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

Dec 7, 2008

Exec had mortgage racket down to an art

Exec had mortgage racket down to an art

Orson Benn has gone to prison for falsifying applications, but a former associate in Homestead still sells mortgages.

Borrowers Betrayed Part 4
Orson Benn's network of mortgage brokers wrote thousands of subprime loans in Miami-Dade which have gone into foreclosure.
MIAMI HERALD STAFF

jdolan@MiamiHerald.com

Orson Benn, once a vice president at the nation's largest subprime lender, spent three years during the height of the housing boom tutoring Florida mortgage brokers in the art of fraud.

From his office in New York, he taught them how to doctor credit reports, coached them to inflate income on loan applications, and helped them invent phantom jobs for borrowers.

When trouble arose -- one broker got caught, another got cold feet -- Benn called his trusted fixer in Miami to remove the problem and get the loan approved: Yvette Valdes.

The 48-year-old Valdes was a key figure in helping Benn tap into one of the country's most lucrative mortgage markets during his run with Argent Mortgage, The Miami Herald found.

Benn and several associates were convicted of racketeering this year, but Valdes still sells mortgages from a nondescript storefront in Homestead.

While prosecutors looked at roughly $100 million in loans written by Benn and a cadre of co-workers, that represents just a portion of the loans they approved during his aggressive expansion into Florida.

The Miami Herald found that Benn's network approved more than $550 million in home loans from Tampa to West Palm Beach to Miami, according to an analysis of court records.

In Miami-Dade County alone, Benn's office approved more than $349 million in loans on 1,913 homes -- more than one in three have since fallen into foreclosure, the analysis shows.

Valdes brokered at least 100 of those loans worth $22 million -- nearly all based on false and misleading financial information, the newspaper found.

One borrower claimed to work for a company that didn't exist -- and got a $170,000 loan. Another borrower claimed to work a job that didn't exist -- and got enough money to buy four houses.

In a brief interview with The Miami Herald, Valdes blamed the borrowers, refusing to comment further. Her lawyer, Glenn Kritzer, said she has done nothing illegal.

With so many of Benn's loans now in foreclosure, Miami-Dade County is littered with still more empty homes. Squatters inhabit some; crack dens occupy others. At least one has been stripped to the ground, leaving only the foundation.

''It's like a desert,'' said Reynaldo Perez, 41, who lives in a Homestead town house financed by Benn three years ago. ``Just on my street, there are five or six homes being foreclosed.''

Although the Office of Financial Regulation -- the state agency entrusted with policing the mortgage industry -- was alerted to Valdes's role in Benn's network at least three years ago, it never launched an investigation, the newspaper found.

Since 2005, the agency has had copies of some of the same misleading loan applications that The Miami Herald reviewed.

Terry Straub, the OFR's director of finance, acknowledged that his agency had evidence against Valdez. ''I don't have any explanation for why we didn't pursue it,'' he said.

In fact, state regulators ignored more than a dozen written warnings about brokers in Benn's network, the agency's records show.

Despite a law banning criminals from getting licensed -- created after a Miami Herald series was published this summer -- two brokers in Benn's network who pleaded guilty in May to conspiracy charges in the case remain licensed.

THE BEGINNING

The path to Valdes and other brokers began in 2002, when Benn was hired by Argent Mortgage, which would become the nation's largest provider of loans to people with low credit scores.

Known as ''Big O,'' the six-foot three-inch, 280-pound Benn grew up as the son of a subway mechanic in one of Brooklyn's toughest neighborhoods. Even without a formal banking education, he needed just three years to advance from a clerical job to vice president.

At first, his job was to trouble-shoot problems that cropped up in loan applications, court records and interviews show.

Argent made money bundling the mortgages and selling them to investors on Wall Street, not by collecting monthly checks and depending on the borrowers' ability to pay. The accuracy of loan applications was not a priority, Benn later testified.

