One of the six indicted conspirators, Vincent Vendittelli, was a loan officer at Spectrum Financial Group (SFG). Vendittelli handled all of the straw buyers’ loans and presented false information to financial institutions on loan applications which enabled otherwise average people to falsely qualify for multimillion dollar houses. Vendittelli handled more than 100 of these loans.

Another indicted conspirator, Cleothus Jackson, aka Henry Oliver Ford, and four other co-conspirators are alleged to have devised the scheme and recruited the straw buyers. Straw buyers were paid for the purchase of the houses but the lion’s share of illicit profits went to the recruiters, according to the indictment.

All of the properties went into foreclosure and in some cases bank short sales. The resulting decrease in home values caused a ripple effect across the Valley.

“These illicit schemes defrauded financial institutions out of millions of dollars,” said Matt Allen, ICE Special Agent in Charge in Arizona. “This investigation provides real insight into how virtually every aspect of some of these transactions was permeated with fraud and why the real estate market in Arizona is in its current condition. ICE is proud to work with the U.S. Attorney’s Office and our other law enforcement partners to hold these individuals accountable for enriching themselves at the expense of our banks, our communities and ultimately all American taxpayers.”

October 11, 2010

FBI: Top Areas for Mortgage Fraud

* Analysis of available law enforcement and industry resources indicates that the top ten mortgage fraud areas are California, Florida, Georgia, Illinois, Indiana, Michigan, New York, Ohio, Texas, and Utah. Other areas significantly affected by mortgage fraud include Arizona, Colorado, Maryland, Minnesota, Missouri, Nevada, North Carolina, Tennessee, and Virginia.
* There is a strong correlation between mortgage fraud and loans which result in default and foreclosure.

Emerging Schemes

* Recent statistics suggest that escalating foreclosures provide criminals with the opportunity to exploit and defraud vulnerable homeowners seeking financial guidance.
* Perpetrators are exploiting the home equity line of credit (HELOC) application process to conduct mortgage fraud, check fraud, and potentially money laundering-related activity.

FBI and Industry Respond to Escalating Mortgage Fraud

* The FBI is proactively working with the mortgage industry in an effort to curb mortgage fraud crimes. The FBI signed a memorandum of agreement with the MBA to promote the FBI’s Mortgage Fraud Warning Notice.

Introduction

The Prieston Group, a risk management solutions provider that administers an insurance product covering losses due to fraud and misrepresentation, calculated that losses attributed to mortgage fraud will most likely reach $4.2 billion for 2006. This figure does not take into account another estimated $1.2 billion spent on fraud prevention tools. – The Prieston Group, 2006 Data, 16 February 2007,and 2 April 2007.

Mortgage Fraud is defined as the intentional misstatement, misrepresentation, or omission by an applicant or other interested parties, relied on by a lender or underwriter to provide funding for, to purchase, or to insure a mortgage loan. Although no central repository collects all mortgage fraud complaints, statistics from multiple sources indicate that mortgage fraud is on the rise. Some industry explanations for this increase point to recent high mortgage loan origination volumes that strained quality control efforts, the persistent desire of mortgage lenders to hasten the mortgage loan process, the escalation of home prices in recent years, and the introduction of non-traditional loans which contain fewer quality control restraints such as low documentation and no documentation loans1.

Mortgage loan fraud is divided into two categories: fraud for property and fraud for profit. Fraud for property/housing entails minor misrepresentations by the applicant solely for the purpose of purchasing a property for a primary residence. This scheme usually involves a single loan. Although applicants may embellish income and conceal debt, their intent is to repay the loan. Fraud for profit, however, often involves multiple loans and elaborate schemes perpetrated to gain illicit proceeds from property sales. It is this second category that is of most concern to law enforcement and the mortgage industry. Gross misrepresentations concerning appraisals and loan documents are common in fraud for profit schemes and participants are frequently paid for their participation. Recent events likely resulted in an increase in mortgage fraud as higher housing prices tempted borrowers to commit fraud for property in order to qualify for a mortgage loan. Also, mortgage fraud perpetrators likely seized the opportunity to take advantage of the relaxed lending practices to commit fraud for profit.

The most common form of mortgage fraud is illegal property flipping which entails false appraisals and other fraudulent loan documents (see figure 1). Combating mortgage fraud effectively requires the cooperation of law enforcement and industry entities. No single regulatory agency is charged with monitoring this crime. The FBI, Department of Housing and Urban Development-Office of Inspector General (HUD-OIG), Internal Revenue Service, Postal Inspection Service, and state and local agencies are among those investigating mortgage fraud.

