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What Is Mortgage Fraud For Profit? By lar The Story: In 2007, Sally was having trouble keeping up with her payments, and by September, she received a foreclosure notice in the mail. A few days later, she was called by a man who said he could help. He said she could have a check for $40,000 to help pay her bills, and she wouldn’t have to worry about foreclosure any more. Sally signed papers in late October at a title company in Maryland. She went home with a $40,000 check and started making her new house payments to District Properties in December. Nine months later, Sally started having trouble making her house payments again. This time, instead of a foreclosure letter, she received an eviction letter in the mail. Sally gradually realized that she no longer owned her home; she was simply a renter. In a panic, Sally called District Properties. The man who answered the phone told her that Subprime Co. held two loans against the house, one for $264,000 and one for $66,000, but she could buy her house back for $360,000 – three times the she had a year earlier. Sally’s income and credit were not good enough to buy her house at that price. The man said, “I’m sorry” and hung up.
The Profile: Like hundreds of District residents, Sally became a victim of fraud for profit, sometimes called “equity skimming.” The scheme she fell victim to was orchestrated by a variety of people, including a broker, real estate agent, appraiser, “investor,” “straw buyer,” and “bird dog.” Each person in the scheme received a portion of the equity in Sally’s house. In the end, Sally lost her house, Subprime Co. foreclosed, and the group that orchestrated the fraud made more than $100,000.
This fraud is different from predatory lending, in part because Sally never made a loan. Predatory lending typically involves a single loan with extremely high fees and a high interest rate made to a homeowner or legitimate purchaser. fraud for profit is typically a more complex scheme involving an inflated appraisal, falsified loan applications, equity skimming, property flipping, and sometimes identity theft. The borrower is typically a straw buyer, who never intends to occupy the house. The payment is paid by the investor, or a company controlled by the investor. Eventually, the investor stops making payments, forcing the lender to foreclose, or sells (“flips”) the house for additional profit.
In a typical fraud for profit scheme, a bird dog looks for distressed houses by checking public real estate records and driving around targeted neighborhoods. When a house is identified, the bird dog reports the address to the investor and receives $1,000 or so for the service. A straw buyer, who is a person with good credit or a falsely inflated credit score, poses as a buyer. In some cases, a straw buyer is a
stolen identity; the person whose name is stolen may discover the theft when credit is denied or the purchase appears on a credit report. In some cases, a straw buyer is a participant in the scheme – a professional straw buyer. In many cases, however, a straw buyer is a person who hears by word of mouth through family, friends or co-workers that someone will pay $5,000 to $10,000 for the use of his or her name. As with most financial arrangements that seem too good to be true, a one-time straw buyer often finds that things do go wrong: his credit may be ruined because the mortgages are not paid, he may be investigated by law-enforcement for fraud, or he may be charged with conspiracy.
In addition to bird dogs and straw buyers, a broker and appraiser are important participants in a fraud for profit. Usually, both are active participants in the scheme and receive money for falsifying documents. Other industry professionals who play an important role are employees of a title company who create closing documents and disburse funds after a sale is completed. Professionals who have access to credit report databases or software that generates W-2 forms and pay stubs also participate in the scheme. As reported in the 2006 FBI Financial Crimes Report, 80 percent of all reported fraud losses involve industry insiders. Perhaps this is why fraud for profit has become so prevalent throughout the country. A homeowner facing foreclosure is easily convinced by a professional broker, for example, that he should sign contracts that convey his house to someone else. People tend to trust professionals in the financial industry. This is one of the reasons that government regulations requiring financial industry professionals to maintain specific standards are so crucial for the protection of consumers.
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