Search


About

Flipping Frenzy.com is your source for news, information, and commentary on Real Estate and Mortgage Fraud. Click here to learn more.


Suspect Fraud?

If you believe you have been a victim of real estate or mortgage fraud, start here! Select your state from the pulldown menu below:

Articles

Our founder, Ralph Roberts, has written many eye-opening articles about Real Estate and Mortgage Fraud. Click here for more information.

Contact Ralph

If you would like to talk with us about a Real Estate or Mortgage Fraud-related matter, please click here.


Click Above for Info

Categories

Ralph's Latest Book: Click Above for Info

May 2012
S M T W T F S
« Jun    
 12345
6789101112
13141516171819
20212223242526
2728293031  

Click Above for Info

Recent comments

The FBI Investigates Mortgage Fraud!

Recent posts

Archives

May 30, 2011

Three Indicted in Multiple Mortgage Fraud Schemes Involving 13 Properties

PROVIDENCE, RI—A federal grand jury in Providence on Tuesday returned indictments against a loan officer and a loan processor employed at the same mortgage company, and a former Rhode Island attorney currently involved in the real estate industry in an alleged “straw borrowing” scheme that netted more than $3.5 million dollars in fraudulently obtained mortgages on 13 properties in five Rhode Island communities, it was announced by United States Attorney Peter F. Neronha.

The grand jury returned a 13-count indictment charging Juan Carlos Hernandez, 41, of West Warwick, R.I., a loan officer with National City Mortgage Company; Miguel Valerio, 51, of Providence, R.I., a loan processor with National City Mortgage Company; and James D. Levitt, 65, of Pawtucket, R.I., a former attorney who controlled two companies formed for the purpose of engaging in real estate transactions. The properties are located in Cranston, Central Falls, Coventry, Pawtucket, and Providence.

In addition, Levitt is named in a separate eight-count indictment alleging three counts of bank fraud, three counts of wire fraud, and two counts of tax fraud in connection with mortgage transactions in Providence separate from the conspiracies outlined in the indictment naming Levitt, Juan Carlos Hernandez, and Miguel Valerio.

The indictments allege that Juan Carlos Hernandez and Miguel Valerio conspired to recruit and pay “straw purchasers” to purchase properties they would not normally qualify to purchase, with the intent of taking control of the properties to collect rent on and to sell within a short period of time, and divide the profits among them. The “straw-borrowers” were paid various fees and were regularly advised by the defendants that they would not be responsible for the mortgages for which they were applying.

In addition, the indictment alleges that Hernandez, Valerio, and Levitt conspired to obtain “straw purchasers” to apply for and obtain mortgages on four properties in which the three had a financial interest.

A separate indictment alleges that James Levitt schemed to commit mail and wire fraud by obtaining mortgages on three properties which he expected to control, two of which were obtained in the name of an associate based on false and fraudulent information.

The cases are being prosecuted by Assistant U.S. Attorney Luis M. Matos.

The matters were investigated by the Federal Bureau of Investigation, U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development Office of Inspector General, and Internal Revenue Service, Criminal Investigations.

An indictment is merely an allegation and is not evidence of guilt. A defendant is entitled to a fair trial in which it will be the government’s burden to prove guilt beyond a reasonable doubt.

April 28, 2011

Manchester-by-the-Sea Woman Sentenced in Mortgage Fraud Case

BOSTON, MA—A Manchester-by-the-Sea woman was sentenced today in federal court for her participation in a mortgage fraud scheme in 2005.
United States Attorney Carmen M. Ortiz; Warren T. Banford, Special Agent in Charge of the Federal Bureau of Investigation – Boston Field Division; Robert Bethel, Inspector in Charge of the U.S. Postal Inspection Service; Susan Dukes, Special Agent in Charge of the Internal Revenue Service, Criminal Investigation – Boston Field Office; and Police Commissioner Edward Davis of the Boston Police Department, announced today that ELIZABETH SON, 26, of Manchester-by-the-Sea, was sentenced by U.S. District Judge Rya W. Zobel to three years of supervised release, with the first six months to be served in a half-way house, and was ordered to pay restitution in the amount of $611,000 to victim mortgage lenders.
On November 25, 2008 SON pled guilty to four counts of wire fraud. In 2005 SON participated in a scheme with others to defraud mortgage lenders in connection with the purchase of two properties in Dorchester by serving as a “straw” borrower on fraudulent loan applications.
The case was investigated by the Federal Bureau of Investigation, the U.S. Postal Inspection Service and the Internal Revenue Service, with assistance from the Boston Police Department. It was prosecuted by Assistant U.S. Attorneys Victor A. Wild and Ryan M. DiSantis of the Ortiz’s Economic Crimes Unit and Mary Murrane of the Asset Forfeiture Unit.

March 31, 2011

Manhattan U.S. Attorney Announces Charges Against Two Men in a $10 Million Commercial Bank Fraud and Identity Theft Scheme

Defendants Paid Bribes to a Bank Employee to Obtain $2.45 Million in Loans

PREET BHARARA, the United States Attorney for the Southern District of New York, JANICE FEDARCYK, Assistant Director in Charge of the New York Field Office of the Federal Bureau of Investigation (“FBI”), and CHARLES PINE, Special Agent in Charge of the New York Field Office of the Internal Revenue Service (“IRS”), announced the filing of charges against CHRISTOPHER CAVOUNIS and JAGDESH COOMA for orchestrating a scheme to defraud several banks of at least $10 million by obtaining commercial loans and lines of credit using false and fraudulent documents. As part of the scheme, CAVOUNIS and COOMA allegedly submitted applications for loans in the names of shell companies with no assets, and with straw owners, using fraudulent documents created to trick the banks into believing those entities were real. The defendants also paid bribes totaling over $135,000 to an employee of Citibank to obtain $2.45 million worth of loans.

Manhattan U.S. Attorney PREET BHARARA stated: “The defendants engaged in a breathtaking array of elaborate financial schemes, obtaining millions of dollars from banks using fraudulent documents and misappropriated identity information. These charges should send a message that, along with our partners at the FBI and IRS, we will vigorously pursue those who make it harder for law-abiding companies to obtain credit during these difficult economic times.”

FBI Assistant Director in Charge JANICE K. FEDARCYK stated: “The defendants concocted an intricate scheme using false documents and identity theft to fraudulently obtain $10 million in bank loans. By further using bribery and threats of violence, the defendants showed that their only objective was to make a profit themselves. Committing financial crimes of this magnitude undermines the integrity of the financial process created to help American businesses succeed.”

IRS Special Agent in Charge CHARLES PINE stated: “Bank fraud, like all financial crimes, adds to the underground economy, erodes the integrity of our tax system and threatens the financial health of our communities. IRS-Criminal Investigation is always ready to work with our law enforcement partners and lend its financial investigative expertise to investigations like this one.”

