The Fraud Squad

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Huffington Post Investigative Fund   |  Howard Goodman
First Posted: 06-22-09 10:57 AM   |   Updated: 11- 4-09 10:59 AM

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Mortgage Scams

MIAMI -- The sun-seared condominiums along Brickell Avenue stand tall and shiny, but these days they're pockmarked with vacant units, one after the other ⎯ the foreclosed detritus of what was once Boom City.

This part of Florida has seen more than its share of real-estate bubbles over the years and been home to countless schemes, scams, and cons. There's a reason some call it "Fort Frauderdale."

So, no one should be surprised that the mortgage meltdown here presented a plenitude of new opportunities for wrongdoing ⎯ bad actors getting in on the anything-goes market to rake off thousands or millions in profits, inflating property values as if injecting them with steroids, and, when it all imploded, ultimately leaving behind blighted neighborhoods and victims with emptied bank accounts and ruined credit. Not for nothing is the Sunshine State a perennial leader on the mortgage industry's annual Fraud Index.

The surprise is that South Florida is leading the way in cleaning up the toxic real-estate mess.

Last month, Congress passed, and President Obama signed, the Fraud Enforcement and Recovery Act, which gives prosecutors and regulators new tools to crack down on mortgage fraud and predatory lending. Among other things, the new law establishes a National Mortgage Fraud Task Force within the U.S. Justice Department.

The inspiration for this new crime-fighting entity: the economic-crimes division of the Miami-Dade Police Department.

Police in Miami-Dade County made fighting mortgage fraud a top priority as early as 2006, when the housing bubble was still expanding. "We had a couple of very smart investigators in economic crimes who'd both been real-estate agents, and they could see it coming," says Glenn Theobald, the police department's chief counsel.

At the time, no state statute even defined mortgage fraud. "It was hard to make a judge see that a crime had been committed," recalls Theobald, a 26-year veteran cop with a weightlifter's build and a law degree. So he drafted a bill, saw it through the Florida Legislature, and in 2007, under the new law, it became a third-degree felony ⎯ later raised to second-degree-to knowingly make a material misstatement, misrepresentation, or omission in the mortgage lending process.

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Now, if an appraiser falsified a property value to inflate someone's profits, for example, the cops could take action.

THE STRIKE FORCE

With strong backing from Mayor Carlos Alvarez and Police Director Robert Parker, the county formed a mortgage task force, with Theobald at its helm. The unit got started in September 2007 with a staff of five. A year and a half later, the unit's 19 investigators and supervisors have made almost 150 arrests. We're talking cases that rival, in complexity, the painstaking drug-organization takedowns of "The Wire."

Yet, the problem was exploding.

In Miami-Dade County, just 16 suspected mortgage-fraud cases were reported in 2005 and 78 in 2006. They rocketed past 800 in 2007 and topped 1,000 in 2008. (The actual incidence is undoubtedly much higher.)

The foreclosure numbers soared, too.

In 2007, Miami-Dade had 26,391 foreclosures, more than twice the figure for the previous year. In 2008, foreclosures more than doubled again, to 56,656-one for every 32 households.

And that just begins to describe the damage. The inflated real-estate values pushed up property taxes. When the bubble burst, homeowners walked away from their overpriced mortgages and too-high taxes, foreclosures soared, home prices plummeted, buildings and developments were blacklisted by banks. Neighborhoods deteriorated.

At first, Theobald thought that region-wide action was needed, but soon he realized that the same thing was going on from coast to coast. He made dozens of trips to the nation's capital and to points around the country. Last year, Rep. Kendrick Meek, a Democrat from Miami, introduced a bill based on Theobald's idea for a national task force, and the measure was eventually folded into the fraud-enforcement bill that Obama signed last month.

"The bad guys we stop here shouldn't be allowed to move on to Nevada, say, and do the same thing there," Theobald says. "This isn't baseball, there's no three strikes. You're convicted once, you're done."

