Press Release
SEVEN CHARGED IN $120 MILLION NATIONAL TAX FRAUD SCHEME
December 6, 2011
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
U.S. Attorney Wifredo A. Ferrer, United States Attorney for the Southern District of Florida, Tax Division Principal Deputy Assistant Attorney General John A. DiCicco, and Jose A. Gonzalez, Special Agent in Charge, Internal Revenue Service, Criminal Investigation Division (IRS-CID), Miami Office, announce today’s arraignment of defendants Penny Jones, a resident of Rigby, Idaho, and Christopher Marrero, a resident of Davie, Florida, on an indictment charging them for their participation in a $120 million tax fraud scheme. The case has been assigned to U.S. District Judge William P. Dimitrouleas. Both defendants entered not guilty pleas this morning at their arraignments before U.S. Magistrate Judge Lurana S. Snow.
The indictment, recently unsealed, charges seven individuals – Jones, Marrero, Michael D. Beiter, Jr., formerly a resident of Coral Springs, Fla., David Clum, Jr., a resident of Whites Creek, Tenn., Dale Peters, a resident of San Mateo, Cal., Laura Barel, a resident of Lauderhill, Fla., and John Michael Smith, Jr., a resident of Hidden Hills, Cal. – with participating in a scheme to file false tax returns. Barel had been previously charged by a criminal complaint in May 2011. Arraignments are pending for Beiter, Clum, Peters, and Smith.
According to the indictment, the false return scheme was national in scope, causing the filing of tax returns for at least 180 clients from 30 different states, requesting more than $120,000,000 worth of fraudulent tax refunds. The indictment alleges that the defendants and clients of the scheme collectively filed more than 380 tax returns, mostly from tax year 2008 but also for other tax years, reporting the amount of their personal debt obligations as both income and as federal tax withholding.
The indictment alleges that the scheme was premised upon the fraudulent “redemption theory” argument that individuals are not responsible for their common, personal debt obligations such as home mortgages, unpaid credit card bills, and lines of credit, and may instead seek money from the IRS to repay these outstanding obligations. As part of the scheme, defendants prepared and caused to be prepared false IRS Forms 1099-OID, Original Issue Discount, and 1099-A, Abandoned Property, on behalf of the scheme’s clients.
According to the indictment, defendants held seminars in Florida and Tennessee in which they recruited potential clients. The indictment and other publicly filed documents allege that clients paid $750 to have defendants prepare a tax return reporting this type of “OID” income, and that clients agreed to share 10% of their tax refund with defendants.
Previously, in a separate case in Fayetteville, Ark., a client of the scheme, Philip Butcher, formerly of Rogers, Ark., was charged with filing false claims for tax refunds. According to the indictment in that case, Butcher filed two tax returns reporting his loans as OID income and tax withholding, claiming tax refunds totaling $1,456,696. The IRS paid Butcher $672,781.
Jones was previously enjoined by a federal court from preparing tax returns.
An indictment is only an accusation and a defendant is presumed innocent until proven guilty beyond a reasonable doubt.
If convicted, Jones, Beiter, Clum, and Peters each face 215 years in prison, Barel faces 25 years, Marrero faces 30 years, and Smith faces 75 years. All of the defendants are also subject to fines and mandatory restitution if convicted.
These cases were investigated by Special Agents of the IRS – Criminal Investigation. Trial attorneys Jed Silversmith and Jonathan Marx of the Justice Department’s Tax Division, and Assistant U.S. Attorney Bertha Mitrani are prosecuting the case.
More information about the Tax Division and its enforcement efforts can be found at www.justice.gov/tax.
A copy of this press release may be found on the website of the United States Attorney’s Office for the Southern District of Florida at http://www.usdoj.gov/usao/fls. Related court documents and information may be found on the website of the District Court for the Southern District of Florida at http://www.flsd.uscourts.gov or on http://pacer.flsd.uscourts.gov.
Technical comments about this website can be e-mailed to the Webmaster. PLEASE NOTE: The United States Attorney’s Office does not respond to non-technical inquiries made to this website. If you wish to make a request for information, you may contact our office at 305-961-9001, or you may send a written inquiry to the United States Attorney’s Office, Southern District of Florida, 99 NE 4th Street, Miami, Fl. 33132.