According to the indictment and the complaint previously filed in Manhattan federal court:

From at least 2009 to November 2010, CAVOUNIS and COOMA allegedly obtained, through fraud, at least 16 commercial loans and/or lines of credit, totaling at least $10 million, from eight different lenders—Capital One Bank, N.A.; Citibank, N.A. (“Citibank”); First Republic Bank; Herald National Bank; New York Commercial Bank; Signature Bank; Sovereign Bank; and TD Bank, N.A. (collectively, the “Lenders”). All of these loans are presently in default. To trick the Lenders into providing the loans, CAVOUNIS and COOMA engaged in an elaborate scheme in which they prepared and then submitted applications and supporting documentation for commercial loans that contained false and misleading information on behalf of empty shell companies with no existing business or assets.

As part of the alleged scheme, CAVOUNIS and COOMA recruited straw borrowers who provided personal identifying information to the defendants in exchange for future payment. With the information in hand, the defendants represented these individuals to be the owners or executives of various companies in applications for loans from the Lenders. In addition, CAVOUNIS and COOMA provided the Lenders with fraudulent documentation in support of those applications, which they had created, and which purported to accurately reflect the personal and financial information of each straw owner, and/or corresponding company. This documentation included falsified tax returns, identification documents, and bank or other financial statements. Unbeknownst to the Lenders, however, the straw borrowers were in no way affiliated with those companies, which were themselves complete shams with neither existing businesses nor actual earnings and income. CAVOUNIS, in connection with certain applications, also assumed the identity of another individual himself and provided financial institutions with a fraudulent driver’s license in the name of that individual.

Furthermore, to help obtain the loans, over the course of an approximately four month period in 2010, CAVOUNIS paid a Citibank employee in excess of $135,000 in bribes to secure approval for several lines of credit, in the total approximate amount of $2.45 million, which were issued to empty shell companies he controlled.

When one of the banks froze a line of credit obtained through the scheme, CAVOUNIS allegedly resorted to threats in an attempt to obtain the loan. For example, in October 2010, after Citibank approved a $450,000 line of credit but subsequently froze funding when CAVOUNIS attempted to withdraw that entire amount within mere days of approval, he threatened two Citibank bankers with physical violence unless the loan proceeds were made immediately available to him.

CAVOUNIS, 30, of Fresh Meadows, New York, and COOMA, 27, of Fresh Meadows, New York, are each charged with one count of conspiracy to commit bank fraud and four substantive counts of bank fraud, each of which carry a maximum sentence of 30 years in prison, as well as one count of aggravated identity theft, which carries a mandatory minimum sentence of two years in prison which must run consecutively to any other sentence imposed. CAVOUNIS and COOMA were previously charged in a complaint and were arrested on November 26, 2010. The case is assigned to U.S. District Judge ROBERT P. PATTERSON.

March 11, 2011

Milford Woman Involved in Mortgage Fraud Scheme is Sentenced

David B. Fein, United States Attorney for the District of Connecticut, announced that MARY ELLEN DURSO, 54, of Milford, was sentenced today by U.S. District Court Judge Mark R. Kravitz in New Haven to three years of probation, the first six months of which DURSO must spend in home confinement, for her involvement in mortgage fraud scheme. On December 14, 2010, DURSO pleaded guilty to one count of conspiracy stemming from the scheme, and five counts of filing false tax returns.

According to court documents and statements made in court, DURSO conspired with others to commit bank fraud by filing a materially false loan application to Washington Mutual to refinance a condominium in Hillsboro Beach, Florida. DURSO served as the straw owner for the condo in order to obtain the fraudulent proceeds for the benefit of her co-conspirators.

On September 20, 2007, after the refinance loan had been approved and funded, $233,874.98 was wired into DURSO’s bank account. The next day, DURSO obtained two cashier’s checks totaling $155,544 for the benefit of her co-conspirators. DURSO also gave her co-conspirators signed and unsigned blank checks to her bank account to allow them to write checks payable to themselves or to entities they controlled. As part of the scheme, one of her co-conspirators paid the mortgage by writing checks to DURSO. The checks were deposited in DURSO’s bank account, and then mortgage payments were automatically withdrawn from the account, making it appear that the funds for the payment came from DURSO.

By the summer of 2008, the mortgage payments had stopped, and the condo subsequently went into foreclosure. The home was then deeded to Federal Home Loan Mortgage Corp. (“Freddie Mac”) before being resold for approximately $35,000 less than the outstanding principal balance on the original refinance loan.

DURSO also filed false tax returns for tax years 2004 to 2008 by inflating her itemized deductions, including her mortgage interest and medical expenses, resulting in a tax loss of approximately $46,000 to the government.

Today, Judge Kravitz ordered DURSO to pay restitution to Freddie Mac, and back taxes, plus penalties and interest, to the government.

This case is being investigated by the Federal Bureau of Investigation and the Internal Revenue Service – Criminal Investigation. The case is being prosecuted by Assistant United States Attorney David T. Huang.

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 11, 2011

Fontana Woman Convicted in Mortgage Fraud Case Involving More Than $1 Million in Fraudulent Loans

The fourth defendant in a mortgage fraud scheme that fraudulently collected more than $1 million in loan proceeds was convicted today on federal charges for acting as a “straw borrower” who posed as the purchaser of one of the properties.

Lisa Lievanos, 45, was convicted of five felony counts – conspiracy, two counts of wire fraud, money laundering and making false statements to special agents with the Federal Bureau of Investigation.

As a result of today’s convictions, Lievanos faces up to 60 years in federal prison when she is sentenced on July 13 by United States District Judge Florence- Marie Cooper.

Three other defendants in this case previously pleaded guilty for their roles in the mortgage fraud scheme. They are:

* Angela Cotton, 39, of Fontana, who ran a bogus title company and is scheduled to be sentenced by Judge Cooper on June 15;
* Terral Toole, 41, of Irvine (formerly of Lake Elsinore), who is scheduled to be sentenced by Judge Cooper on June 1; and
* Miles Davis, 46, of Glendale (formerly of Reseda), a loan processor, who was sentenced by Judge Cooper to three years of probation, including six months of home detention.

The evidence presented at Lievanos’ trial showed that Cotton found properties in Rancho Cucamonga and, with the assistance of real estate professionals and people such as Lievanos who agreed to sell their personal information, fraudulently “purchased” one of the properties and obtained a $635,000 loan.

A second loan involved a refinance of Lievanos’ residence, which netted the defendants $526,500. In the loan application, Lievanos included false employment information, income information, occupancy declarations, and rental agreements relating to her financial condition.