HOOKING THE BIG FISH

Kenneth Thomas, a Miami-based banking expert and economist, says all the mortgage fraud is reminiscent of the cocaine-crazed '80s, when banks in South Florida were so besieged by deposits of cash that began weighing piles of bills instead of counting them.

"There wasn't enough law enforcement to handle it," Thomas recalls. "That's how mortgage fraud has become. Law enforcement can't keep up."

Not that the feds aren't trying.

The FBI has been stepping up mortgage-fraud investigations. It has assigned 180 special agents to mortgage fraud, up from 120 in 2007, and last year its Operation Malicious Mortgage brought more than 400 arrests.

"In general, we tend to focus on entire rings of fraudsters that collaborate among each other to commit very egregious crimes in multiple millions of dollars," says William Stern, a senior FBI agent who runs mortgage-fraud investigations out of West Palm Beach.

The approach has nabbed some big prizes. Just last month the local U.S. attorney indicted a married couple and the husband's brother-Garry and Yvonne Souffrant, both 33, and Gamaliel Souffrant, 44-for using Progressive Real Estate of Broward, Inc., "to launder millions of dollars in drug proceeds through an extensive mortgage fraud scheme." They were allegedly using straw buyers to help drug dealers buy homes and luxury cars and pocketing millions in mortgage-loan proceeds for themselves. Convictions could bring sentences of up to 40 years.

That big-case strategy makes it possible to nab the worst players and nail them with heavy prison time. But, as Theobald points out, it also means passing over an awful lot of smaller frauds.

"They're not getting to 98 percent of the cases," he says.

According to the FBI, there were 63,173 reported cases of suspected mortgage fraud nationwide in fiscal 2007 (a 36 percent increase over the previous year), and an additional 28,873 cases through February 2009. Against that deluge, FBI officials say the bureau is working not even 2,000 open cases.

DISSECTING THE MONEY TRAIL

In a simple form of the fraud, someone buys a $200,000 condo, has it fraudulently appraised at $800,000, and sells it to a straw buyer-a person who doesn't intend to live in the condo but whose good credit wins a loan. The first guy pays off the original $200,000 loan, and the two of them split the $600,000 difference. No one pays on the $800,000 mortgage, the condo goes into foreclosure, and a bank is stuck with the bill.

Lots of cases are slicker. "This is a crime that evolves," says Sergeant David Goldberger, an investigator with the Miami-Dade Mortgage Fraud Task Force.

Example: Instead of the condo merely selling for $800,000, add the element of phony paperwork: In a quick pivot, the HUD document that actually goes to the lender falsely shows the sale at $1.6 million to an altogether different buyer. A middleman pockets the difference of the two quick transactions.

Now you've got a fraud that involves a lot of players: a shadowy orchestrator and maybe a dirty title agent, a mortgage broker, an appraiser, and the willing or duped straw buyer.

Good luck sorting it all out. "Sometimes you have to dissect the money trail to the minute," says Perry Pitelli, a detective with the task force.

The fraud is often connected with other types of crime, investigators say. Many schemes, for example, are tied to identity theft. Some of the same players turn up in Medicare fraud or immigrant-smuggling cases.

It can easily take six months to investigate a single case, Theobald says. That's why it's a good idea to tap local and state police departments. "They have the manpower," Theobald says, "but they need the training."

Under the new law, the Attorney General Eric Holder is supposed to help with that by setting up a task force that coordinates law-enforcement efforts in the 10 states with the worst mortgage fraud.

Theobald, who's thrilled to see his work turned into a federal law, says that Holder's staff has been in touch with him.

So the feds want to learn from the locals? "I know," Theobald says. "Isn't it cool?"

