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Government Closes Internet Anti-Foreclosure Scams Tied To Google

Google

First Posted: 11/16/11 07:50 PM ET Updated: 11/17/11 11:34 AM ET

SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -- The federal government has shut down dozens of Internet scam artists who had been paying Google to run ads making bogus promises to help desperate homeowners scrambling to avoid foreclosures.

The crackdown announced Wednesday renews questions about the role that Google's massive advertising network plays in enabling online misconduct. It may also increase the pressure on the company to be more vigilant about screening the marketing pitches that appear alongside its Internet search results and other Web content.

The criminal investigation into alleged mortgage swindlers comes three months after Google agreed to pay $500 million to avoid prosecution in Rhode Island for profiting from online ads from Canadian pharmacies that illegally sold drugs in the U.S.

A spokesman for the U.S. Treasury Department division overseeing the probe into online mortgage scams declined to comment on its scope other to say it's still ongoing.

Google Inc. also declined to comment Wednesday.

No company wants to be tainted by a criminal investigation, but the prospect is even more nettlesome for Google because it has embraced "don't be evil" as its corporate motto.

That commitment may make it difficult for Google to fend off a call by Consumer Watchdog to donate the revenue from fraudulent mortgage ads to legitimate organizations that help people ease their credit problems. Consumer Watchdog is an activist group that released a report in February asserting that Google was profiting from ads bought by mortgage swindlers.

"Google should never have published these ads, but its executives turned a blind eye to these fraudsters for far too long because of the substantial revenue such advertising generates," said Consumer Watchdog's John M. Simpson, a frequent critic of the company.

To fight future abuse, Google has suspended its business ties with more than 500 advertisers and agencies connected to the alleged scams, according to the U.S. Treasury Department's Office of the Special Inspector General for the Troubled Asset Relief Program.

The evidence collected in the current investigation led to the government's closure of 85 alleged mortgage scams. The identities of the businesses and people involved in the scams weren't disclosed Wednesday.

The con artists are accused of duping people into believing they could help lower their home loan payments under a government-backed mortgage modification program created to reduce the foreclosures that have made it more difficult for the slumping real estate market to recover. The alleged rip-offs typically relied on collecting upfront fees or getting victims to transfer their monthly mortgage payments to the scam artists, according to the Office of the Special Inspector General for the Troubled Asset Relief Program.

In some cases, the swindlers passed themselves off as being affiliated with the government.

Google's name popped up because the scam artists relied on the company's vast advertising network to bait their victims. About two out of every three Internet search requests are made through Google, making its ad network a prime outlet for finding people hoping to save their homes, according to Christy Romero, deputy special Inspector General for the Troubled Asset Relief Program.

"The first place many homeowners turn for help in lowering their mortgage is the Internet through online search engines, and that's precisely where they are being taken advantage of and targeted," she said.

In its February report on the problem, Consumer Watchdog found that Google processed more than 74,000 monthly searches using the term, "stop foreclosure." An ad running alongside the results for that query cost an average of $8.29 per click at the time of the Consumer Watchdog study. The report couldn't determine how much money Google was making from the ads offering bogus mortgage modifications.

Even after surrendering $500 million to settle the investigation into ads for illegal online pharmacies, Google is still expected to sell more than $35 billion in advertising this year.

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SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -- The federal government has shut down dozens of Internet scam artists who had been paying Google to run ads making bogus promises to help desperate homeowners scrambling to avoid ...
SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -- The federal government has shut down dozens of Internet scam artists who had been paying Google to run ads making bogus promises to help desperate homeowners scrambling to avoid ...
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
parabq
08:57 AM on 11/18/2011
Prosecute Google over ads?? Where is the prosecution of Holder over selling guns
to the Mexican cartels - unbelivable !!
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
MyResponsibility
To Disagree,one need not be disagreeable
10:33 PM on 11/17/2011
How does Google determine what advertisers are legit and which are not? Ridiculous...buyer beware.
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
02:52 PM on 11/17/2011
If companies can buy the links generated by Google as a result of someone doing a search, it brings into question the value of those links.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
AndyMorrow
qui tacet consentire - who is silent gives consent
01:30 PM on 11/17/2011
How is Goggle suppose to determine this in a reasonable manner? Head scratch on that one.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
psnyder325
Yep, I'm a Socialist. Deal.
01:12 PM on 11/17/2011
But....but....the scam artists are JOB CREATORS, aren't they??? And right now, isn't that all that counts in this country is jobs, jobs, jobs? The Republicans should be protesting this shutting down of JOB CREATORS. 'Cause any government action is wrong and government should get off of people's backs, even if they pollute, scam, steal, cheat, or, I suppose, even murder people....so long as it creates JOBS. (Just following Republican "logic" (an oxymoron if there ever was one) to its natural conclusion.)
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
AndyMorrow
qui tacet consentire - who is silent gives consent
01:33 PM on 11/17/2011
That's what I say regarding the war on drugs -- total government interference on a multi-billion dollar industry. :)
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Dee-Dee
A retired teacher and administrator, now doing bus
01:09 PM on 11/17/2011
I saw a very misleading/fradulent add here on Huffington Post a few days ago about buying a guide to get personal grants that you don't have to pay back. I'm a certified grant writer, and no such grants exist. People will pay money and be duped. Huffington Post should not post such ads. I also do not like the sponsor paid editorials that are now appearing on Huffington Post. It all goes to saying anything to get the money and I thought more of Huffington Post than that.
12:34 PM on 11/17/2011
Google could stop this. But they cannot afford to.