On the loan applications, the four defendants allegedly included false employment information, which included verifying the amounts of income of the straw buyer. As part of the scheme, Cotton established fraudulent escrow companies to complete the fraudulent sale transactions.

As a result of the fraudulent conduct related to the scheme, banks suffered losses of nearly $2 million.

This case is a result of an investigation by the FBI’s Southern California Mortgage (SCAM) Task Force.

October 19, 2010

Don’t Be a Victim of Mortgage Fraud

Mortgage fraud has become more prevalent throughout the nation and especially so in Georgia, particularly the Atlanta metropolitan area. Mortgage fraud has wreaked havoc on neighborhoods, ruined individuals’ credit standing, and caused many millions of dollars of losses in Georgia. Don’t be a victim of mortgage fraud or fall prey to becoming unwitting participants in a fraud scheme. Ensure that you are dealing with a reputable entity, ask questions about unusual or suspicious transactions, and be aware of any deal that sounds “too good to be true”. If any loan officer or mortgage broker asks you to sign any document that you know contains a false statement or misrepresentation – WALK AWAY from the transaction and report the incident to the Department of Banking and Finance!

The Department wants to ensure that you are aware of some of the common fraud schemes that have come to our attention. Most of the fraud schemes involve variations of several of the following elements in which the “fraudsters”:

*
Induce appraisers to inflate property values in order to obtain a larger mortgage loan for the “straw borrower.”
*
Submit bogus invoices for phantom “upgrades” or “renovations” that falsely inflate the value of the property. This allows the fraudster, “straw borrower” or “investor” to obtain a larger mortgage.
*
Promise “investors” that their properties will be leased or rented and all mortgage, insurance, property tax and home owner association payments will be paid for them. In actuality, these payments are not made and there may or may not be any tenants.
*
Pay “straw borrowers” or “investors” to sign and submit documents containing false qualifying information such as false and counterfeit drivers’ licenses, pay stubs, tax returns, W-2 tax forms, rent checks, bank statements, earnest money checks, Social Security numbers, and verifications of deposit, employment, rent and mortgage.
*
Pay “straw sellers” to falsely claim ownership of a property, appear at a closing where the property is sold to “straw borrowers”, disburse the sale proceeds at the fraudsters’ direction and thereafter appear at another closing to purchase the same property at a lesser amount with a portion of the sale proceeds, a practice sometimes called “flipping.” Some flips are the same day and others within days, weeks or months.
*
Advance down payment amounts which are falsely represented as being paid by the borrower.
*
Cause “straw sellers” and “straw borrowers” to assume the identity of other people for the purpose of fraudulently obtaining mortgage loan proceeds.
*
Quit claim the property back to the seller or to a co-conspirator without notice to or permission from the lender.
*
File false satisfaction, cancellation and assignment of security deeds on a number of properties to eliminate the security interest of legitimate lenders, by either fraudulently transferring interest to a co-conspirator’s company or showing the property to be free of all mortgage liens before obtaining additional mortgage loans on the property.
*
File false and forged Quit Claim deeds transferring property from true owners to “straw sellers” and “straw borrowers”, thereby gaining control of the property to use as security for fraudulent loans.

More Information

Residential mortgage fraud continues to receive much attention and has been more prevalent in Georgia. An FBI assistant director testified that fraud is “pervasive” in the mortgage market and is growing fast. With sophisticated electronic document-preparation programs, unethical mortgage loan officers, brokers, real estate agents and lawyers can create fake FICO scores, fake tax returns, fake identities and obtain inflated appraisals. According to the FBI, based on existing investigations and mortgage fraud reporting, 80% of all reported fraud losses involve collaboration or collusion by industry insiders.

The chairman of a House financial services subcommittee cited industry studies suggesting that “between 10 and 15 percent of all home loan applications involve some fraud or misrepresentation.” The potential costs – to home buyers and mortgage lenders – could be in the billions of dollars a year. According to a recent report by the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI), each mortgage fraud scheme contains some type of “material misstatement, misrepresentation or omission relied upon by an underwriter or lender to fund, purchase or insure a loan.”

Frequently, mortgage fraud ends up hurting not only lenders but innocent consumers too. One mortgage company cited the following example of mortgage fraud: A first-time buyer was persuaded to purchase a property that was significantly overvalued because of a fraudulent appraisal. The seller pocketed big profits, but now the buyer is unable to refinance and unable to pay off the loan by selling the house because the property is worth less than the mortgage amount. Some possible signs of fraud in the application – unusually high FICO scores combined with high incomes, higher-than-average mortgage amounts and home values for the neighborhood. That may sound odd since all these characteristics would normally be associated with problem-free applicants. But unfortunately, the crooks know this too, and they often try to make a loan application good enough to pass cleanly through automated loan underwriting systems.

Georgia Real Estate Fraud Prevention & Awareness Coalition (GREFPAC)

The GREFPAC works to:

*
Prevent real estate and mortgage fraud;
*
Facilitate cooperation among and between industry partners, regulators and law enforcement agencies;
*
Pursue compliance with, and enforcement of, existing regulations and statutes;
*
Develop and promote industry practices and regulatory and statutory reforms that will benefit consumers and industry partners; and
*
Promote public awareness through information and education.

You will find valuable information about preventing mortgage fraud on GREFPAC’s website – http://www.grefpac.org/

Of particular interest is their “You Can Prevent Mortgage Fraud – DO’s & DON’Ts” brochure. The prevention brochure is broken down into two index cards. The brochure is provided in English and in Spanish.

For quick access to the DO’s brochure in English – http://www.grefpac.org/downloads/Do Card 5×8.doc
For quick access to the DON’Ts brochure in English – http://www.grefpac.org/downloads/Dont Card 5×8.doc
See the Spanish version of the brochure

If you suspect mortgage fraud, please go to the following page on MBA’s website to learn more about reporting procedures:
Reporting Mortgage Fraud in Georgia

You may report suspected mortgage fraud in Georgia to the Department by downloading our Reporting Mortgage Fraud form. Doe not use this form if you are a consumer with an issue or complaint regarding your own home loan.

Additional Resources for Mortgage Fraud Prevention:

Stop Mortgage Fraud website

Mortgage Asset Research Institute, Inc.

Online-Home-Mortgages.Net

October 13, 2010

FBI investigates and tips to help prevent you from being victimized

Redemption / Strawman / Bond Fraud

Proponents of this scheme claim that the U.S. government or the Treasury Department control bank accounts—often referred to as “U.S. Treasury Direct Accounts”—for all U.S. citizens that can be accessed by submitting paperwork with state and federal authorities. Individuals promoting this scam frequently cite various discredited legal theories and may refer to the scheme as “Redemption,” “Strawman,” or “Acceptance for Value.” Trainers and websites will often charge large fees for “kits” that teach individuals how to perpetrate this scheme. They will often imply that others have had great success in discharging debt and purchasing merchandise such as cars and homes. Failures to implement the scheme successfully are attributed to individuals not following instructions in a specific order or not filing paperwork at correct times.