MIAMI -- The sun-seared condominiums along Brickell Avenue stand tall and shiny, but these days they're pockmarked with vacant units, one after the other ⎯ the foreclosed detritus of what was once B...
MIAMI -- The sun-seared condominiums along Brickell Avenue stand tall and shiny, but these days they're pockmarked with vacant units, one after the other ⎯ the foreclosed detritus of what was once B...
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- nomorefed I'm a Fan of nomorefed 3 fans permalink

1st 100 days - There are 2.9 million more people unemployed in May than there were unemployed in January. The unemployment rate went from 7.6% to 9.4%.
Since May 2008, we have lost 5.5 million jobs. The biggest losers were:
Manufacturing 1.5 million lost
Finance & Prof Serv 1.5 million lost
Construction 1.1 million lost
Retail & Leisure 1.3 million lost

hat tip to href=".http://www.iamned.com"> for providing good finance and economics articles

where is the change? where is hope? why cant ppl find jobs?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:15 PM on 06/23/2009
- rsaillant1 I'm a Fan of rsaillant1 25 fans permalink
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I have first hand knowledge of a group on Miami Beach called "City Limits Properties,"
that have moved into a Lake Worth developement called St. Andrews at Boynton, a community
that went condo 2 years ago. There, they break into forclosed/abandoned units and rent them out
on a month to month basis.

They threaten remaining tenants, renters whose owners have deserted, by towing their vehicles off premises if they don't submit to their demands. In order to have their vehicles stay on the property they must have a sticker or notice for which City Limits demands a monthly fee, said fee to cover rent and maintenance. In actuality it's nothing less than the old "protection" racket. They are collecting renton property to which they have no legal rights.

Let's see.....fraud, grand theft auto, and coercion. All of which falls under the RICO Act.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:06 PM on 06/23/2009
- metalpipe I'm a Fan of metalpipe 10 fans permalink
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This is a perfect example of how we as a nation must step up and do the right thing. We have to change from within. Reshape our minds towards love and peacefulness. Law enforcement will never be able to bring these criminals to justice; there are simply to many, which points directly to our culture and society as a whole. Abolition didn't stop the use of alcohol, the drug wars haven't scratched the surface of our drug use, abstinance only programs won't do a thing to prevent teenage curiosity or curb abortions, and spending half our wealth on a 'strong' military will never curb violence.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:51 AM on 06/23/2009

The National Association of Realtors recently hired PR giant Burston-Marsteller to do damage control for them, creating a "Surround Sound" program to train brokers to talk up market "positives". Ironically these are the same people that represented Babcock and Wilcox after the Three Mile Island accident, Union Carbide after the Bhopal accident, and Blackwater USA in Iraq amongst other dubious clients...they know toxic waste and toxic assets when the seem them folks-don't believe their lies.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:52 PM on 06/22/2009
- nomorefed I'm a Fan of nomorefed 3 fans permalink


If the truth were being reported we'd be having riots in the streets. And meanwhile the top execs in banks and brokeragesa that caused such a mess are STILL employed and making millions while laying off THOUSANDS of people that actually do work. If you know anyone in banking that's still employed, odds are they are doing the work of three people so the top execs can show 'savings' and contineu collecting mega-incomes.

good articles: href=".http://www.bit.ly/12NCJR>recommended reading

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:09 PM on 06/22/2009
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Facts:

1980 WS Executives made 20 times average Worker
2008 WS Executives made 400 times average Worker

NOW Canada Executive made 20 times average Worker
NOW Britain Executives made 22 times average Worker
NOW Japan Executives made 11 times average Worker

Clearly if this trend continues at the current rate of 20 fold increase in 30 years we will see
WS Executives will be at 1,000 Times the average Worker by 2018 and 2,000 Times in 2025:

Year ___Times Average Worker's Income

2009 400.0
2010 443.5
2011 491.8
2012 545.3
2013 604.7
2014 670.5
2015 743.4
2016 824.4
2017 914.1
2018 1013.5
2019 1123.8
2020 1246.1
2021 1381.8
2022 1532.1
2023 1698.9
2024 1883.7
2025 2088.7

The result of this massive skimming of Company Profits to all levels of employees has left many Banks near bankruptcy and the Taxpayer Backfilling the VOID with $Tens of Billions in Bailouts!

