Showing posts with label fraud. Show all posts
Showing posts with label fraud. Show all posts

Thursday, July 21, 2011

Wells Fargo to pay $85M to settle case

The AP reports,

“Wells Fargo & Co. has agreed to pay $85 million to settle civil charges that it falsified loan documents and pushed borrowers toward subprime mortgages with higher interest rates during the housing boom.

“The fine is the largest ever imposed by the Federal Reserve in a consumer-enforcement case, the central bank said Wednesday.

“Wells Fargo, the nation's largest mortgage lender, neither admitted nor denied wrongdoing as part of the settlement. The bank agreed to compensate borrowers who were steered into higher-priced loans or whose income was exaggerated.”

Wells Fargo was accused of inflating borrowers' incomes on loan applications from 2004 until 2008. Sales reps also pushed borrowers towards subprime loans, even if they were eligible for lower rate mortgages.

“Between 3,700 and roughly 10,000 people could be compensated under the settlement, the Fed said. The payments will likely range from $1,000 to $20,000.”

Read the full report.

For your next title order or
if you have questions about what you see here, contact
Stephen M. Flatow, Esq.
Stephen's Title Agency, LLC
165 Passaic Avenue, Suite 101
Fairfield, NJ 07004
Tel 973-227-4724 - Fax 973-556-1628
E-mail Stephenstitle AT comcast.net - http://www.stephenstitle.com/


Wells Fargo, mortgages, fraud, subprime,Stephen Flatow, Stephen's Title

Tuesday, September 21, 2010

New Jersey in the news

Is something wrong with New Jersey’s air?

It must be the air. What else could explain another breaking story about fraud by a New Jersey resident? This time to the tune of $45 million in a Ponzi scheme.

As reported in the Star Ledger, Montclair resident Antoinette Hodgson “told her alleged victims she was using their money to buy and renovate homes and then sell them for profit, authorities said.”

“But in truth, authorities say, she used money from new investors to repay older investors and spent hundreds of thousands of dollars at casinos in Atlantic City and Las Vegas. She also spent more $700,000 on a Dunkin Donuts franchise in Arizona, authorities said.”

Don't get me wrong, I love New Jersey, been here for more than 30 years and plan on staying another 30 years.

The Star Ledger article can be found here.


For your next title order or
if you have questions about what you see here, contact
Stephen M. Flatow, Esq.
Stephen's Title Agency, LLC
165 Passaic Avenue, Suite 101
Fairfield, NJ 07004
Tel 973-227-4724 - Fax 973-556-1628
E-mail Stephenstitle AT comcast.net - www.stephenstitle.com

Monday, September 13, 2010

A Downside of Short Sales

We’ve previously written about short sales. Their numbers are growing as more homeowners sell in a down market. (As a refresher, a short sale occurs when the sale price is less than the amount of outstanding mortgages and expesenses of sale and the lender agrees to accept less than full payment for its mortgage.)

Short sales are subject to abuses that can amount to fraud. The most usual case is the broker who arranges the short sale and does not disclose that his buyer will resell the house at a higher price immediately after the short sale occurs. Title companies are one the lookout for these types of deals and refuse to insure them.

The Sunday New York Times discusses this problem in a column by Bob Tedeschi. Here’s the column

A Downside of Short Sales
By Bob Tedeschi

STRUGGLING homeowners have found some refuge in short sales, in which lenders allow borrowers to escape foreclosure by selling a home for less than what is owed on the mortgage. Government programs offering incentives to both parties will push the number of short sales to 400,000 this year from 100,000 in 2008, according to CoreLogic, a financial consulting firm.

But the jump in short sales has also given rise to a new form of fraud — which, as a recent study by CoreLogic suggests, could undermine the burgeoning practice.

Fraudulent short sales take many forms, but Frank McKenna, the vice president for fraud strategy at CoreLogic and one of the report’s authors, says one arrangement is more common than others.