Google could stop a huge number of scams simply by insisting that all advertisers disclose their actual business name and address on their web site. That's required by law in California and the European Union. But Google allows anonymous ads. 36% of Google AdSense ads don't clearly identify the business behind the ad.

This can be checked automatically. We do it at "sitetruth.com". Google doesn't. If they did, they'd lose at least 8% of their revenue. That's why Google has turned to the dark side - a big chunk of their revenue, and a bigger chunk of their profits, comes from advertising questionable businesses.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
GetRealSoon
Finding Fraudster
11:27 AM on 11/17/2011
Finally steps in the right direction! Shut down all those deceptive mortgage swindlers deceiving borrowers on the way in and on the way out.
11:09 AM on 11/17/2011
There are more "Mom's Weird Trick" scam adverts on HuffPost than at any other news site, including Fox News. I look forward to Huffpost's expose on the "Weird Mom" scam while running at least 3 of these adverts on the same page.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
DebtNavigation
Attorney and Author
11:06 AM on 11/17/2011
Mainstream publications like newspapers and magazines are happy to sell advertising to all sorts of scams. Nevertheless, congrats to Google for stopping some people from being twice-victimized. Now those who are in foreclosure danger need to do something smarter than just fall for gimmicks. They need to band together and fight the machine.

In Mexico in the mid-'90s Wall Street engineered a currency coup that tripled the debt owed by small businesses and family farms and also allowed for them to be massively ratejacked on top of it. Mexicans consequently formed the "el Barzon" movement and pushed back Wall Street and deposed their ruling party of 60+ years. In this country YouTube phenom Ann Minch has already declared the debtors' revolt and begun going after them.

If you've been pushed under, you can read every other page of my book for free: http://www.scribd.com/doc/25443175/Debt-Hope-Down-and-Dirty-Survival-Strategies-Evaluation-Version-Complete
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
insider9909
They sold us for 30 pieces of silver.
11:03 AM on 11/17/2011
Ads on TV and internet about mycleanpc and the like are total scams. They will charge you hundreds to do nothing. I am astonished as to how much garbage is prominently displayed on national website like google, wapo, hp, etc.,
12:18 PM on 11/17/2011
Yeah - it was so much better in the old days when we had actors in doctor suits telling us smoking was good for us (on YouTube in case you think that is an exaggeration).

Modern technology is not the problem, nor are sites running what is basically a sales bulletin board. Stupidity of consumers is the real issue. Want to cut government regulations? Educate consumers not to fall for such nonsense.
11:02 AM on 11/17/2011
This is just part of an article of how Obama is in bed with "Google" (fromm cnn.com)

Yet neither Obama's anticorporate leanings nor Google's anti-"politics as usual" culture has stopped the two camps from collaborating closely. Schmidt sits on Obama's Council of Science and Technology Advisers. Google employees acted as advisers to the Obama transition team -- in one case Google executive Sonal Shah actually led a meeting, to the surprise of at least one attendee -- and a handful of ex-Googlers have joined the administration in various roles.
12:20 PM on 11/17/2011
CNN did not say it that I could find - and you did not include a link, of course.

Glenn Beck said it. Bet that's where you heard it.
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aspertame2
My other avatar is a sparkly rainbow care-bear
10:30 AM on 11/17/2011
Just now, on the HP sidebar:

"Could This Stock Triple? The Hottest Alternative Energy Stock on Wall Street right now!"
"TODAY'S DEAL: 32GB Apple iPad for $39.99. Limit One Per Day."
"Best Diet Pills of 2011" (link to an "as seen on TV" ad - "Get a gym body without going
to the gym!")

And I think I've seen considerably more questionable looking ads on HP in the past, but HP doesn't deserve any particular singling out, here. Many websites will refuse certain catagories of ads like adult entertainment, but not really do much vetting of individual ads. And newspapers run questionable ads all the time.

Not to stick up for poor beleaguered Google, but what wrong have they committed besides maybe cultivate the business of shady advertisers more profitably, than the next website?

I'm thinking it's the foreclosure scam angle -- someone is singling out a subcategory of criminality to make a point, but unless the government ALSO demands that sponsored websites engage in the same rigourous checking of the miracle cellulite potion sellers and the stock shillers looking to be the next Bernie Madeoff, it's disingenuous posturing to go after Google's ad dept here.
10:27 AM on 11/17/2011
Google is not the only (or even the worst) offender here.
Take a look at the ads that appear on HP. Most of them
are flagrant, eye-popping scams. ("Dermatologists hate
her because she's 57 but looks 25. Click here to get
her secret formula." "Click here for a trick that gets
you free car insurance." "Scientists in YOUR neighborhood
just discovered an immortality potion.") The lowest
of the low...
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mmsuki
Fine; I evolved, you didn't.
10:18 AM on 11/17/2011
And the republicans show their outrage at more federal regulatory interference....
12:23 PM on 11/17/2011
They show their outrage because something is not regulated to the sky as much as they do because of excessive government regulations. The same folks that are always talking about restoring personal freedom and responsibility do everything they can to take it away.

And they wonder why we think their positions are largely self-serving bull crap...