This scheme predominately uses fraudulent financial documents that appear to be legitimate. These documents are frequently referred to as “bills of exchange,” “promissory bonds,” “indemnity bonds,” “offset bonds,” “sight drafts,” or “comptrollers warrants.” In addition, other official documents are used outside of their intended purpose, like IRS forms 1099, 1099-OID, and 8300. This scheme frequently intermingles legal and pseudo legal terminology in order to appear lawful. Notaries may be used in an attempt to make the fraud appear legitimate. Often, victims of the scheme are instructed to address their paperwork to the U.S. Secretary of the Treasury.

Tips for Avoiding Redemption/Strawman/Bond Fraud:

* Be wary of individuals or groups selling kits that they claim will inform you on to access secret bank accounts.
* Be wary of individuals or groups proclaiming that paying federal and/or state income tax is not necessary.
* Do not believe that the U.S. Treasury controls bank accounts for all citizens.
* Be skeptical of individuals advocating that speeding tickets, summons, bills, tax notifications, or similar documents can be resolved by writing “acceptance for value” on them.
* If you know of anyone advocating the use of property liens to coerce acceptance of this scheme, contact your local FBI office.

Advance Fee Schemes

An advance fee scheme occurs when the victim pays money to someone in anticipation of receiving something of greater value—such as a loan, contract, investment, or gift—and then receives little or nothing in return.

The variety of advance fee schemes is limited only by the imagination of the con artists who offer them. They may involve the sale of products or services, the offering of investments, lottery winnings, “found money,” or many other “opportunities.” Clever con artists will offer to find financing arrangements for their clients who pay a “finder’s fee” in advance. They require their clients to sign contracts in which they agree to pay the fee when they are introduced to the financing source. Victims often learn that they are ineligible for financing only after they have paid the “finder” according to the contract. Such agreements may be legal unless it can be shown that the “finder” never had the intention or the ability to provide financing for the victims.

Tips for Avoiding Advanced Fee Schemes:

If the offer of an “opportunity” appears too good to be true, it probably is. Follow common business practice. For example, legitimate business is rarely conducted in cash on a street corner.

* Know who you are dealing with. If you have not heard of a person or company that you intend to do business with, learn more about them. Depending on the amount of money that you plan on spending, you may want to visit the business location, check with the Better Business Bureau, or consult with your bank, an attorney, or the police.
* Make sure you fully understand any business agreement that you enter into. If the terms are complex, have them reviewed by a competent attorney.
* Be wary of businesses that operate out of post office boxes or mail drops and do not have a street address. Also be suspicious when dealing with persons who do not have a direct telephone line and who are never in when you call, but always return your call later.
* Be wary of business deals that require you to sign nondisclosure or non-circumvention agreements that are designed to prevent you from independently verifying the bona fides of the people with whom you intend to do business. Con artists often use non-circumvention agreements to threaten their victims with civil suit if they report their losses to law enforcement.

For more information:
- Work-at-Home Advance Fee Scheme
- Cancer Research Advance Fee Scheme

Identity Theft

Identity theft occurs when someone assumes your identity to perform a fraud or other criminal act. Criminals can get the information they need to assume your identity from a variety of sources, including by stealing your wallet, rifling through your trash, or by compromising your credit or bank information. They may approach you in person, by telephone, or on the Internet and ask you for the information.

The sources of information about you are so numerous that you cannot prevent the theft of your identity. But you can minimize your risk of loss by following a few simple hints.

Tips for Avoiding Identity Theft:

* Never throw away ATM receipts, credit statements, credit cards, or bank statements in a usable form.
* Never give your credit card number over the telephone unless you make the call.
* Reconcile your bank account monthly, and notify your bank of discrepancies immediately.
* Keep a list of telephone numbers to call to report the loss or theft of your wallet, credit cards, etc.
* Report unauthorized financial transactions to your bank, credit card company, and the police as soon as you detect them.
* Review a copy of your credit report at least once each year. Notify the credit bureau in writing of any questionable entries and follow through until they are explained or removed.
* If your identity has been assumed, ask the credit bureau to print a statement to that effect in your credit report.
* If you know of anyone who receives mail from credit card companies or banks in the names of others, report it to local or federal law enforcement authorities.

Investment-Related Scams

Letter of Credit Fraud

Legitimate letters of credit are never sold or offered as investments. They are issued by banks to ensure payment for goods shipped in connection with international trade. Payment on a letter of credit generally requires that the paying bank receive documentation certifying that the goods ordered have been shipped and are en route to their intended destination. Letters of credit frauds are often attempted against banks by providing false documentation to show that goods were shipped when, in fact, no goods or inferior goods were shipped.

Other letter of credit frauds occur when con artists offer a “letter of credit” or “bank guarantee” as an investment wherein the investor is promised huge interest rates on the order of 100 to 300 percent annually. Such investment “opportunities” simply do not exist. (See Prime Bank Notes for additional information.)

Tips for Avoiding Letter of Credit Fraud:

* If an “opportunity” appears too good to be true, it probably is.
* Do not invest in anything unless you understand the deal. Con artists rely on complex transactions and faulty logic to “explain” fraudulent investment schemes.
* Do not invest or attempt to “purchase” a “letter of credit.” Such investments simply do not exist.
* Be wary of any investment that offers the promise of extremely high yields.
* Independently verify the terms of any investment that you intend to make, including the parties involved and the nature of the investment.

Prime Bank Note Fraud

International fraud artists have invented an investment scheme that supposedly offers extremely high yields in a relatively short period of time. In this scheme, they claim to have access to “bank guarantees” that they can buy at a discount and sell at a premium. By reselling the “bank guarantees” several times, they claim to be able to produce exceptional returns on investment. For example, if $10 million worth of “bank guarantees” can be sold at a two percent profit on 10 separate occasions—or “traunches”—the seller would receive a 20 percent profit. Such a scheme is often referred to as a “roll program.”

To make their schemes more enticing, con artists often refer to the “guarantees” as being issued by the world’s “prime banks,” hence the term “prime bank guarantees.” Other official sounding terms are also used, such as “prime bank notes” and “prime bank debentures.” Legal documents associated with such schemes often require the victim to enter into non-disclosure and non-circumvention agreements, offer returns on investment in “a year and a day”, and claim to use forms required by the International Chamber of Commerce (ICC). In fact, the ICC has issued a warning to all potential investors that no such investments exist.

The purpose of these frauds is generally to encourage the victim to send money to a foreign bank, where it is eventually transferred to an off-shore account in the control of the con artist. From there, the victim’s money is used for the perpetrator’s personal expenses or is laundered in an effort to make it disappear.