Almost every day consumers are confronted with a variety of scams including credit card fraud, identity theft, travel scams, medical fraud, counterfeiting and misrepresentation of products and/or services that are grossly misleading or down right fraud.
Do your due diligence-ITS SUPER IMPORTANT!
What is consumer fraud? Some definitions
Consumer fraud includes many fraudulent and misleading practices such as advertising, marketing, selling, or procuring goods or services. Consumer fraud occurs when a product or service does not perform as advertised. Another example of consumer fraud is overcharging for something or concealing a fee. Consumer fraud may also occur when a company compels you to agree to unfair terms and conditions in order to complete a transaction. You may also be a victim of consumer fraud if you purchased an item represented to you as safe when the seller had reason to believe otherwise. In this section we also inlude ID theft, banking, travel, medical and real estate fraud.
Recognizing Consumer Scams
For victims of fraud
10. Travel and vacations (Predicted as #9). As forecast, the Soccer World Cup in South Africa drew in thousands of ticket scam victims, while an increasing flow of travelers to China found themselves at the center of numerous tourist con tricks. However, the economic recovery we expected to see wasn’t as strong as everyone hoped and many Americans decided to vacation more safely at home.9. Investment scams (Predicted as #10). In the wake of the Madoff scandal, more incredible Ponzi schemes were exposed and crashed, while art investment frauds targeted celebrities. Rock bottom interest rates lured more people into phony real estate and “green” investment projects (including the BP Gulf disaster clean-up) and foreign exchange funds promising unrealistically high returns.8. Work from home schemes (Predicted as #7). Still a major source of crime, bogus home-working schemes received a lot of publicity throughout the year, so, although there were just as many crooks pushing these scams, slightly fewer victims may have fallen for them than we expected. One bit of good news!7. Auctions and classified ad scams (Predicted as #8) move up one more place in our Top 10 scams list, as they did in the prior year. As much as anything, this reflects the growing use of the Internet for buying stuff, so we included bogus retail websites in our research this year, which, as you’ll see below, is likely to push the crime even higher up the charts in 2011.6. Doorstep scams (Predicted as #6). We forecast that the 2010 Census back in April would attract scammers, mainly “phishing” (see #1 below) for information they could use for identity theft. And we were right. The annual crop of disasters, including floods and, this year, the San Francisco gas explosion, also brought out the bogus contractors in force.5. Lottery scams (Predicted as #5). Sadly, as we reported a year ago, this crime targets the elderly. There’s apparently still no shortage of victims willing to pay up to hundreds of thousands of dollars in bogus fees to collect non-existent winnings.4. Nigerian scams (Predicted as #4). The continuing efforts by the Nigerian government to clamp down on this scam seem to be having little effect. A TV documentary broadcast a few months ago showed how whole towns in that country have become dependent on the proceeds of scams.3. Economy-related scams (Predicted as #3). Foreclosure and loan modification scams, together with bogus job offers — usually a prelude to identify theft or simply a means for charging an upfront fee — were the most common crimes in this category. The BP Gulf disaster added significantly to the number of phony job schemes.2. Malware (Predicted as #2). This is the broad term for harmful software that installs on home and business computers to steal information, wreck hard drives, disrupt business activities and recruit computers into “zombie botnets” for sending out spam. Internet security specialists McAfee say they’ve identified 14 million unique malware programs, up by 1 million over the year as a whole.1. Phishing and identify theft (Predicted as #1). The invasion by scammers of social networking sites, such as Facebook and Twitter, together with malware downloads (see above) kept this crime firmly in the top slot.
OIL AND GAS SCAMS-WATCH OUT!!!
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As the price of oil and gas securities rise, they look like great investments. Shareholders even have a chance of making lots of money if they buy and sell in time. And as more and more people invest in oil and gas securities, the likelihood of oil and gas fraud scams goes up dramatically. Fast talking brokers can trick investors into putting their money in non-existent companies or into buying overpriced stocks. As an investor you do have rights. IF YOU HAVE BEEN A VICTIM OF OIL AND GAS SCAMS, LET US KNOW!!
Typical oil and gas scams are handled by swindlers who use high pressure sales tricks to steal money from investors. These swindlers often sell stocks or bonds to investors in a different state. In some cases, a different oil and gas fraud scheme is used. Instead of stocks, the scam artists sell minority partnerships in a company or a particular site. They typically target investors who are far from the well site to discourage them from inspecting the site or operation.