Mortgage fraud is a relatively low-risk, high-yield criminal activity that tempts many. However, according a May 2006 Financial Crimes Enforcement Network (FinCEN) report, finance-related occupations, including accountants, mortgage brokers, and lenders, were the most common suspect occupations associated with reported mortgage fraud2. Perpetrators in these occupations are familiar with the mortgage loan process and therefore know how to exploit vulnerabilities in the system.

Victims of mortgage fraud may include borrowers, mortgage industry entities, and those living in the neighborhoods affected by mortgage fraud. Lenders are plagued with high foreclosure costs, broker commissions, reappraisals, attorney fees, rehabilitation costs, and other related expenses when a mortgage fraud is committed3. As properties affected by mortgage fraud are sold at artificially inflated prices, properties in surrounding neighborhoods also become artificially inflated. When property values increase, property taxes increase as well. Legitimate homeowners also find it difficult to sell their homes as surrounding properties affected by fraud deteriorate.

During boom periods, high mortgage loan volume impacts expedited quality control efforts which often focus on production. Therefore, perpetrators may submit loans based on fraudulent information anticipating that the bogus information will be overlooked. On the other hand, loan officers, brokers, and others in the industry are paid by commission and may be tempted to approve questionable loans when the housing market is down to maintain current levels of income.

Analysis of mortgage originations indicates a decrease in demand. As a result of the declining housing market, mortgage fraud perpetrators may take advantage of eager loan originators attempting to generate loans for commission. Mortgage loan originations, including purchases and refinances declined during 2006 across the United States. The Mortgage Bankers Association (MBA) estimates that mortgage loan originations will reach $2.28 trillion during 2007 (see figure 2)4. According to an MBA December 2006 report, total home sales during 2006 decreased by approximately 10 percent from 2005 sales. New home sales declined by 17 percent and existing home sales dipped by 8 percent. In response to a decrease in demand for housing, builders reduced single-family starts (through November 2006) which were 14 percent lower than during the same time period in 2005. The MBA estimates that the oversupply of housing will continue to affect new home construction, home sales, and home prices until mid-20075.

Top Areas for Mortgage Fraud

Data was compiled and analyzed from law enforcement and industry sources to determine those areas of the country most affected by mortgage fraud during 2006. Information from the FBI, HUD-OIG, FinCEN, Mortgage Asset Research Institute (MARI), Federal National Mortgage Association (Fannie Mae), RealtyTrac Inc. (foreclosure statistics), and Radian Guaranty Inc., indicate that the top ten mortgage fraud areas for 2006 were California, Florida, Georgia, Illinois, Indiana, Michigan, New York, Ohio, Texas, and Utah. Other areas significantly affected by mortgage fraud include Arizona, Colorado, Maryland, Minnesota, Missouri, Nevada, North Carolina, Tennessee, and Virginia (see figure 3).

Analysis of available information indicates that mortgage fraud is most concentrated in the north central region of the United States. The north central region is followed by the southeast and west regions.

Regional analysis of FBI pending mortgage fraud-related investigations as of FY 2006 reveals that the north central region of the United States led the nation with the most pending investigations. The north central region was followed by the southeast, west, south central, and northeast, respectively (see figure 4).

The aggregate amount of ARM loans containing fraudulent misrepresentations is unknown. However, since mortgage fraud perpetrators hope to inflate the value of their properties and quickly sell them, they would likely gravitate towards mortgage loans that offered low and short-term interest rates such as those offered by ARMs.

Delinquency, Default, and Foreclosure: Potential Fraud Indicators

Mortgage loans based on fraudulent information usually result in delinquency, default, or foreclosure in a bear market. According to the MBA, both delinquency and foreclosures rates increased during 2006 and were largely concentrated in adjustable rate mortgage (ARM) loans, especially sub-prime ARMs. This is partly attributable to the recent rise in interest rates, placing a strain on ARMs borrowers6.

BasePoint Analytics, a fraud analytics company, analyzed more than 3 million loans and found that between 30 and 70 percent of early payment defaults (EPDs) are linked to significant misrepresentations in the original loan applications7. Radian Guaranty, Inc. is a leading provider of mortgage insurance which protects lenders against loan default. Of the top ten states Radian Guaranty Inc. ranked highest for mortgage fraud, seven of them also ranked in the company’s top ten for EPDs. This suggests that EPDs are a good mortgage fraud indicator.

During 2006 there were more than 1.2 million foreclosure filings nationally, which represents a 42 percent increase from 2005 figures. The foreclosure rate for 2006 was one foreclosure filing for every 92 households8. Foreclosures for 2006 surpassed foreclosures for 2005 during every month of the year9.