While foreign banks use instruments called “bank guarantees” in the same manner that U.S. banks use letters of credit to insure payment for goods in international trade, such bank guarantees are never traded or sold on any kind of market.

Tips for Avoiding Prime Bank Note Fraud:

* Think before you invest in anything. Be wary of an investment in any scheme, referred to as a “roll program,” that offers unusually high yields by buying and selling anything issued by “prime banks.”
* As with any investment, perform due diligence. Independently verify the identity of the people involved, the veracity of the deal, and the existence of the security in which you plan to invest.
* Be wary of business deals that require non-disclosure or non-circumvention agreements that are designed to prevent you from independently verifying information about the investment.

“Ponzi’ Schemes

“Ponzi” schemes promise high financial returns or dividends not available through traditional investments. Instead of investing the funds of victims, however, the con artist pays “dividends” to initial investors using the funds of subsequent investors. The scheme generally falls apart when the operator flees with all of the proceeds or when a sufficient number of new investors cannot be found to allow the continued payment of “dividends.”

This type of fraud is named after its creator—Charles Ponzi of Boston, Massachusetts. In the early 1900s, Ponzi launched a scheme that guaranteed investors a 50 percent return on their investment in postal coupons. Although he was able to pay his initial backers, the scheme dissolved when he was unable to pay later investors.

Tips for Avoiding Ponzi Schemes:

* Be careful of any investment opportunity that makes exaggerated earnings claims.
* Exercise due diligence in selecting investments and the people with whom you invest—in other words, do your homework.
* Consult an unbiased third party—like an unconnected broker or licensed financial advisor—before investing.

For more information:
- Bernie Madoff Case
- Stanford Case
- Wholesale Grocery Distribution Ponzi Scheme
- ATM Ponzi Scheme
- Victims Turn Tables with Ponzi Scheme

Pyramid Schemes

As in Ponzi schemes, the money collected from newer victims of the fraud is paid to earlier victims to provide a veneer of legitimacy. In pyramid schemes, however, the victims themselves are induced to recruit further victims through the payment of recruitment commissions.

More specifically, pyramid schemes—also referred to as franchise fraud or chain referral schemes—are marketing and investment frauds in which an individual is offered a distributorship or franchise to market a particular product. The real profit is earned, not by the sale of the product, but by the sale of new distributorships. Emphasis on selling franchises rather than the product eventually leads to a point where the supply of potential investors is exhausted and the pyramid collapses. At the heart of each pyramid scheme is typically a representation that new participants can recoup their original investments by inducing two or more prospects to make the same investment. Promoters fail to tell prospective participants that this is mathematically impossible for everyone to do, since some participants drop out, while others recoup their original investments and then drop out.

Tips for Avoiding Pyramid Schemes:

* Be wary of “opportunities” to invest your money in franchises or investments that require you to bring in subsequent investors to increase your profit or recoup your initial investment.
* Independently verify the legitimacy of any franchise or investment before you invest.

Market Manipulation or “Pump and Dump” Fraud

This scheme—commonly referred to as a “pump and dump”—creates artificial buying pressure for a targeted security, generally a low-trading volume issuer in the over-the-counter securities market largely controlled by the fraud perpetrators. This artificially increased trading volume has the effect of artificially increasing the price of the targeted security (i.e., the “pump”), which is rapidly sold off into the inflated market for the security by the fraud perpetrators (i.e., the “dump”); resulting in illicit gains to the perpetrators and losses to innocent third party investors. Typically, the increased trading volume is generated by inducing unwitting investors to purchase shares of the targeted security through false or deceptive sales practices and/or public information releases.

A modern variation on this scheme involves largely foreign-based computer criminals gaining unauthorized access to the online brokerage accounts of unsuspecting victims in the United States. These victim accounts are then utilized to engage in coordinated online purchases of the targeted security to affect the pump portion of a manipulation, while the fraud perpetrators sell their pre-existing holdings in the targeted security into the inflated market to complete the dump.

Tips for Avoiding Market Manipulation Fraud:

* Don’t believe the hype.
* Find out where the stock trades.
* Independently verify claims.
* Research the opportunity.
* Beware of high-pressure pitches.
* Always be skeptical.

For more information:
- Operation Shore Shells investigation

Telemarketing Fraud

When you send money to people you do not know personally or give personal or financial information to unknown callers, you increase your chances of becoming a victim of telemarketing fraud.

Here are some warning signs of telemarketing fraud—what a caller may tell you:

* “You must act ‘now’ or the offer won’t be good.”
* “You’ve won a ‘free’ gift, vacation, or prize.” But you have to pay for “postage and handling” or other charges.
* “You must send money, give a credit card or bank account number, or have a check picked up by courier.” You may hear this before you have had a chance to consider the offer carefully.
* “You don’t need to check out the company with anyone.” The callers say you do not need to speak to anyone including your family, lawyer, accountant, local Better Business Bureau, or consumer protection agency.
* “You don’t need any written information about their company or their references.”
* “You can’t afford to miss this ‘high-profit, no-risk’ offer.”

If you hear these or similar “lines” from a telephone salesperson, just say “no thank you” and hang up the telephone.

Tips for Avoiding Telemarketing Fraud:

It’s very difficult to get your money back if you’ve been cheated over the telephone. Before you buy anything by telephone, remember:

* Don’t buy from an unfamiliar company. Legitimate businesses understand that you want more information about their company and are happy to comply.
* Always ask for and wait until you receive written material about any offer or charity. If you get brochures about costly investments, ask someone whose financial advice you trust to review them. But, unfortunately, beware—not everything written down is true.
* Always check out unfamiliar companies with your local consumer protection agency, Better Business Bureau, state attorney general, the National Fraud Information Center, or other watchdog groups. Unfortunately, not all bad businesses can be identified through these organizations.
* Obtain a salesperson’s name, business identity, telephone number, street address, mailing address, and business license number before you transact business. Some con artists give out false names, telephone numbers, addresses, and business license numbers. Verify the accuracy of these items.
* Before you give money to a charity or make an investment, find out what percentage of the money is paid in commissions and what percentage actually goes to the charity or investment.
* Before you send money, ask yourself a simple question. “What guarantee do I really have that this solicitor will use my money in the manner we agreed upon?”
* Don’t pay in advance for services. Pay services only after they are delivered.
* Be wary of companies that want to send a messenger to your home to pick up money, claiming it is part of their service to you. In reality, they are taking your money without leaving any trace of who they are or where they can be reached.
* Always take your time making a decision. Legitimate companies won’t pressure you to make a snap decision.
* Don’t pay for a “free prize.” If a caller tells you the payment is for taxes, he or she is violating federal law.
* Before you receive your next sales pitch, decide what your limits are—the kinds of financial information you will and won’t give out on the telephone.
* Be sure to talk over big investments offered by telephone salespeople with a trusted friend, family member, or financial advisor. It’s never rude to wait and think about an offer.
* Never respond to an offer you don’t understand thoroughly.
* Never send money or give out personal information such as credit card numbers and expiration dates, bank account numbers, dates of birth, or social security numbers to unfamiliar companies or unknown persons.
* Be aware that your personal information is often brokered to telemarketers through third parties.
* If you have been victimized once, be wary of persons who call offering to help you recover your losses for a fee paid in advance.
* If you have information about a fraud, report it to state, local, or federal law enforcement agencies.