These "superstar" incomes are not justified! Especially when you consider how they got the money to pay them!

A person owning a business or working for themselves deserves what they earn but employees of banks developing Clever schemes to cheat others should be penalized, NOT rewarded!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:46 PM on 06/22/2009
- metalpipe I'm a Fan of metalpipe 10 fans permalink
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Their salaries are small potatos in the big scheme of things, but I do agree in gives incentives in the wrong direction.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:53 AM on 06/23/2009

I think the snide comments about Cubans and Russians are uncalled for. This happened in America, under American regulation, by well-respected Americans. Madoff was king until found out. Just the natural outcome of a system that rewards greed.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:23 PM on 06/22/2009
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Its the so-called "respected" EL1TES that committed these cr!mes and still enjoy their positions as head of G0LDMAN and JPM!

They setup mortgage companies that created the "SURE FAIL TRICK&TRAP" mortgages and converted them to Derivatives!

Then placed repeated and massive Bets using Credit Default Swaps that the "SURE FAIL" Deriviativ­e/Mortgage­s would FAIL and made massive incomes.

John Paulson made $3.7 Billion in one year betting that Americans would FAIL in their House Payments! Soros made $2.9 Billion in one year doing a similar thing!

Reprehensible! Outrageous!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 07:07 PM on 06/22/2009
- Zrae I'm a Fan of Zrae permalink

Next con is the loan modification "consultants". It's already happening. Post dated checks up front for thousands of dollars to help you get a loan modification. A careful look at the contract and they are only promising to contact your lender. Many do not even bother to register with the states they are hitting on. Why should they? They are somewhere else.
Also next the repercussions of outsourcing real estate services to Iindia and other countries. They have incredible data basess with all your personal information.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:41 PM on 06/22/2009
- mkw408 I'm a Fan of mkw408 2 fans permalink

I work next to one of these fraudulent Loan Modification companies. I've seen an easy $2 million worth of new cars come through there in about a month. Google the company and they have scammed hundreds of people out of thousands of dollars. It is pathetic that nothing is being done about this. Kicking someone when they are down is the worst of the worst.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:33 PM on 06/22/2009
- JoeBlough I'm a Fan of JoeBlough 57 fans permalink
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Yet, very Republican.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:42 PM on 06/22/2009
- Oldtimer I'm a Fan of Oldtimer 16 fans permalink
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mginla.
You are right.
I too am in the real estate property management business (Long Beach)
and witnessed first hand the abnormal bubble cheered on by realtors.
I saw it coming and advised many people NOT to buy. In the end I
saved many people from losing their ass.
Today the prices and rents continue to go down for several reasons.
The first is the bubble created inflated values disconnected from reality.
The current major problem is job losses and America is witnessing
th beginning of the Second GREAT DEPRESSION. Jobs are being lost
at a record pace resulting in less and less demand for everything.
The vicious cycle is in full throttle. The state is bankrupt. Tax revenues
are in free-fall. Meanwhile the news media is not covering the story.
Hang on for dear life folks. The Depression has arrived and the
banks own the White House and Congress. It is going to get
very, very, very ugly. Of course, the DOW is up this year so we
all must be just fine..... heh, heh.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:31 PM on 06/22/2009
- Alethea I'm a Fan of Alethea 60 fans permalink
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This is what happens when you get rid of regulation.

Repubs, do you understand NOW why regulation can be in EVERYONE's best interest?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:50 PM on 06/22/2009
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The article is about the enforcement of regulations, not the lack of regulations.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:18 PM on 06/22/2009
- Alethea I'm a Fan of Alethea 60 fans permalink
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"Getting rid" of regulations can mean several things. De-legislating them, watering them down or simply not enforcing them (all of which Repubs loved to do). Either way, the result is the same is it not?

The result being, in this case, fraud on a massive scale. The solution, in this case, being broader enforcement on a massive scale.