Foreclosure Fraud

Recent statistics suggest that escalating foreclosures provide criminals with the opportunity to exploit and defraud vulnerable homeowners seeking financial guidance. The perpetrators convince homeowners that they can save their homes from foreclosure through deed transfers and the payment of up-front fees. This “foreclosure rescue” often involves a manipulated deed process that results in the preparation of forged deeds. In extreme instances, perpetrators may sell the home or secure a second loan without the homeowners’ knowledge, stripping the property’s equity for personal enrichment.

While foreclosure scams vary, they may be used in combination with other fraudulent schemes. For instance, perpetrators may view foreclosure-rescue scams as a new method for fraudulently acquiring properties to facilitate illegal property-flipping and equity-skimming.

Home Equity Lines of Credit

According to a DOJ press release, Mi Su Yi and her husband, Paul Amorello, were sentenced in California in July 2006 for operating a $3 million bust-out scheme involving business lines of credit and HELOCs. The couple accessed lines of credit that had been obtained by others and paid the balances with worthless checks. They subsequently withdrew cash from the lines of credit before the checks were returned for insufficient funds. The couple laundered their proceeds through bank accounts opened under three false identities. In an attempt to avoid detection, the couple deposited cash amounts of less than $10,000 into these accounts. -US DOJ, “New Jersey Residents Sentenced to Prison for Running a $3 Million ‘Bust-Out’ Scheme,” Press Release, 25 July 2006, available at http://www.usdoj.gov

Individuals and criminal groups are exploiting the home equity line of credit (HELOC) application process to conduct multiple-funding mortgage fraud schemes, check fraud schemes, and potentially money laundering-related activity. HELOCs differ from standard home equity loans because the homeowner may borrow against the line of credit over a period of time using a checkbook or credit card. HELOCs are aggressively marketed by lenders as an easy, fast, and inexpensive means to obtain funds. HELOC funds are normally withdrawn on an as-needed basis to conduct home repairs or to pay bills, but fraud perpetrators may withdraw the entire amount within a short time period. Lenders typically focus on property equity prior to funding HELOCs. As such, many lenders do not demand a full property appraisal or a full property title search.

Perpetrators apply for multiple HELOCs to different lending institutions for a single property within a short time period. Prior to providing the funding, lenders conduct searches to determine if the property is encumbered by a lien. However, liens on a property may not be recorded for several days or months and thus cannot be immediately verified. Consequently, lenders do not discover that they hold a third, fourth, or fifth lien on a property (rather than the expected second lien) until later. The money obtained from the multiple HELOCs totals more than the original property purchase price, exceeding the out-of-pocket expenses incurred to secure the property.

Perpetrators conducting check fraud schemes may manipulate HELOC accounts and cause lenders to incur losses. For example, a perpetrator secures a HELOC and withdraws the entire allotted amount. A fraudulent check is then used to pay the balance owed on the HELOC. However, the perpetrator quickly withdraws the check amount from the HELOC before the bank realizes the check is worthless. When the check is returned for insufficient funds, the line of credit surpasses its maximum limit and the lender experiences a loss. HELOC accounts have also been used in common check frauds where perpetrators stole HELOC checks, fraudulently completed them, and deposited the funds into their own personal accounts.

HELOCs may also be used as a means of depositing and withdrawing laundered proceeds to further conceal the original funding source. As long as withdrawals from the HELOC do not exceed the line of credit limit, payments deposited into the account may be withdrawn later.

FBI and Industry Respond to Escalating Mortgage Fraud

The FBI is proactively working with the mortgage industry in an effort to curb mortgage fraud crimes. On March 8, 2007, the FBI signed a memorandum of agreement with the MBA to promote the FBI’s Mortgage Fraud Warning Notice. The Notice states that it is illegal to make any false statement regarding income, assets, debt or matters of identification, or to willfully inflate property value to influence the action of a financial institution. Under the agreement, the MBA and the FBI will make the notice available to mortgage lenders to use voluntarily as a means of educating consumers and mortgage professionals of the penalties and consequences of mortgage fraud.10

October 7, 2010

NATIONAL MORTGAGE FRAUD SWEEP TAKES IN TWO BIRMINGHAM FRAUD RINGS

The U.S. Attorney’s Office for the Northern District of Alabama is currently prosecuting two mortgage fraud rings that have affected 125 properties in the Birmingham Metro Area and caused nearly $4 million in losses to banks and lending institutions, U.S. Attorney Joyce White Vance announced.

Working as part of Operation Stolen Dreams, the national mortgage fraud crackdown announced today by Attorney General Eric Holder, Vance said 12 defendants in the two Jefferson County mortgage fraud rings have been charged, sentenced or pleaded guilty since March 1 when the national sweep began.