To avoid being a victim of oil and gas fraud, look out for:
Don’t get taken in by promises of making dramatically large returns on your investments.
Oil and Gas Fraud Hot Topics
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Oil well promoter Gary Milby convicted of fraud
Business Courier by Dan Monk, Senior Staff Writer
Date: Thursday, May 12, 2011, 3:02pm EDT
Latest in Mortgage Fraud.
This just in: more on lawyers allegedly behaving badly.
Federal prosecutors in New York on Thursday charged fourteen people in an alleged $58 million mortgage fraud, including five lawyers, one of whom previously had been disbarred. The scheme, which ran from 2004 to 2009 and revolved around a company called First Class Equities, allegedly involved more than 100 home mortgage loans on properties in the New York City area, as well as Long Island and Westchester and Dutchess Counties.
Allegedly corrupt lawyers have been a common theme in several mortgage fraud schemes that have come to light in recent years in the New York area. You can read press releases on two recent mortgage-fraud takedowns that included lawyers here and here.
In the latest scheme, at least two of the lawyers charged–Jacquelyn Todaro and Kevin Hymowitz–allegedly recruited so-called straw buyers, persons who were paid to pose as home buyers, but had no intention of living in or paying off the mortgaged properties, prosecutors said.
The attorneys allegedly received loan proceeds from the banks and submitted false paperwork about how those moneys were distributed, instead making large, illicit payments to their co-conspirators, prosecutors said.
One of the “lawyers” was allegedly Michael Schlussel, who was disbarred in 2003 and wasn’t licensed to practice law, prosecutors said.
Schlussel previously pleaded guilty to practicing law without a license in July 2009. Nassau County prosecutors alleged at the time that he was posing a lawyer in a landlord-tenant dispute and had previously appeared at real estate closings.
Todaro and Schlussel also allegedly provided fake documents to lenders for home equity loans or second mortgages on the same day some straw buyers “purchased” properties, prosecutors said.
Counsel for the accused lawyers couldn’t immediately be located for comment Thursday.
DAVIDSON COUNTY, N.C. — A Federal Trade Commission study has ranked the Thomasville-Lexington Micropolitan Statistical Area as 11th in the nation in the number of fraud and other related consumer complaints in 2008.The study, which was released last week, stated the Thomasville-Lexington Micropolitan Statistical Area recorded 642 complaints per 100,000 population on 1,003 complaints.Napa, Calif., had the highest average with 859.8 complaints per 100,000 population on 1,148 complaints.Thomasville police Maj. Tim Driggers said he was surprised to see the Thomasville-Lexington Micropolitan Statistical area ranked high on the list. He said fraud by false pretense charges were down in 2008 when compared to 2007.
Judd Rousseau, chief fraud officer with Identity Theft 911, said the Federal Trade Commission fraud study compiled a list of fraud complaints and not just victims. Identity Theft 911 is a company that works with victims of fraud to help fix their situations, Rousseau said.”I think the numbers support that fraud is still a growing concern in the United States,” he said. “If you look at the FTC numbers, 65 percent of them did not file a police report. With the economy getting worse, we made a prediction early in the year that we felt like the numbers are getting worse. This report has come out and it shows that the amount of fraud victimization is up about 20 percent.”According to data from the study, the Thomasville-Lexington Micropolitan Statistical Area ranked sixth in the number of identity theft related complaints with 279.7 per 100,000 population on 437 complaints.Meanwhile, the Brownsville-Harlington, Texas, Metropolitan Statistical Area ranked first with 366.8 complaints per 100,000 on 1,422 complaints.The figures were compiled in the Federal Trade Commission’s Consumer Sentinel Network Data Book for 2008.According to the Federal Trade Commission study, the network is a secure online database of millions of consumer complaints available only to law enforcement.
Hot spots for mortgage fraud risk
Reports point finger at organized crime rings, Realtors

Fraud is rarely really thought about mortgage fraud in terms of geography, but after reading Interthinx’s quarterly Mortgage Fraud Risk Report…
Interthinx of Agoura Hills, Calif., provides risk mitigation and regulatory compliance tools for the financial services industry and what it has been able to do is mine its data to locate nodes of mortgage fraud risk.