This story wouldn't be interesting if there were already broad, well enforced, regulatory powers now would it? Comprenez vous maintenant mon amis?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:49 PM on 06/22/2009
- Subtext I'm a Fan of Subtext 3 fans permalink

I disagree.
The people who appraised the property should've been regulated, and they weren't.
The banks who wrote the paper on an inflated property should've been regulated, and they weren't.
The people who cut up the paper into 'securities' should've been regulated, and they weren't.
The people who graded the securitization should've been regulated, and weren't.
The lack of regulation not only permitted the fraud, but also prevented responsible parties from even detecting that there had been fraud committed.

The person to whom you glibly responded was looking at the cause, not just one of the effects described in the article.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:02 PM on 06/22/2009
- dynwitch I'm a Fan of dynwitch 30 fans permalink
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So.... some change some of us can believe in some of the time.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:48 PM on 06/22/2009
- metalpipe I'm a Fan of metalpipe 10 fans permalink
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He is only one man against a large group of extremely weak and corrupt politicians.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:58 AM on 06/23/2009
- 1sparrow I'm a Fan of 1sparrow 20 fans permalink

i thought this article was extremely well written. at least the beginning. by the end we are supposed to feel sorry for the banks. i am to tell you the banks have been infiltrated with more crooks-- and who is going to take on the banks? the government? it seems to be stepping stones to a world wide police state---- run only by the very highest in wealth. i may capitulate without a fight. i don't see an answer.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:21 PM on 06/22/2009

This is news? This nation was built on the fast unethical buck. We celebrate the fast buck artists and wish to be one ourselves. Honest pay for honest work. When is the last time you heard that? Oxymoron in current times.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:09 PM on 06/22/2009
- Lyr I'm a Fan of Lyr 35 fans permalink

This is the right idea. However this is the equivalent of going after the street dealer, and not the drug king pin. The Federal government has the resources and the authority to go after the king pins, yet they refuse to.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:02 PM on 06/22/2009
- TJCole I'm a Fan of TJCole 152 fans permalink
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It's a shame and disgrace this administration has done so little for all these millions of Americans who have largely been victimized by the very villains they chose to enrich and reward for their predatory usurious vile crushing of the dreams and hope of millions of our fellow Americans..!

A national disgrace...of which Obama should be ashamed..!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:53 PM on 06/22/2009
- marinade I'm a Fan of marinade 39 fans permalink

If you read the article, you would know that the President has done something about it.

National disgrace? That would be Bush's Iraq war. A trillion dollars later....

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:58 PM on 06/22/2009
- Furby I'm a Fan of Furby 66 fans permalink
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True, but people who refuse to educate themselves before jumping in are easy targets, as in any scam. The consumer bears some responsibility to read and get informed.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:58 PM on 06/22/2009
- MsEngineer I'm a Fan of MsEngineer 3 fans permalink

Did you read the article? It is about people who comitted fraud on purpose. Most of the fraud was committed against the banks and financial institutions. These institutions should not have been easy targets for con artists and scammers but apparently they were.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:50 PM on 06/22/2009
- zizyphus I'm a Fan of zizyphus 99 fans permalink
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What I think needs to be noted is that the Federal Government did not take this much time and energy to investigate the money trail of the highjackers of 911. From Wiki:

"On October 6, 2001, a senior-level U.S. government official told CNN that U.S. investigators had discovered Ahmed Omar Saeed Sheikh (Sheik Syed), using the alias "Mustafa Muhammad Ahmad" had sent about $100,000 from the United Arab Emirates to Mohammed Atta. "Investigators said Atta then distributed the funds to conspirators in Florida in the weeks before the deadliest acts of terrorism on U.S. soil .... CNN later confirmed this.[13]

The 9/11 Commission's Final Report states that the source of the funds "remains unknown.""

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:23 PM on 06/22/2009
- wrender I'm a Fan of wrender 22 fans permalink
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Maybe because some of that money trail would lead directly to the Pentagon. Yet another reason why many Americans are unsatisfied with the official fairy tale and subsequent farce of an investigation.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:02 PM on 06/22/2009
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