Operation Stolen Dreams was organized by President Obama’s interagency Financial Fraud Enforcement Task Force, which was established to lead an aggressive, coordinated and proactive effort to investigate and prosecute financial crimes. Nationwide, since the sweep began it has involved 1,215 criminal defendants, including 485 arrests, who are allegedly responsible for more than $2.3 billion in losses. Additionally, the operation has, to date, resulted in 191 civil enforcement actions which have resulted in the recovery of more than $147 million.

“Mortgage fraud not only damages our banks and credit unions, this crime can affect the very core of our neighborhoods and communities,” Vance said. “We have seen first-hand that as a property goes into foreclosure, surrounding homes are harmed by lowered property values. Many times the foreclosed properties become abandoned, and these vacant houses then become the source of new criminal offenses such as vandalism, or drug-related activities. We are determined to aggressively seek out these frauds and prosecute their perpetrators,” she said.

The mortgage fraud rings currently being prosecuted in Birmingham involve various schemes of deception. Some schemes involve false statements of income and assets on loan applications. In other schemes, the seller makes an up-front payment to the buyer of rental property and promises to supply tenants eligible for government rent subsidies. Then, when the properties can’t be rented, buyers are stuck with depressed properties they can’t afford.

Of the 12 defendants involved in the two rings, 8face pending charges, two have been convicted and sentenced, and two have pleaded guilty and are awaiting sentencing.

The FBI, the Department of Housing and Urban Development’s Office of Inspector General and the Social Security Administration’s Office of Inspector General investigated these mortgage fraud rings and worked with Assistant U.S. Attorney Patrick Carney to bring them to prosecution, Vance said.

“Those who perpetrate mortgage fraud not only damage lending institutions, real estate professionals and the financial health of our communities – they also victimize a significant number of homeowners in the U.S. every year,” said FBI Special Agent in Charge Patrick J. Maley. “As these cases highlight, the FBI, along with our local, state and federal partners, are addressing this crime on a local level to protect the financial health of our country as well as individual citizens,” Maley said.

“The last number of years have seen enormous and damaging developments in the mortgage and housing markets, with an urgent reliance on the government to bolster unstable marketplaces and devastated communities,” said Kenneth M. Donohue, inspector general of the Department of Housing and Urban Development. “The HUD OIG, in partnership with other federal agencies, is deeply committed to ensuring that scarce resources are not diverted to those who seek to enrich themselves at the expense of those who so desperately need assistance today.”

The local mortgage fraud ring led by TIMOTHY JOHNSON hit lenders the hardest, causing $2.5 million in failed mortgages on about 45 properties in Fairfield, East Lake, inner-city Birmingham and Bessemer. Loans have been foreclosed on about 75 percent of those homes. Johnson and nine other individuals have been charged in connection with this mortgage fraud ring.

Johnson, 45, of Bessemer, is charged with two counts of making false statements on a loan application, two counts of mail fraud against a financial institution and one count of false statements to federal agents. The nine other defendants connected to the case all face charges that they supplied false information or documents, including letters claiming Social Security disability payments, in their mortgage loan applications.

Johnson, as the center of the fraud, would approach people attempting to sell their homes and discover what price they wanted. He would do minimal work on the homes, have them appraised and then attach a “mechanics lien” against the property for the difference between the appraised value and what the owner wanted for the house. Johnson would then proceed to find buyers, spreading the word that he could help individuals improve their credit or get approved for a mortgage loan.

His means of helping people secure loans often involved the creation of fraudulent letters purporting to show that the loan applicant received monthly disability payments from the Social Security Administration. Once loans were issued, based on the false claims of disability income or false credit claims, Johnson would realize his profit from the scheme. He would be paid the amount of the liens he placed on the properties.

Among the nine other defendants charged in connection to Johnson’s fraud scheme was a Social Security Administration employee, Pamela Terrell. Terrell was charged with aiding and abetting the fraud. She provided Johnson with several disability award letters that fraudulently purported to be from the Social Security Administration, and which were used to obtain loans for otherwise ineligible loan applicants.

A second ring being prosecuted in this office was led by AL CARSON ROCKETT, 33, of Birmingham, who pleaded guilty in February to mail fraud. Those charges were connected to a mortgage fraud scheme that involved about 80 properties and totaled $1,090,046. Rockett was sentenced June 3 to 15 months in prison.

Rocketts’ frauds took various forms as he adapted to changing banking and funding rules associated with mortgage loans. His initial scheme involved altering documents to make it appear that the home buyer already owned the home and was seeking to refinance the mortgage. He was assisted in this scheme by JERRY EUGENE PARKER, who owned Central Alabama Title Company. Parker, 59, of Hoover, was charged in April with two counts of aiding and abetting mail fraud.