The operative word here is “risk,” because Interthinx’s fraud detection tools find discrepancies in loans, but the company can’t use the word fraud unless litigation is brought forward, so “mortgage fraud risk” is the phrase it has devised.
Mortgage fraud risk means that individual loans have red flags in regard to such things as manipulated property value or borrower identity, explained Ann Fulmer, Interthinx’s vice president of business relations.
“You can’t say it’s fraud until that loan blows up, investigated and identified as fraud. In the environment we are in now with the secondary market and all the repurchases, there is an awful lot of investigation going on into these loans and it is becoming very clear there is a huge amount of fraud.”
What’s interesting about Interthinx’s report is that it centers on individual locations because incidents of mortgage fraud migrate geographically to take advantage of local market conditions.
In its most recent report, issued late summer, the five states highest on its mortgage fraud risk index were Nevada, Arizona, California, Rhode Island and Florida.
Four of the top five are fairly obvious because fraud thrives where there is uncertainty in property values. To a lender, valuation represents security, but when valuation is manipulated it represents profit margins to fraudsters. The states with the highest ranking of fraud risk are those with high levels of foreclosure activity and underwater borrowers.
What’s happening in these states is that individual borrowers want to refinance but they have impaired equity and not enough income to support a refinance so they are fudging income and employment facts.
All that shuffling of numbers is secondary to the primary incidents of mortgage fraud risk, which is the manipulation of property values when your home is underwater and your opportunities to refinance are limited.
The odd state out in the top five for mortgage fraud risk is Rhode Island, which economically has its own set of troubles. The state is experiencing serious unemployment problems and high mortgage failures.
With foreclosures come a lot of uncertainty in property values, thus there is opportunity for fraud. Combine that with the desperation that’s often a byproduct of unemployment and you get a lot of motivation to commit fraud.
The 10 states with the lowest mortgage fraud risk rankings are: Wyoming, Louisiana, Montana, Alabama, Alaska, Mississippi, South Dakota, West Virginia, Kansas and Maine.
If one drills down into the Interthinx data to cities, the top 10 metro areas for mortgage fraud risk are all in the busted residential states of California, Arizona and Florida: Modesto, Calif.; Stockton, Calif.; Vallejo-Fairfield, Calif.; Cape Coral-Fort Myers, Fla.; Riverside-San Bernardino-Ontario, Calif.; Phoenix-Mesa-Scottsdale, Ariz.; Las Vegas-Paradise, Nev.; Visalia-Porterville, Calif.; Fresno, Calif.; and Bakersfield, Calif.
Diving even deeper into the data to individual ZIP codes, one finds some real surprises: Of the top 10 ZIP codes for mortgage fraud risk, the No. 1 and No. 3 spots are in Chicago and the No. 6 and No. 10 rankings in Atlanta.
Locally what happens, Fulmer explained, is that once fraud gets hold of an area, it infects public records and creates so much uncertainty that a cycle of fraud develops.
Fulmer used a personal case as an example. In her neighborhood, which remains unidentified but is probably near Agoura Hills, Calif., there were eight homes involved with fraud and it took eight years to get those homes out of the fraud cycle and into the hands of true owner-occupiers.
Another problem to individual localities is organized rings of fraudsters. Interthinx breaks out mortgage fraud risk into four categories: property valuation fraud, identity fraud, occupancy fraud, and employment/income fraud.
Property valuation fraud (manipulating value to create equity, which is then extracted from loan proceeds) mimics the wider fraud indices in that the top five metros (Modesto, Stockton and Vallejo-Fairfield in California; Cape Coral-Fort Myers, Fla.; and Phoenix-Mesa-Scottsdale, Ariz.) are all in the infamously busted states.
When it comes to identity fraud, a whole new set of cities appears. The term identity fraud refers to schemes where perpetrators hide their identity and/or obtain a credit profile to meet lender guidelines.
The top five metros for identity fraud risk are: Cleveland-Elyria-Mentor, Ohio; Miami-Fort Lauderdale-Pompano Beach, Fla.; Honolulu; Salinas, Calif.; and Trenton-Ewing, N.J.
This set of metros has been beset by organized mortgage fraud rings.