For More information:
- Telemarketing Fraud Targeting Seniors

Nigerian Letter or “419” Fraud

Nigerian letter frauds combine the threat of impersonation fraud with a variation of an advance fee scheme in which a letter mailed from Nigeria offers the recipient the “opportunity” to share in a percentage of millions of dollars that the author—a self-proclaimed government official—is trying to transfer illegally out of Nigeria. The recipient is encouraged to send information to the author, such as blank letterhead stationery, bank name and account numbers, and other identifying information using a fax number provided in the letter. Some of these letters have also been received via e-mail through the Internet. The scheme relies on convincing a willing victim, who has demonstrated a “propensity for larceny” by responding to the invitation, to send money to the author of the letter in Nigeria in several installments of increasing amounts for a variety of reasons.

Payment of taxes, bribes to government officials, and legal fees are often described in great detail with the promise that all expenses will be reimbursed as soon as the funds are spirited out of Nigeria. In actuality, the millions of dollars do not exist, and the victim eventually ends up with nothing but loss. Once the victim stops sending money, the perpetrators have been known to use the personal information and checks that they received to impersonate the victim, draining bank accounts and credit card balances. While such an invitation impresses most law-abiding citizens as a laughable hoax, millions of dollars in losses are caused by these schemes annually. Some victims have been lured to Nigeria, where they have been imprisoned against their will along with losing large sums of money. The Nigerian government is not sympathetic to victims of these schemes, since the victim actually conspires to remove funds from Nigeria in a manner that is contrary to Nigerian law. The schemes themselves violate section 419 of the Nigerian criminal code, hence the label “419 fraud.”

Tips for Avoiding Nigerian Letter or “419″ Fraud:

* If you receive a letter from Nigeria asking you to send personal or banking information, do not reply in any manner. Send the letter to the U.S. Secret Service, your local FBI office, or the U.S. Postal Inspection Service. You can also register a complaint with the Federal Trade Commission’s Complaint Assistant.
* If you know someone who is corresponding in one of these schemes, encourage that person to contact the FBI or the U.S. Secret Service as soon as possible.
* Be skeptical of individuals representing themselves as Nigerian or foreign government officials asking for your help in placing large sums of money in overseas bank accounts.
* Do not believe the promise of large sums of money for your cooperation.
* Guard your account information carefully.

For More information:
- Related Online Rental Ads Scheme
- Related Spanish Lottery Scam

Health Care Fraud or Health Insurance Fraud

Medical Equipment Fraud:

Equipment manufacturers offer “free” products to individuals. Insurers are then charged for products that were not needed and/or may not have been delivered.

“Rolling Lab” Schemes:

Unnecessary and sometimes fake tests are given to individuals at health clubs, retirement homes, or shopping malls and billed to insurance companies or Medicare.

Services Not Performed:

Customers or providers bill insurers for services never rendered by changing bills or submitting fake ones.

Medicare Fraud:

Medicare fraud can take the form of any of the health insurance frauds described above. Senior citizens are frequent targets of Medicare schemes, especially by medical equipment manufacturers who offer seniors free medical products in exchange for their Medicare numbers. Because a physician has to sign a form certifying that equipment or testing is needed before Medicare pays for it, con artists fake signatures or bribe corrupt doctors to sign the forms. Once a signature is in place, the manufacturers bill Medicare for merchandise or service that was not needed or was not ordered.

Tips for Avoiding Health Care Fraud or Health Insurance Fraud:

* Never sign blank insurance claim forms.
* Never give blanket authorization to a medical provider to bill for services rendered.
* Ask your medical providers what they will charge and what you will be expected to pay out-of-pocket.
* Carefully review your insurer’s explanation of the benefits statement. Call your insurer and provider if you have questions.
* Do not do business with door-to-door or telephone salespeople who tell you that services of medical equipment are free.
* Give your insurance/Medicare identification only to those who have provided you with medical services.
* Keep accurate records of all health care appointments.
* Know if your physician ordered equipment for you.

For more information:
- Heath Care Fraud webpage

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.

September 23, 2010

Four More Charged in Connecticut with Participating in Mortgage Fraud Conspiracy

David B. Fein, United States Attorney for the District of Connecticut, today announced that a federal grand jury sitting in New Haven has returned a second superseding indictment charging a total of 10 individuals with various offenses related to their alleged participation in a mortgage fraud conspiracy. Six defendants, including Syed A. Babar of New London, have been charged previously with various mortgage fraud offenses stemming from the alleged scheme. The second superseding indictment charges four additional defendants, MARSHALL ASMAR, 40, of Joanne Drive, Milford; WENDY WERNER, 45, of Sarasota, Florida; REHAN QAMER, 38, formerly of Ashtabula, Ohio, and MOHAMMAD SALEEM, 39, formerly of Flushing, New York.

The indictment alleges that, between August 2006 and May 2010, Syed A. Babar, also known as “Ali” and “Asad,” 28, of New London, was the de facto leader and organizer of a conspiracy 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 ASMAR and WERNER entered into sales contracts with straw purchasers to sell homes for a price higher than the actual price that ASMAR and WERNER, as the sellers, would receive. Members of the conspiracy—which included a mortgage broker, two attorneys and a real estate appraiser—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 members of the conspiracy 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. The co-conspirators then split the fraud proceeds.

It is alleged that, in August 2006, WERNER, through her company, Marbo Restorations, LLC, sold three houses on Lake Street in Norwich to QAMER, a straw purchaser working with Babar. The fraudulently inflated sales prices for 35, 37, and 41 Lake Street were $260,000, $270,000, and $270,000, respectively, and QAMER obtained residential real estate loans to purchase homes for those amounts. WERNER provided Babar with approximately $283,000 of the proceeds generated from the sale of the three houses. Babar then wrote 10 checks totaling approximately $179,000 to QAMER.

SALEEM also is alleged to have served as a straw purchaser during the conspiracy. Babar is alleged to have recruited and paid straw purchasers up to $20,000 to nominally purchase homes.