Rockett resold houses he bought at foreclosure auctions. He made minimal improvements on the houses, then obtained artificially high appraisals. He recruited buyers with assurances that the houses could be investments, promising to find tenants through the government’s subsidized rent program and claiming the rent would cover the mortgage and provide some profit. Tenants rarely were found.

Once Rockett had buyers, Parker would change the title of the property into the buyer’s name before the sale was made. This allowed the new buyer to appear as the current owner of the property seeking a refinance, rather than a new mortgage loan. The loan requested would be 20 percent less than the appraised value, giving the appearance that the owner had at least 20 percent equity in the home, and making the loan more likely to be approved.

Rockett made his illicit profit in the difference between the inflated loan amount and his original purchase price. This refinance scheme also allowed him to avoid down-payment or other costs associated with an original mortgage loan.

The President’s Financial Fraud Enforcement Task Force includes representatives from a broad range of federal agencies, regulatory authorities, inspectors general, and state and local law enforcement who, working together, bring to bear a powerful array of criminal and civil enforcement resources. The task force is working to improve efforts across the federal executive branch, and with state and local partners, to investigate and prosecute significant financial crimes, ensure just and effective punishment for those who perpetrate financial crimes, combat discrimination in the lending and financial markets, and recover proceeds for victims of financial crimes. For more information on the task force, visit StopFraud.gov.

October 5, 2010

Mortgage Fraud Alert

With attempted fraud on the rise and fraudsters getting more sophisticated, brokers must ensure they don’t become soft targets by doing robust due diligence on all cases

With a raft of regulations, major funding problems and widespread dual pricing mortgage brokers have a lot on their plate at the moment. But one thing they can’t afford to ignore is the specter of fraud that permanently haunts the industry.

In the good old days between 2005 and 2007 when mortgages were aplenty brokers were probably guilty of being as lax as lenders and regulators when it came to checks.

Those days are gone and the consensus seems to be that as the industry dips and business volumes fall so does fraud, but this is a dangerous complacency.

Experian’s Fraud Index reveals that attempted fraud rose by 37% in the first half of 2010 compared with the second half of 2009 due to a rise in so-called soft fraud which is when borrowers misrepresent incomes to get a deal rather than by organized crime.

Hard fraud is committed by sophisticated criminals to money launder while soft fraud is the ordinary borrower lying to get a mortgage – serious but not in the same league. The best way for brokers to guard themselves against both is simple – due diligence on their clients through rigorous checks and questioning.

“The most important thing brokers can do is to identify applicants, be skeptical of what they are being told and check the facts rigorously,” says Nick Baxter, partner at Baxter Business Consultants.

“If a broker doesn’t have an impressive record it gets around and they can be used as a conduit to fraud, perhaps accidentally,” he adds. “The biggest danger is that brokers who don’t ask the tough questions become targets for money launderers who think they are lax. Brokers must ask tough questions at the right time.”

Alan Cleary, managing director of Precise Mortgages, agrees that brokers face the danger of being used by fraudsters.

“It’s not a good thing for brokers because you can’t plead ignorance if you’ve been targeted,” he says.

“Lenders can identify specific brokers they get bad business from and there are a lot of brokers being kicked off panels at the moment – it’s a growing problem. As lenders become more vigilant brokers are caught up in it and it is damaging to their business. If you get kicked off Lloyds Banking Group’s broker panel you’re out of business because you can’t be a broker without dealing with 30% of the market.”

For money laundering in particular Baxter says it is crucial brokers ask the right questions. Brokers must have proof of their deposit and ask where the money has come from and if it is legal.

“Buy-to-let frauds with no proof of deposit are a key risk,” he says. “There is no reason why a person who wants to buy 10 properties shouldn’t be asked where the deposit has come from. They should be asked whether it comes from legitimate means and how they have produced this money.

“By asking such questions brokers will protect themselves. Genuine customers won’t care about the intrusion and money launderers will go elsewhere.”

Ray Boulger, senior technical manager at John Charcol, agrees that tough questioning is the key to brokers preventing fraud but adds that it is difficult to counteract the sophistication of some documents.

“Brokers must do the obvious checks but also be experienced enough to recognize when something doesn’t sound right,” he says. “One of the biggest problems for brokers is the sophistication of fraudsters. Some copies of passports and identity are so good that you can’t tell they are fake.

“I was at a conference a few years ago where even fraud experts struggled to differentiate the two, so brokers can have difficulties sometimes.”