With control over hundreds of millions of dollars in loans, Benn launched a subprime empire that would soon cover most of Florida.

After four months on the job, Benn flew to Tampa to meet with brokers who courted him with a luxury box at a Tampa Bay Lightning hockey game, football tickets and strip-club outings, court records show.

He taught one of those brokers, Scott Almeida, a convicted cocaine trafficker, to prepare phony income statements and doctor credit reports.

A few months later, Almeida introduced Benn to Tampa brokers David Tuggle and Eric Steinhauser.

After Benn taught them to prepare phony documents, they began to write millions of dollars in loans.

Along the way, the brokers showed their gratitiude. DHL envelopes stuffed with cash -- a total of hundreds of thousands of dollars -- routinely arrived at Benn's million-dollar house in the New York suburbs. In slightly more than two years, Tuggle and Steinhauser alone paid Benn between $70,000 and $100,000, they told police.

SOUTH FLORIDA LINK

As the scheme grew riskier, it extended south, almost 300 miles, to Yvette Valdes in Homestead.

Benn told Steinhauser to create a phony deed to help a borrower get a loan. But Steinhauser said he had trouble finding someone in Tampa willing to help him because the deed would be filed in court.

So, Benn referred him to Valdes at Sandkick Mortgage.

For 16 months, Valdes and her co-workers were a mainstay of Benn's lucrative Miami-Dade operations, writing more than $1 million worth of loans in a typical month.

The Miami Herald obtained every loan application that Sandkick sent to Argent between May 2004 and September 2005, for mortgages totaling $22 million.

The documents include the personal and financial information about the borrower supplied by the broker.

Out of 129 applications, 103 contained red flags: non-existent employers, grossly inflated salaries and sudden, drastic increases in the borrower's net worth.

The simplest way for a bank to confirm someone's income is to call the employer. But in at least two dozen cases, the applications show bogus telephone numbers for work references, the newspaper found.

On three applications, Valdes provided her own private cellphone number, even though the borrowers did not work for her.

Another application included a letter from ''Community Bank,'' saying the borrower had $63,000 in his account. The phone number on the letter does not belong to a financial institution, however. It belongs to Bill Rieck, a Key West city employee, who told The Miami Herald that he was surprised his number was used.

''I ain't no community bank,'' he said, adding that the cell number has been his for six years.

INCOME AT ISSUE

When Kendale Lakes couple Monica Gaviria and Stacy Duthely applied for a loan through Sandkick in January 2005, they declared a combined income of $68,000 a year. She was a hair stylist; he, an interpreter.

When the loan went through a few months later, the documents showed more than a fivefold increase, to $384,000.

Gaviria said that figure is grossly inflated, but said she knew nothing about the change on her mortgage application until this year when she fell behind on her payments and the bank called her.

She said the bank representative demanded, ``What's the problem? You make $17,000 a month.''

As the months went by, Valdes began to write more loans for Benn, records show. She started small with an $87,000 loan in May 2004, but the next month, her numbers rose to $750,650. By that September, she hit $1 million.

The following year, she went on a tear, breaking the $1 million mark seven times.

Along the way, some borrowers came back for more.

One Sandkick customer, Erica Wright, bought her first house in July 2004, when she was 21. Her loan application said she was the office manager at Weldon Industries, a Tampa fence manufacturer, for four years. The job paid $40,000 a year.

But when reached by The Miami Herald last month, the company's general manager, Scott Franzen, said, ``We've never had anyone here by that name.''

In September 2004, Wright bought three more houses using Weldon as the employer, even claiming a big raise to $78,840.

Wright could not be reached for comment. All four properties have fallen into foreclosure, leaving $501,677 in unpaid debt.

While Valdes was flooding Miami-Dade with risky loans, Benn's network drew the attention of state regulators several times.

One of the brokerages doing business with Benn -- Total Mortgage of Tampa -- incurred 10 complaints in just two years.