Contrary to the representations made on the loan applications, it is alleged that the straw purchasers never occupied the houses as their primary residences, failed to make payments on the loans and the properties went into foreclosure, including the three Lake Street properties that QAMER purchased from WERNER.

The alleged mortgage fraud scheme involved approximately 35 properties and loans obtained in the amount of approximately $10 million. Current losses from the scheme are estimated to be at least $2.5 million.

The indictment charges ASMAR, WERNER, QAMER, and SALEEM with one count of conspiracy to commit wire fraud, which carries a maximum term of imprisonment of five years. ASMAR and WERNER also are charged with eight counts of wire fraud, which carries a maximum term of imprisonment of 20 years on each count. The indictment also charges ASMAR with four counts of making false statements, which carries a maximum term of imprisonment of five years on each count. Finally, the indictment charges WERNER and QAMER with one count of mail fraud, which carries a maximum term of imprisonment of 20 years.

The second superseding indictment was returned on July 29, 2010, and unsealed on September 15. ASMAR was arrested on August 20. He entered a plea of not guilty to the charges and is released on a bond in the amount of $250,000, fully secured by real property. WERNER was arrested in Florida on September 10. On September 21, she appeared before United States Magistrate Judge Donna F. Martinez in Hartford and entered a plea of not guilty to the charges. She is released on a bond in the amount of $85,000, fully secured by real property.

QAMER and SALEEM are currently being sought by law enforcement.

U.S. Attorney Fein stressed that 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.

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

This case is being investigated by the Federal Bureau of Investigation and the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development – Office of Inspector General, and is being prosecuted by Assistant United States Attorneys Eric J. Glover and Susan Wines.

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.

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

August 16, 2010

Two in Miami Convicted in $21 Million Dollar Mortgage Scam

Wifredo A. Ferrer, United States Attorney for the Southern District of Florida, Henry Gutierrez, Postal Inspector in Charge, U.S. Postal Inspection Service, Michael K. Fithen, Special Agent in Charge, U.S. Secret Service, and J. Thomas Cardwell, Commissioner, State of Florida Office of Financial Regulation announced that on Friday, August 6, 2010, a federal jury in Miami convicted Mayelin Salas, 36, of Miami Springs, and Lucy Segurola, 51, of Miami, for their participation in a mortgage fraud scheme that resulted in approximately $21 million in fraudulent loans. Salas and Segurola were found guilty of conspiracy to commit mail and wire fraud. Salas was also found guilty of mail fraud.

According to the evidence presented at trial, Salas was an employee of State Mortgage Lending, a mortgage lending company in Doral, which was owned and operated by Magile Cruz. Cruz previously pled guilty and was sentenced in January 2009 to 120 months’ imprisonment for her participation in this scheme. Cruz’s other companies included Star Lending Mortgage, Sherley Title Services, Doral Title Services, and Professional Title Express, all in Miami-Dade County.

According to the trial evidence, in 2005, Salas participated in a double HUD scheme through which the defendants created and submitted to Fremont Investment and Loan, a lending institution, false duplicate HUD-Settlement Statement Forms, which grossly inflated the true *purchase price of a property that Salas was purchasing. Salas received a $5,000 payment from Cruz for her participation in the scheme.

The evidence at trial established that Lucy Segurola acted as a straw borrower on at least three loans totaling more than one million dollars. Segurola allowed her credit information to be used to apply for these loans knowing that she was not the true borrower and that Cruz would be making the monthly mortgage payments. The loan applications also included false employment verifications, pay stubs, income and funds on deposit, and IRS Forms W-2. Segurola was paid a total of $15,000 for her participation in the scheme.

The defendants face a maximum term of imprisonment of twenty years as well as fines and mandatory restitution. Sentencing has been scheduled for October 22, 2010.

Mr. Ferrer commended the investigative efforts of the Federal-State Mortgage Fraud Strike Force, with special commendation to the U.S. Postal Inspection Service, U.S. Secret Service, and the State of Florida Office of Financial Regulation.

June 29, 2010

Feds conclude biggest mortgage fraud dragnet in U.S. history

Suspects may find themselves behind bars living rent free thanks to nationwide mortgage fraud arrests.

Members of the Financial Fraud Enforcement Task Force released the results of a nationwide dragnet, “Operation Stolen Dreams,” which targeted mortgage fraudsters throughout the country and is the largest collective enforcement effort ever brought to bear in confronting mortgage fraud. The White Collar Crime Committee of the National Association of Chiefs of Police obtained relevant documents describing this enormous operation.

The sweep was organized by President Barack 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 through June 17, 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, according to the Federal Bureau of Investigation.

“From home buyers to lenders, mortgage fraud has had a resounding impact on the nation’s economy,” said FBI Director Robert S. Mueller, III. “Those who prey on the housing market should know that hundreds of FBI agents on task forces and their law enforcement partners are tracking down your schemes and you will be brought to justice.”

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

The operation was conducted in conjunction with the Department of Justice — including the FBI, U.S. Attorneys Offices, the U.S. Trustee Program, and other components — as well as the Department of Housing and Urban Development, the Department of the Treasury, the Federal Trade Commission, the Internal Revenue Service, the U.S. Postal Inspection Service, the U.S. Secret Service, the National Association of Attorneys General, and the National District Attorneys Association.

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, according to officials.

MORTGAGE FRAUD REPORT

According to the Federal Bureau of Investigation’s 2009 Mortgage Fraud Report, released today, mortgage fraud suspicious activity reports referred to law enforcement increased 5 percent to 67,190 during fiscal year 2009.

It’s estimated that $14 billion in fraudulent loans originated in 2009. The total dollar loss attributed to mortgage fraud is unknown.

Other key findings presented in the report include:

There are more than 2.8 million properties with foreclosure filings, a 120 percent increase from 2007 to 2009. The Las Vegas area reported the most significant rate of foreclosures, with more than 12 percent of housing units there receiving a foreclosure notice.

The top 10 states ranked by the number of foreclosure filings per housing unit were California, Florida, Arizona, Michigan, Nevada, Georgia, Ohio, Texas, and New Jersey. In April 2010, one in every 386 housing units received a foreclosure filing.

Prevalent mortgage fraud schemes in fiscal year 2009 include loan origination, foreclosure rescue, builder bailout, equity skimming, short sale, illegal property flipping, reverse mortgage fraud and loan modifications. Emerging trends include fraud involving economic stimulus plans/programs, property theft/fraudulent leasing of foreclosed properties and tax-related fraud.

June 3, 2010

Federal Jury Convicts Five Involved in Mortgage Fraud Ring

BOSTON—Following a seven-week trial, a federal jury found five defendants guilty of mortgage fraud stemming from a scheme that involved 21 properties in the Greater Boston area, 10 mortgage lenders, and more than $10.6 million in loan proceeds.