John Malone, chairman of PMS and the Association of Mortgage Intermediaries’ spokesman at the National Fraud Authority’s mortgage fraud forum, says fraudsters are always years ahead of the businesses they set out to deceive.

“Fraudsters are more sophisticated these days and use technology to their advantage,” he says. “On the internet you can get pay slips, P45s, fake passports and driving licenses that look real. Fraudsters will always be up to five years ahead of businesses.”

And Malone warns some types of fraud such as identity theft are increasing. His role at AMI gives brokers a voice at the National Fraud Authority. Until he took up the role this month brokers were not represented. Malone insists brokers are crucial in the chain as a conduit between clients, solicitors, surveyors and lenders.

“Brokers are right in the middle of it,” he says. “So we are trying to educate them and limit fraud as much as we possibly can.”

Baxter agrees that fraud is still an issue but believes there has been a decrease as volumes have fallen.

“Mortgage fraud has probably reduced because the days of the one minute mortgage don’t exist anymore,” he says.

But Baxter says brokers must be wary of mortgage fraud in the long term. He says many fraudsters are clever and present themselves as plausible customers. In short, if they can deceive people they will. He criticizes the speed of applications and the focus on volume and while praising fraud checks via credit scoring to highlight risks, he does not think it is a silver bullet.

“Credit scoring checks help but it was difficult for underwriters to consider all the information in the time they had,” he says. “I have seen things in credit scoring checks that should have made them ask questions but they didn’t.

“Between 2005 and 2008 I don’t think staff were adequately trained either. That is still the case but the difference is they now have more time. Lenders need to use this to train their staff for the future. Just because the mortgage market is depressed doesn’t mean fraudsters are going to leave. Lenders must do all they can to tackle it.”

Malone believes lenders can do more, such as making sure that brokers’ client information is secure.

“You can go into an intermediary’s office and there are files and computers lying around,” he says. “But what happens when they leave the office at night? Big institutions have to go through a risk education process to try to eliminate or reduce the onset of risk.

“Of course, one of the things lenders are asking everyone to do is to protect client details in a locked safe or filing cabinet. But in brokers’ offices that often isn’t the case. That’s the kind of things lenders should be asking questions about.”

Colin Snowdon, managing director of residential mortgages at Aldermore, says brokers should not be wary if lenders start to ask questions.

“When lenders ask questions that brokers think are strange it isn’t always because they are trying to make things difficult,” he says.

“You can’t be too careful about mortgage fraud these days. Brokers have an important role as it is they who meet the clients. They have to be aware of all the issues and ensure they don’t allow themselves to be used. There is a real danger of that.”

Eddie Goldsmith, senior partner at Goldsmith Williams, has just set up the Conveyancing Association to tackle fraud in conveyancing and says lenders will always use people they are comfortable with.

“In every profession there are good and bad individuals and you can’t avoid criminals who infiltrate the industry,” he says. “What lenders need to do is work with people they know, are comfortable with, and who they trust.

“Firms that are members of our trade body are all reputable and one of the reasons we formed it is to help lenders use good firms. This won’t get rid of fraud overnight but if lenders are going down a restricted panel route we can tell them to look at the Conveyancing Association as a reputable grouping.”

Malone agrees that brokers have a huge responsibility and that the Financial Services Authority is clamping down on them. He says that for years the buzzwords have been ’know your client’ but the emphasis has now changed as the FSA seeks to talk tough on fraud and stresses the need for ’client due diligence’.

“I think the phrase puts far more onus on brokers to understand more about their clients,” he says. “At PMS if we want to take on a new firm we have to do thorough due diligence on it before taking it on board and that is what brokers have to do. ’Know your client’ was good at the time but there is a change of emphasis at the FSA which is demanding due diligence.”

He adds that it is more than just clients who need to be thoroughly checked.

“Brokers also have to look all around the client’s situation such as the property they are buying and the solicitor they are using, and check things such as how long it has been operating and whether it has had any issues with lenders,” he says.

“These are the things that brokers haven’t been doing over the years. They’ve just been accepting the solicitors their clients use but it’s their responsibility now to find out more about them.”

Cleary says due diligence is crucial and if business is coming from an introducer brokers must take appropriate steps to guard against fraud.

“If brokers are accepting business from an introducer they are basically saying that they are so confident about that individual that they will use their FSA license to get the business through,” he says. “If it goes wrong the broker is in trouble, so they have to go through the appropriate checks.”

But Cleary does not believe brokers have to do all the work as lenders have systems and structures to combat fraud.

“Brokers can’t be expected to do everything,” he says. “Lenders have access to national fraud databases and credit referencing tools, which I don’t expect brokers to have because it costs a lot of money.