“These are professional criminals who come into an area, hit hard and fast, and then move to a different market,” Fulmer said. “Identity fraud has gone up because so many people have impaired credit scores so if you want to refinance or buy a house, you insert someone else’s Social Security number to try to qualify.”
Some of these cities have other problems as well. Cleveland, which has high unemployment, has been a hotbed for mortgage fraud for a long time, as has the Miami area, but for a different reason: out-of-control speculative development. Seemingly innocent Honolulu pops into the rankings every now and then mostly due to rise and fall of local, organized rings.
Fulmer has one last note about mortgage fraud risk: the involvement of unscrupulous real estate agents and brokers. “One of the things we are hearing from our clients,” she said, “is that in flopping schemes, which is where the price is manipulated on a short sale so a home could be sold at a higher price to an end buyer, there is an increasing involvement of real estate agents and brokers.”
She added that some agents and brokers “have gone to jail because of this.”
Indians among 111 charged in major U.S. healthcare fraud
The 111 people charged across nine cities are accused of crimes, including conspiracy to defraud Medicare, criminal false claims, money laundering and aggravated identify theft.
At least six Indian?origin persons are among over 100 doctors, nurses and healthcare professionals arrested on charges of alleged involvement in a massive Medicare fraud estimated at USD 225 million, in one of the biggest crackdowns on healthcare fraud?related crimes in the U.S.
The 111 people charged across nine cities are accused of crimes, including conspiracy to defraud Medicare, criminal false claims, money laundering and aggravated identify theft.
?With this takedown, we have identified and shut down large?scale fraud schemes operating throughout the country.
This is the largest federal healthcare fraud takedown in our nation?s history,? said Attorney General Eric Holder who announced the charges with Health and Human Services Secretary Kathleen Sebelius.
Medicare is a government insurance programme that covers Americans who are 65 and older. About 45 million elderly and disabled Americans are enrolled in taxpayer?funded Medicare plans.
Collectively, the doctors, nurses, health care company owners charged in the fraud are accused of falsely billing Medicare of more than U.S.D 225 million.
Over 60,000 Indian?origin doctors are estimated to be operating in the US which has a total of about 954,000 doctors.
More than 700 agents from the FBI and the Department of Health and Human Services arrested the alleged swindlers in Brooklyn, Chicago, Dallas, Detroit, Houston, Los Angeles, Louisiana, Miami and Tampa.
The agents also executed 16 search warrants across the country in connection with the ongoing investigation.
According to court documents, defendants participated in schemes to submit claims to Medicare for treatments that were medically unnecessary and often never provided.
In Chicago, Indian?origin doctor Jaswinder Rai Chhibber, president and owner of a medical clinic, was arrested and presented in court. He is charged with one count of healthcare fraud.
According to the charges, Chhibber, 48, submitted reimbursement claims for medical procedures he never rendered.
He allegedly performed complicated diagnostic tests on patients without a medical need for those tests besides billing insurance providers for tests never actually performed on patients.
In Detroit, among those charged were Vishnu Pradeep Meda, 30, Ram Naresh Rajulapati, 31 and Surya Nallani, 43.
Nallani was charged with fraud in connection with an about U.S. dollars 8.5 million physicians visiting group operation.
She billed Medicare for home visits which required her to be physically present, when in fact she was abroad.
Keywords: US healthcare fraud, Indian origin doctors, nurses, healthcare professionals arrest,
FBI Mortgage Fraud Report 2006 – May 2007

This house was used in a Mortgage Fraud Scheme
Top Areas for Mortgage Fraud
- Analysis of available law enforcement and industry resources indicates that the top ten mortgage fraud areas are California, Florida, Georgia, Illinois, Indiana, Michigan, New York, Ohio, Texas, and Utah. Other areas significantly affected by mortgage fraud include Arizona, Colorado, Maryland, Minnesota, Missouri, Nevada, North Carolina, Tennessee, and Virginia.
- There is a strong correlation between mortgage fraud and loans which result in default and foreclosure.
Emerging Schemes
- Recent statistics suggest that escalating foreclosures provide criminals with the opportunity to exploit and defraud vulnerable homeowners seeking financial guidance.
- Perpetrators are exploiting the home equity line of credit (HELOC) application process to conduct mortgage fraud, check fraud, and potentially money laundering-related activity.