United States Attorney Carmen M. Ortiz; Warren T. Bamford, Special Agent in Charge of the Federal Bureau of Investigation, Boston Field Division; Robert Bethel, Postal Inspector in Charge of the United States Postal Inspection Service, Boston Division; Susan Dukes, Special Agent in Charge of the Internal Revenue Service, Criminal Investigation, Boston Field Division; Boston Mayor Thomas M. Menino; and Boston Police Commissioner Edward Davis, announced that ERIC L. LEVINE, 57, of Brookline; J. DANIEL LINDLEY, 62, of Jamaica Plain; ERNST APPOLON, 31, of Braintree; DANIEL APPOLON, 23, of Dorchester; and LATOYA HALTIWANGER, 28, of Los Angeles, were convicted of wire fraud and conspiring to commit wire fraud. LEVINE and LINDLEY were also convicted of money laundering.

“This type of greed and self-interest has directly contributed to the deterioration to many neighborhoods across the country,” said U.S. Attorney Ortiz. “The U.S. Attorney’s Office and our law enforcement partners, are committed to ensuring that those in the real estate profession who exploit consumers for their own profit are exposed and brought to justice.”

Evidence at trial established that between May 2005 and June 2006, the defendants and others participated in a conspiracy to obtain $10.6 million in mortgage loan proceeds by fraud. Specifically, the scheme involved the use of inflated purchase prices and documents containing false statements about purchase price, borrower income, employment, or intent to reside in the property. The difference between purchase prices negotiated with sellers and inflated purchase prices submitted to lenders ranged from as little as $15,000 to as much as $255,000 on individual properties in South Boston, Dorchester, Jamaica Plain, Quincy, Hyde Park, and Cohasset, aggregating to more than $1.9 million. From this $1.9 million, the defendants and other co-conspirators pocketed more than $1.7 million in illegal proceeds. The mortgages on all of the properties were defaulted upon and nearly all went into foreclosure.

LEVINE, a suspended attorney, and LINDLEY, a practicing attorney, participated in the loan closing process and handled the money. ERNST APPOLON, a real estate broker, identified properties for the conspirators, negotiated purchase prices with sellers, and recruited people to lend their names and credit information (“straw” borrowers) to obtain mortgage loans for property purchases. HALTIWANGER, a mortgage broker, was the loan originator for three of the properties in the conspiracy and was the “straw” borrower for a separate property purchase. DANIEL APPOLON recruited two “straw” borrowers whose name and credit information were used to purchase three properties.

The defendants face up to 20 years’ imprisonment to be followed by three years of supervised release and a $1 million fine on each count of wire fraud. For the conspiracy, they face up to five years’ imprisonment to be followed by three years of supervised release and a $250,000 fine. On the money laundering counts, LEVINE and LINDLEY face up to 10 years’ imprisonment to be followed by three years of supervised release and a $250,000 fine.

Co-defendants ANDRE JUNIOR LAMERIQUE, WIDNER LAMARRE, JERMAINE BLAKE, SAMUEL JEAN-LOUIS and JEAN NORISCAT pled guilty to conspiracy to commit wire fraud and several counts of wire fraud. They each face a maximum of 20 years’ imprisonment to be followed by three years of supervised release and a $1 million fine on each count of wire fraud. For the conspiracy, they face up to five years’ imprisonment to be followed by three years of supervised release. NORISCAT also pled guilty to several counts of aggravated identity theft and faces a mandatory two years’ imprisonment for each of the identity theft counts in addition to any other sentence imposed.

The defendants have been scheduled for sentencing as follows: LAMARRE and BLAKE, September 14, 2010; JEAN-LOUIS, September 16, 2010; LAMERIQUE and NORISCAT, September 21, 2010; LEVINE and ERNST APPOLON, September 22, 2010; LINDLEY, September 23, 2010; and DANIEL APPOLON and HALTIWANGER, September 29, 2010.

Co-defendant RALPH APPOLON is scheduled for trial in February 2011.

The case was investigated by the Federal Bureau of Investigation, United States Postal Inspection Service, and Internal Revenue Service, with assistance from the Boston Police Department. It is being prosecuted by Assistant U.S. Attorneys Victor A. Wild and Ryan M. DiSantis of Ortiz’s Economic Crimes Unit and Mary Murrane of Ortiz’s Asset Forfeiture Unit.

Mortgage fraud is a key focus of the Department of Justice who in November 2009 created the Financial Fraud Enforcement Task Force. The task force works 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.

May 19, 2010

Houston trio indicted for mortgage fraud

(HOUSTON) – Two sealed indictments charging Veronica Frazier, Robert Veazie and Felton Greer with fraudulently obtaining home purchase loans have been unsealed, United States Attorney José Angel Moreno announced today. Both indictments were returned under seal on May 5, 2010, and were unsealed Friday once the three defendants were in custody.

Frazier, 42, of Pearland, was charged in a five-count indictment with conspiracy and wire fraud arising from a scheme to defraud residential lenders in connection with individual condominium purchases in a building located at 917 Main Street in Houston, also known as “The Kirby Lofts.”

Veazie, 35, and Greer, 41, both of Houston, were each charged in a separate but related four-count indictment with conspiracy and wire fraud relating to the Kirby Lofts scheme, as well as in connection with other single-family home purchases in the Houston area.

Greer surrendered to FBI agents Friday morning, while Veazie surrendered to the United States Marshals Service. Both appeared before U.S. Magistrate Judge Mary Milloy who allowed them to be released upon posting $50,000 bond. Frazier was arrested by FBI agents Friday morning and is expected to appear before U.S. Magistrate Judge Nancy K. Johnson at 2:00 p.m. today.

According to the allegations in the indictment returned last week, the Kirby Lofts transactions were sham sales. From about January 2006 to October 2006, Frazier recruited individuals with good credit to act as borrowers in applications for mortgage loans to purchase units in The Kirby Lofts and, with the assistance of co-conspirators, assisted these “straw borrowers” with providing false information and documents to induce lenders to fund purchases of units in The Kirby Lofts. The indictment also alleges Frazier and other co-conspirators submitted invoices for payment from loan proceeds and used the money to pay themselves and straw borrowers from loan proceeds.

The indictment against Veazie and Greer alleges they acted as “straw borrowers” in the Kirby Lofts scheme and also for other residential loans involving single-family residential properties in the Houston area. According to the indictment, Veazie and Greer received kickbacks from loan proceeds and provided false statements and documents to induce lenders to fund the purchase loans.

The maximum penalty, upon conviction, for conspiracy and wire fraud is 20 years in prison and a fine up to $250,000.

The investigation leading to the charges was conducted by the FBI. Assistant United States Attorneys Belinda Beek and Vernon Lewis are prosecuting the case.

This indictment 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.

By Phillip Mcneal