“The main thing for brokers is to verify the source of introduced business and make sure they don’t get duped into accepting dodgy pay slips. If you smell a rat check it as if it’s too good to be true then it probably is – we’ve all got that sixth sense that tells us when something isn’t right.”

Malone insists brokers have a responsibility to check the client’s situation.

“Brokers have to be aware of who they are dealing with,” he says. “It can be done in a few phone calls. If lenders are reducing the legal firms they use, they are clearly going through their lists to make sure they know those acting on their behalf. Brokers must do the same.”

He says that when individual registration is brought in there will be even more onus on brokers to perform thorough checks.

“Individual registration will reduce the number of brokers in the mortgage industry,” he says. “We don’t know by how many but I think it will further reduce the numbers. We will be left with a strong, hardcore group of intermediaries who will have to protect their position. We’re asking them to protect themselves and their business by having a firmer understanding of their transactions.”

There is a clear sense that brokers are going to have more responsibilities and be subject to more scrutiny when individual registration is introduced. Malone believes brokers should start verification of clients as early as possible.

“Brokers must start to verify potential clients before they become official clients,” he says. “A lot of brokers just get clients from lead generation firms and no-one has verified them. Brokers haven’t verified clients enough in the past because of the volumes they were doing. A lot of fraud is now being uncovered from the boom years when gross lending was £700bn in 2005 and 2006. If even 5% of that was fraudulent that would amount to a massive £35bn. It is these numbers we’re grappling with.”

A spokesman for the Council of Mortgage Lenders says that varying market conditions create opportunities for criminals who always target weaknesses.

“The ground is constantly shifting with fraud and different practices that organizations follow creating different opportunities for criminals to target,” he says. “They will systematically target weaknesses. But changing market conditions have exposed fraudulent practices that may not have been so apparent when property prices were rising.

“One of the problems with fraud is that it is difficult to quantify. Someone can make a fraudulent application which is declined and we have to decide whether it is a failure that the fraud was attempted or is it a success that the fraud didn’t happen.”

He adds that the most important thing is for brokers to report suspicious information to the right authorities. He highlights the FSA’s Information from Lenders programmed as an example of what brokers should be doing.

Even in depressed times and with brokers fighting for their survival, they must remain vigilant against fraud. Lax checking can ruin careers and reputations can be forever tarnished.

Brokers don’t have all the responsibility and clearly lenders have their role to play too but it is brokers’ necks on the line if something goes wrong, so they have to be sure who they’re dealing with.

There will always be fraudsters looking to deceive them so brokers must make sure they are not a soft target. By doing robust due diligence brokers can protect themselves and fulfill their responsibilities to tackle the specter of fraud that could come back to haunt the industry in a big way.

Brokers must be the first defense

It is a well-known fact in the financial services industry that mortgage lenders have tightened their criteria significantly in an effort to protect themselves from escalating mortgage fraud losses. Coupled with this, the Council of Mortgage Lenders has reported that gross mortgage lending has fallen by 6% in August 2010 compared with August 2009.

Applications are being heavily scrutinized by lenders for signs of material misrepresentation or other anomalies.

Mortgage brokers have suffered much bad press in recent months as the unscrupulous practices of a few have led to serious repercussions for the honest majority. In many cases lenders have reduced the number of brokers on their panels and therefore the number of brokers they are prepared to do business with.

So what can brokers do to win back favor with mortgage providers? What are banks looking for from individuals who are introducing business to them?

As part of my role as fraud consultant at CoreLogic Solutions, a company that specializes in fraud detection technology for the financial services sector, I recently undertook analysis that has highlighted the most common types of mortgage fraud.

The top six most common types of mortgage fraud are:

* Income – 35% of fraudulent applications had evidence of significantly over-inflated salaries.
* Employment – around 16% of applicants had tried to hide details relating to their employer, with a large proportion not disclosing they were self-employed.
* Occupancy – 14% were applications for undisclosed buy-to-lets.
* Fake accounts – over 11% of the proven fraud cases were supported by financial accounts that were either fake or bore no resemblance to the true trading performance of the company or trading individuals.
* Valuation fraud – 11% of cases were backed by valuations that were over-inflated by up to 500%.
* Other professionals – around 6% of the sample showed evidence of fraudulent behavior by other mortgage professionals.

In my experience, the best way for brokers to win back the confidence of lenders is to act as a first line of defense. In many cases it is brokers who build rapport with applicants and have access to supporting documentation. By checking documentation relating to income, employment and occupancy and ensuring that the application appears to make sense, brokers will be able to assist lenders and speed up the application process.