In four of those cases, state regulators confirmed that the company provided false and misleading information to get loans. The company owner put false data in her own mortgage application in 2004, regulators found.

Instead of pressing for disciplinary action, including suspending or revoking the license, the state closed the cases.

The company kept going, brokering two more loans -- later investigated by police -- that went directly to Benn's chief co-conspirator, Argent banker Sam Green.

Green managed to get two mortgages to buy one home. He used one loan to pay for the property, and illegally pocketed the other -- $79,000, he later admitted to police.

SCHEME UNRAVELS

While Benn and his co-workers approved more than half a billion dollars' worth of mortgages during their run at Argent, it was a complaint filed by an elderly Tampa borrower over a disputed loan that drew the attention of police in 2004.

As other borrowers stepped forward with similar complaints, Benn's network slowly unraveled.

Investigators from the humble Hillsborough County Consumer Protection Agency began to review Argent loans and discovered irregularities in the tens of millions of dollars.

One by one, Tampa area brokers pointed the finger at Orson Benn.

Last year, statewide prosecutors charged Benn in Polk County with racketeering. At least seven others have been arrested in the same scheme, including the other Tampa area brokers.

Argent succumbed to the troubles of the subprime market and was bought by Citibank last year.

Despite a crackdown on Benn's Tampa brokers, nothing happened to the Miami network where most of the loans were written, The Miami Herald found.

Benn, who has begun an 18-year prison sentence, did not respond to a request for comment. Neither did Tuggle or Steinhauser, both of whom pleaded guilty in the mortgage scheme and await sentencing.

Both are still listed with ''approved'' licenses on the OFR website, the only place consumers can check the status of brokers.

Although state regulators have known about Valdes's involvement for three years, they never took action against her or Sandkick Mortgage.

The agency identified her as an associated target in a fraud investigation of another broker in the Benn network in 2005, records show.

In addition, the file contains two Sandkick loan applications with bogus claims: one showing an inflated salary and the other a phony job.

Terry Straub, director of finance for the OFR, said he can't explain the lack of action.

Valdes and her co-workers wrote their last loan with Benn in late 2005. Since then, 40 percent of the properties have slipped into foreclosure, the newspaper found.

Some have fallen into disrepair, dragging property values down around them. Others are abandoned. One, in Liberty City, has been razed, leaving nothing but a weed-strewn lot.

Last week, Miami Herald reporters visited Valdes at her Homestead office, now known as Best Mortgage Choice. She refused to discuss the newspaper's findings.

When asked about the misleading information in her customers' loan applications, Valdes said, ``That's their problem.''

source: miamiherald.com

link to the original post:
http://www.miamiherald.com/business/real-estate/story/802703-p3.html


Fort Lauderdale Blog and Real Estate News
Rory Vanucchi
RoryVanucchi@gmail.com

http://waterfrontlife.blogspot.com
www.FortLauderdaleLiving.net

almost three years of investigating alleged predatory lending and fraud cases

After almost three years of investigating alleged predatory lending and cases for primarily Spanish speaking clients in Monterey, Santa Cruz, , and San Benito Counties, I came to the startling that over 98% of those who had or were losing homes to were involved in some type of scheme. This led me to conduct some research. I found that with the of lending , vast numbers of unscrupulous brokers and appraisers were committing , often with the if not assistance of their clients.

While the widespread schemes and tactics utilized were sometimes elaborate and some times crude, all were at least initially successful, if means a house to own and/or in your pocket. How did this happen? who could never have afforded homes with a conventional loan were provided the opportunity to become with no down and no of income. This created an opportunity to speculate in the market with minimal or no monetary . And, with no of being sued, criminally charged, or losing licenses to operate, many brokers and agents went putting in homes they could not afford. All the prospective buyer had to do was sign on the . Fraudulent conduct rose to epic proportions.