FBI and Industry Respond to Escalating Mortgage Fraud
- The FBI is proactively working with the mortgage industry in an effort to curb mortgage fraud crimes. The FBI signed a memorandum of agreement with the MBA to promote the FBI’s Mortgage Fraud Warning Notice.
The Prieston Group, a risk management solutions provider that administers an insurance product covering losses due to fraud and misrepresentation, calculated that losses attributed to mortgage fraud will most likely reach $4.2 billion for 2006. This figure does not take into account another estimated $1.2 billion spent on fraud prevention tools. – The Prieston Group, 2006 Data, 16 February 2007,and 2 April 2007.
Mortgage Fraud is defined as the intentional misstatement, misrepresentation, or omission by an applicant or other interested parties, relied on by a lender or underwriter to provide funding for, to purchase, or to insure a mortgage loan. Although no central repository collects all mortgage fraud complaints, statistics from multiple sources indicate that mortgage fraud is on the rise. Some industry explanations for this increase point to recent high mortgage loan origination volumes that strained quality control efforts, the persistent desire of mortgage lenders to hasten the mortgage loan process, the escalation of home prices in recent years, and the introduction of non-traditional loans which contain fewer quality control restraints such as low documentation and no documentation loans1.
Mortgage loan fraud is divided into two categories: fraud for property and fraud for profit. Fraud for property/housing entails minor misrepresentations by the applicant solely for the purpose of purchasing a property for a primary residence. This scheme usually involves a single loan. Although applicants may embellish income and conceal debt, their intent is to repay the loan. Fraud for profit, however, often involves multiple loans and elaborate schemes perpetrated to gain illicit proceeds from property sales. It is this second category that is of most concern to law enforcement and the mortgage industry. Gross misrepresentations concerning appraisals and loan documents are common in fraud for profit schemes and participants are frequently paid for their participation. Recent events likely resulted in an increase in mortgage fraud as higher housing prices tempted borrowers to commit fraud for property in order to qualify for a mortgage loan. Also, mortgage fraud perpetrators likely seized the opportunity to take advantage of the relaxed lending practices to commit fraud for profit.
The most common form of mortgage fraud is illegal property flipping which entails false appraisals and other fraudulent loan documents (see figure 1). Combating mortgage fraud effectively requires the cooperation of law enforcement and industry entities. No single regulatory agency is charged with monitoring this crime. The FBI, Department of Housing and Urban Development-Office of Inspector General (HUD-OIG), Internal Revenue Service, Postal Inspection Service, and state and local agencies are among those investigating mortgage fraud.
Figure 1: Illegal Property Flipping Scheme

Mortgage fraud is a relatively low-risk, high-yield criminal activity that tempts many. However, according a May 2006 Financial Crimes Enforcement Network (FinCEN) report, finance-related occupations, including accountants, mortgage brokers, and lenders, were the most common suspect occupations associated with reported mortgage fraud2. Perpetrators in these occupations are familiar with the mortgage loan process and therefore know how to exploit vulnerabilities in the system.
Victims of mortgage fraud may include borrowers, mortgage industry entities, and those living in the neighborhoods affected by mortgage fraud. Lenders are plagued with high foreclosure costs, broker commissions, reappraisals, attorney fees, rehabilitation costs, and other related expenses when a mortgage fraud is committed3. As properties affected by mortgage fraud are sold at artificially inflated prices, properties in surrounding neighborhoods also become artificially inflated. When property values increase, property taxes increase as well. Legitimate homeowners also find it difficult to sell their homes as surrounding properties affected by fraud deteriorate.
During boom periods, high mortgage loan volume impacts expedited quality control efforts which often focus on production. Therefore, perpetrators may submit loans based on fraudulent information anticipating that the bogus information will be overlooked. On the other hand, loan officers, brokers, and others in the industry are paid by commission and may be tempted to approve questionable loans when the housing market is down to maintain current levels of income.

Analysis of mortgage originations indicates a decrease in demand. As a result of the declining housing market, mortgage fraud perpetrators may take advantage of eager loan originators attempting to generate loans for commission. Mortgage loan originations, including purchases and refinances declined during 2006 across the United States. The Mortgage Bankers Association (MBA) estimates that mortgage loan originations will reach $2.28 trillion during 2007 (see figure 2)4. According to an MBA December 2006 report, total home sales during 2006 decreased by approximately 10 percent from 2005 sales. New home sales declined by 17 percent and existing home sales dipped by 8 percent. In response to a decrease in demand for housing, builders reduced single-family starts (through November 2006) which were 14 percent lower than during the same time period in 2005. The MBA estimates that the oversupply of housing will continue to affect new home construction, home sales, and home prices until mid-20075.