Hopefully in time, this will improve the rapport between lenders and brokers and ensure that strong relationships develop and flourish as the mortgage market starts to recover.”
Mortgage broker fraud cases this year

Noel Smith of Andrew Copeland Mortgages
Noel Smith, a director of south London-based Andrew Copeland Mortgages Limited, was fined £17,500 for systems and controls failings and for exposing his business to the risk of being used to further financial crime. Smith also had his Financial Services Authority approval to perform management functions withdrawn.

The FSA concluded that Smith’s poor management controls and compliance monitoring led to 224 clients being exposed to the risk of receiving unsuitable advice and left the firm open to abuse by fraudsters. Smith also failed to oversee remedial actions outlined by the FSA to address potential poor advice given to clients. There was also no evidence that affordability had been assessed.

John Apicella was banned for lack of competency by leaving his business open to the risk of involvement in financial crime. Apicella was a sole trader at Newbury-based Mortgages 4 You.

The FSA found that Apicella failed to meet the minimum standards required of a broker by not always completing a fact-find document for new customers or taking the time to research their attitude to risk. In interviews with the FSA regarding customer’s income Apicella said that “if a lender doesn’t require it I don’t ask for it”. He added that he would accept self-employed customers’ income figures at face value. Also, Apicella did not carry out due diligence on a mortgage introducer from whom he accepted seven mortgage applications.

Neale Morton, Syed Meah and Jonathan Smith of Neale Morton IMS Limited
The individuals banned all worked for one firm, Neale Morton IMS Limited, based in Gateshead, Tyne and Wear. Neale Morton was the principal and director of IMS. The FSA prohibited and fined him £130,192 for his knowing involvement in mortgage fraud and for systems and controls failings at IMS for which he was personally culpable. Part of the fine, £5,192, represented a disgorgement of the profit he made from the fraudulent applications.

Morton not only submitted mortgage applications for himself using false income details, but also allowed his firm to be used for mortgage fraud by its advisers and customers. Advisers Jonathan Smith and Syed Meah produced falsified compliance documents during the FSA investigation. Smith also submitted falsified applications to lenders on behalf of customers and Meah did not notify the FSA that he had been arrested on suspicion of money laundering and been suspended as a mortgage adviser at IMS.

In an interview with the FSA, Smith estimated that around 5% of the mortgage business he submitted at IMS was fraudulent.
Collective action is important

This year is notable for an unwelcome first – it is the year mortgage fraud cases with a collective value of more than £1bn were heard by Crown Courts in England and Wales. But anyone who thinks things will get better soon needs to think again, and quickly. My advice is to revise estimates penciled in for 2011. If £1bn is your benchmark, you’re seriously underestimating the problem.

There are two reasons for this. First, £1bn only relates to the known cases of mortgage fraud heard by the courts during the past 10 months. Second, any fraud professional will tell you that for every case that is uncovered, up to four go undetected.

My view is that the real level of mortgage fraud exposure in the UK could be significantly higher than £1bn – and growing rapidly. And if that is the case, the sooner the industry takes appropriate action the better.

The harsh reality is that fraudsters regard lenders as easy prey where the pickings are rich and the chances of being caught pretty remote. Lax and inconsistent controls in the lending and broking community and an unwillingness to recognize the crime – particularly insider and employee fraud – have enabled con men to run riot in sectors such as buy-to-let, self-cert and commercial.

This is a major reason why we have seen a huge increase in the number of lawyers, accountants, surveyors and intermediaries who are prepared to fleece their way to easy and lucrative property paydays.

Any fraud professional will tell you that for every case that is uncovered, up to four go undetected

The Solicitors Regulatory Authority clearly thinks the problem is growing. Recently, its head of fraud went on the record stating his team was looking into the affairs of dozens of law practices suspected of being run by criminals and involved in committing mortgage fraud.

The SRA is working with several police forces to start a major clean-up. This is welcomed as it’s a break with the legal world’s traditional practice of staying silent until a threat has been eliminated. I also applaud the likes of the Association of Mortgage Intermediaries for setting up a panel to address fraud.

But the time has come for the whole industry to debate the extent of the problem in a meaningful way.

Getting to the heart of the matter will require all parties to put their egos to one side because mortgage fraud afflicts all organizations, regardless of their size, geography and corporate DNA.

It also means the industry must stop sweeping cases of insider fraud under the carpet. Organizations need to realize 60% of all fraud has a significant insider element and staff poses a threat to the well-being of businesses.

If there isn’t the collective desire to get to grips with things, then mortgage fraud will continue to be a major bête noire – and the sector will remain a safe haven for organized crime and opportunistic thieves.

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