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November 3, 2010

Rhode Island Real Estate Attorney, State Senator to Plead Guilty as Charged to Mortgage Fraud Schemes Netting More Than $1.7 Million

PROVIDENCE, RI—Christopher B. Maselli, a North Providence real estate attorney and state senator from Johnston, has filed notice with the U.S. District Court in Providence that he intends to plead guilty to eight counts of bank fraud, as charged by the government. An information filed by the government last week alleges that Maselli falsified bank and federal tax documents and lied about his income and assets in obtaining more than 1.7 million dollars in mortgages. There is no plea agreement between Mr. Maselli and the government.
The filing of the information was announced by U.S. Attorney Peter F. Neronha.
Maselli was first charged in this matter in June by way of indictment with seven counts of bank fraud. The information filed Tuesday contains those charges, and one additional count of bank fraud. In the latest charge, it is alleged that Maselli used a family member as a straw borrower and fabricated documents to support the loan application.
According to the Information, between June 2007 and March 2009, Maselli, a self-employed attorney, allegedly inflated his annual income dating back to 2005; lied about personal assets; and submitted phony and altered bank statements and IRS tax returns when applying for mortgages, a home improvement loan, and an auto loan. In all, Maselli obtained six mortgages on residential properties in Johnston and North Providence, and an auto loan, totaling approximately $1,725,027.50.
An arraignment hearing has been scheduled for November 3. Bank fraud is punishable by a maximum sentence of 30 years’ imprisonment, $1,000,000 fine, and five years’ supervised release.
The case is being prosecuted by Assistant U.S. Attorney Dulce Donovan.
The matter was investigated by the Federal Bureau of Investigation; U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development, Office of the Inspector General; and the Internal Revenue Service, Criminal Investigations.

February 13, 2010

No restitution in R.I. $674,000 mortgage-fraud scheme

PROVIDENCE — A woman who has been sentenced to 46 months in federal prison will not, for now, have to pay restitution to the institutions that gave her financing that she then used in a $674,000 mortgage-fraud scheme.

Lisa Torres, formerly of Johnston, was sentenced in U.S. District Court, Providence, in December for conspiring to commit bank fraud. That sentence added 18 months to a prison term for a different case in which Torres, who had been a legal assistant, conspired with two former lawyers, John M. Cicilline and Joseph A. Bevilacqua Jr., to shake down people accused of drug crimes in 2007. The three pleaded guilty in 2008.

The fraud scheme, in which Torres bought foreclosed properties at low prices and got others to take out mortgages to buy the homes from her at higher prices, happened while she was under indictment in the case involving Cicilline and Bevilacqua. Prosecutors have said Torres targeted friends and other people in the Dominican community.

At a restitution hearing Friday, Assistant U.S. Attorney Lee Vilker told U.S. Chief District Judge Mary M. Lisi that two financial institutions, MetLife and Bank of America, representing five of the nine properties, reported that none has been sold so there are no dollar figures to work with to try to calculate restitution.

“They are unable, at this time, to say what their losses will be,” Vilker told the judge, leaving no option for restitution at this time.

Financial institutions Wachovia, IndyMac Bank and CitiMortgage did not respond, Vilker said.

Lisi said she had to order no restitution but that, by federal law, if relevant financial institutions do come up with figures showing losses, they would have 60 days from that time to petition the court for restitution.

Posted By: Ralph Roberts @ 3:52 pm | | Comments (0) | Trackback |
Filed under: Bank Fraud,Mortgage Fraud Scheme,Rhode Island