Data was compiled and analyzed from law enforcement and industry sources to determine those areas of the country most affected by mortgage fraud during 2006. Information from the FBI, HUD-OIG, FinCEN, Mortgage Asset Research Institute (MARI), Federal National Mortgage Association (Fannie Mae), RealtyTrac Inc. (foreclosure statistics), and Radian Guaranty Inc., indicate that the top ten mortgage fraud areas for 2006 were California, Florida, Georgia, Illinois, Indiana, Michigan, New York, Ohio, Texas, and Utah. Other areas significantly affected by mortgage fraud include Arizona, Colorado, Maryland, Minnesota, Missouri, Nevada, North Carolina, Tennessee, and Virginia (see figure 3).

Analysis of available information indicates that mortgage fraud is most concentrated in the north central region of the United States. The north central region is followed by the southeast and west regions.
Regional analysis of FBI pending mortgage fraud-related investigations as of FY 2006 reveals that the north central region of the United States led the nation with the most pending investigations. The north central region was followed by the southeast, west, south central, and northeast, respectively (see figure 4).

The aggregate amount of ARM loans containing fraudulent misrepresentations is unknown. However, since mortgage fraud perpetrators hope to inflate the value of their properties and quickly sell them, they would likely gravitate towards mortgage loans that offered low and short-term interest rates such as those offered by ARMs.
Delinquency, Default, and Foreclosure: Potential Fraud Indicators
Mortgage loans based on fraudulent information usually result in delinquency, default, or foreclosure in a bear market. According to the MBA, both delinquency and foreclosures rates increased during 2006 and were largely concentrated in adjustable rate mortgage (ARM) loans, especially sub-prime ARMs. This is partly attributable to the recent rise in interest rates, placing a strain on ARMs borrowers6.
BasePoint Analytics, a fraud analytics company, analyzed more than 3 million loans and found that between 30 and 70 percent of early payment defaults (EPDs) are linked to significant misrepresentations in the original loan applications7. Radian Guaranty, Inc. is a leading provider of mortgage insurance which protects lenders against loan default. Of the top ten states Radian Guaranty Inc. ranked highest for mortgage fraud, seven of them also ranked in the company’s top ten for EPDs. This suggests that EPDs are a good mortgage fraud indicator.
During 2006 there were more than 1.2 million foreclosure filings nationally, which represents a 42 percent increase from 2005 figures. The foreclosure rate for 2006 was one foreclosure filing for every 92 households8. Foreclosures for 2006 surpassed foreclosures for 2005 during every month of the year9.
Foreclosure Fraud
Recent statistics suggest that escalating foreclosures provide criminals with the opportunity to exploit and defraud vulnerable homeowners seeking financial guidance. The perpetrators convince homeowners that they can save their homes from foreclosure through deed transfers and the payment of up-front fees. This “foreclosure rescue” often involves a manipulated deed process that results in the preparation of forged deeds. In extreme instances, perpetrators may sell the home or secure a second loan without the homeowners’ knowledge, stripping the property’s equity for personal enrichment.
While foreclosure scams vary, they may be used in combination with other fraudulent schemes. For instance, perpetrators may view foreclosure-rescue scams as a new method for fraudulently acquiring properties to facilitate illegal property-flipping and equity-skimming.