An agent for the borrower negotiates with the lender to obtain a low selling price for a property, then sells it to a “straw buyer,” or someone with whom the agent is affiliated. The agents are sometimes real estate agents, or employees of businesses that advertise as “foreclosure rescue” specialists, Mr. McKenna said. As the agent negotiates with the lender — and unbeknownst to the original homeowner or the lender — the agent arranges to resell the property at a higher price. The new buyers may not know that they could have obtained the property for a lower price. Or, even worse, they may be victims of identity theft, unaware that their financial information was being used to buy a home.

In other fraudulent transactions, a borrower might purposefully default on a mortgage he or she could actually afford. The borrower arranges to transfer the property to a friend or relative through a short sale, and the original borrower can remain in the home. The new owner can also transfer ownership back to the original owner through a quitclaim deed, Mr. McKenna said.

He estimated that only about 2 percent of the short sales completed in the last two years were fraudulent, but said fraud was becoming more frequent. “It’s happening a lot more in this market because there are so many more short sales,” he said. “There’s more opportunity to go after the quick buck.”

CoreLogic does not track the actual number of fraudulent short sales. Rather, it estimates the figure by identifying short-sale transactions in which the house was quickly sold or “flipped” to a new buyer, or resold for a vastly higher price. The company obtains and analyzes publicly available sales and financial information on most of the nation’s home purchases.

Florida, California, Texas and Arizona had the greatest number of suspicious short sales, according to the CoreLogic report. New York ranked fifth, with roughly 5.5 percent of all short sales falling into the “suspicious” category. New Jersey ranked eighth, with about 3.3 percent of short sales categorized as suspicious. In Connecticut, the percentage of suspicious short sales was close to zero.Mr. McKenna said the rising number of suspicious short sales could undermine the use of these transactions as a foreclosure alternative. That, he said, would be unfortunate, since borrowers and lenders have only recently reported some momentum in successfully completing short sales.

But John P. Bonora, a vice president of the Fairfield County Bank in Ridgefield, Conn., said he did not expect this to happen. Noting that CoreLogic also sells fraud prevention services to lenders, Mr. Bonora theorized that its report might overstate the threat of fraudulent short sales.

“I’d forward the report to my folks and say you should have some of these things in the back of your mind,” he said. “But I don’t think this report would deter us from doing a short sale.”

Still, Mr. Bonora said, the report makes him more suspicious of real estate agents who market themselves as foreclosure specialists.

“They’re probably speaking with borrowers on a daily basis about foreclosures,” he said. “And people are opportunists.”

The story can be found on-line here.


For your next title order or
if you have questions about what you see here, contact
Stephen M. Flatow, Esq.
Stephen's Title Agency, LLC
165 Passaic Avenue, Suite 101
Fairfield, NJ 07004
Tel - Fax 973-556-1628
E-mail Stephenstitle AT comcast.net - www.stephenstitle.com

Saturday, August 14, 2010

The long arm of the law grabs 2 mortgage swindlers

New Jersey’s Attorney General Paula T. Dow and Criminal Justice Director Stephen J. Taylor announced yesterday “that a Union County mortgage loan solicitor has been charged with conspiring with others – including a Kearny woman who was charged previously – in a scheme to steal millions of dollars by obtaining mortgage loans using false identities and counterfeit documents.”

Nuno J. Sousa, 34, of Elizabeth, was arrested yesterday. He joins Genilza R. Nunes who was arrested in March.
“The state investigation determined that Nunes, Sousa and a number of co-conspirators allegedly were involved in a sophisticated, multi-million dollar mortgage loan fraud scheme operating in northern New Jersey, including Morris, Somerset, Hudson, Union, Passaic and Essex Counties. The state has specifically alleged that Nunes and Sousa – with Sousa acting as the mortgage loan solicitor – engaged in fraudulent transactions involving five properties, with a total fraud of $2,152,800. However, it is believed that the scheme is much larger.”
We write about these arrests and hoped-for prosecutions not out of any sense of glee but to demonstrate that the real estate market collapse did not result just from the shenanigans of big Wall Street firms but also from thefts and frauds of the kind allegedly pulled-off by the defendants. If the alleged scheme is part of a larger one, I can’t wait to see the rest.

You can read the Attorney General’s press release here.

If you have questions about what you see here, contact
Stephen M. Flatow
Stephen's Title Agency, LLC
StephensTitle@comcast.net