Home Equity Lines of Credit
According to a DOJ press release, Mi Su Yi and her husband, Paul Amorello, were sentenced in California in July 2006 for operating a $3 million bust-out scheme involving business lines of credit and HELOCs. The couple accessed lines of credit that had been obtained by others and paid the balances with worthless checks. They subsequently withdrew cash from the lines of credit before the checks were returned for insufficient funds. The couple laundered their proceeds through bank accounts opened under three false identities. In an attempt to avoid detection, the couple deposited cash amounts of less than $10,000 into these accounts. -US DOJ, “New Jersey Residents Sentenced to Prison for Running a $3 Million ‘Bust-Out’ Scheme,” Press Release, 25 July 2006, available at http://www.usdoj.gov
Individuals and criminal groups are exploiting the home equity line of credit (HELOC) application process to conduct multiple-funding mortgage fraud schemes, check fraud schemes, and potentially money laundering-related activity. HELOCs differ from standard home equity loans because the homeowner may borrow against the line of credit over a period of time using a checkbook or credit card. HELOCs are aggressively marketed by lenders as an easy, fast, and inexpensive means to obtain funds. HELOC funds are normally withdrawn on an as-needed basis to conduct home repairs or to pay bills, but fraud perpetrators may withdraw the entire amount within a short time period. Lenders typically focus on property equity prior to funding HELOCs. As such, many lenders do not demand a full property appraisal or a full property title search.
Perpetrators apply for multiple HELOCs to different lending institutions for a single property within a short time period. Prior to providing the funding, lenders conduct searches to determine if the property is encumbered by a lien. However, liens on a property may not be recorded for several days or months and thus cannot be immediately verified. Consequently, lenders do not discover that they hold a third, fourth, or fifth lien on a property (rather than the expected second lien) until later. The money obtained from the multiple HELOCs totals more than the original property purchase price, exceeding the out-of-pocket expenses incurred to secure the property.
Perpetrators conducting check fraud schemes may manipulate HELOC accounts and cause lenders to incur losses. For example, a perpetrator secures a HELOC and withdraws the entire allotted amount. A fraudulent check is then used to pay the balance owed on the HELOC. However, the perpetrator quickly withdraws the check amount from the HELOC before the bank realizes the check is worthless. When the check is returned for insufficient funds, the line of credit surpasses its maximum limit and the lender experiences a loss. HELOC accounts have also been used in common check frauds where perpetrators stole HELOC checks, fraudulently completed them, and deposited the funds into their own personal accounts.
HELOCs may also be used as a means of depositing and withdrawing laundered proceeds to further conceal the original funding source. As long as withdrawals from the HELOC do not exceed the line of credit limit, payments deposited into the account may be withdrawn later.
FBI and Industry Respond to Escalating Mortgage Fraud
The FBI is proactively working with the mortgage industry in an effort to curb mortgage fraud crimes. On March 8, 2007, the FBI signed a memorandum of agreement with the MBA to promote the FBI’s Mortgage Fraud Warning Notice (see figure 5). The Notice states that it is illegal to make any false statement regarding income, assets, debt or matters of identification, or to willfully inflate property value to influence the action of a financial institution. Under the agreement, the MBA and the FBI will make the notice available to mortgage lenders to use voluntarily as a means of educating consumers and mortgage professionals of the penalties and consequences of mortgage fraud.10

1Mortgage Asset Research Institute, “Eighth Periodic Mortgage Fraud Case Report to MBA,” p. 3, 11, 12, April 2006.
2FinCEN, “The SAR Activity Review Trends, Tips and Issues,” p. 15, May 2006, available at http://www.fincen.gov/sarreviewissue10.pdf
3Bits Financial Round Table, “Fraud Production Strategies for Consumer, Commercial, and Mortgage Loan Documents,” A Publication of the Bits Fraud Reductions Steering Committee, p. 7, January 2005.
4Mortgage Bankers Association Mortgage Finance Forecast, 13 March 2007, 8 November 2006, 7 December 2005, and MBA 1-4 Family Mortgage Originations 1990-2005.
5Mortgage Bankers Association, “Year in Review: Normalization of the Housing Market,” 29 December 2006.
6Mortgage Bankers Association, “Year in Review, Normalization of the Housing Market, 29 December 2006.
7BasePoint White Paper, “New Early Payment Default-Links to Fraud and Impact on Mortgage Lenders and Investment Banks,” p. 2, 2007.
8RealtyTrac Staff, “More Than 1.2 Million Foreclosures Reported in 2006,” RealtyTrac Inc. Press Release, 25 January 2007
9RealtyTrac Incorporated, 2005 and 2006 Percent of Households in Foreclosure, data provided 17 January 2007.
10Mortgage Bankers Association, “MBA Signs Memorandum of Agreement with FBI to Promote Use of FBI’s Mortgage Fraud Warning Notice,” Press Release, 8 March 2007.
Criminal Investigative Division, Criminal Intelligence Section