To comprehend the blatant that was being committed, and ignored by the California Department of , (D.R.E.) district and other police agencies, you only have to ask yourself a simple question. How many do you know who have walked into a Ferrari dealership and were handed keys to a $180,000 Highway Patrol- attention-grabbing red F-430 after they told the salesperson, “Hey I want to buy that mean red machine, but I don’t have a down payment and my wife and I earn a combined annual income of less than $20,000″? Then, how did a California couple employed at a shop earning a combined annual income of $35,360 purchase a $628,000 without a down payment and with one hundred percent financing? Or, how did a California seasonal worker purchase a $598,000 with no down payment and with one hundred percent financing while earning $8.76 per hour at a lettuce packing shed in Salinas? How did the expect the lettuce packer and makers to meet $4,000 plus monthly payments, or did they? And, how did the lettuce packer and makers actually think that they could afford even the teaser rates of $1,800 per month, or did they? The makers and the lettuce packer are not to the rule, but rather the majority. And they are real ; they were my clients.

The majority of the news media, , and legislators either do not have a concept as to what actually occurred in the crisis, or they are intentionally misleading the public. A couple years back, I predicted a severe . I had been asked to speak at several functions by the California Association of Brokers, National Association of Hispanic Professionals, and the Santa Cruz County Board of . The attendees laughed when I made the predication. The was still hot but, suspiciously at the same time, homeowners were defaulting on their at a record pace. The professionals’ general response was that the problem was temporary and that in a year things would be back to normal. They didn’t want to hear that the houses were so overvalued that even persons could not afford them, especially since the majority of their clients were working class making well below wages.

Easy and inflated appraisals are the why spun out of sight and then rapidly declined and are still declining. were exaggerated for several reasons. The brokers that were relying on to help them had a vested interest in closing the deal at any cost because they were going to make regardless if the borrower had the means to repay the loan. The greater the loan amount, the more unscrupulous brokers earned. with little or no began homes at a record pace, some offering to pay more than the asking price, further inflating . As increased, owners soon resorted to refinancing constantly. Appraisals were falsified so could pull out cash, most of the time leaving homes with little, if any equity. My clients routinely pocketed $50,000, $60,000, $70,000 or more in transactions months after properties. These were the very same who couldn’t even afford a down payment or the payments. Some of the cash was spent on and vehicles, some invested in other .

The escalating to purchase homes has ended leaving values in question. Ask yourself what your property is worth today. The answer is, what you can sell it for, and more likely than not, your property will have to compete with a nearby in . With so many and a tightening credit market, prices continue to fall on a . But, let’s say you can afford a ten percent down payment on a $400,000 . Why would you purchase the today when there is no indication when will stabilize? You could easily loose the $40,000 down payment in less than six months. When will stabilize? Knowing what actually occurred, it will be at least five years before we hit the bottom.

So most of this you have probably heard before. But I learned something more by looking at hundreds of loan applications and documents given to me by clients claiming they were lied to and cheated by their brokers. But first you should ask why come to me, a private investigator, instead of to an attorney or public agency for assistance?

The majority of district and police agencies has little, if any, of lending and practices and regulations, and therefore was deemed worthless even by actual victims of . For example, in 2007 the County District Attorney’s Consumer unit had not made one arrest for and/or predatory lending practices in related cases. This is the norm in most counties throughout California. The California Department of (D.R.E.), until just very recently, would not even respond to complaints of unlicensed activity. Their response was that they only regulate licensed persons. If the individual didn’t have a license, what could they do? Yet in 2006, ignoring my calls and written complaints, they went as far as providing a license to a previously unlicensed woman who had been a “loan consultant” on one of my cases. I reported her for to both the D.R.E. and Monterey County District Attorney. I provided them with a 7 page investigative report with verification that she had conducted without a license. She had even paid restitution to one of my clients after being caught threatening her with deportation if the client complained about the loan. Less than six months after I submitted my report, the loan consultant was provided a license to operate.

So I turn back to my question, why did the come to me, a private investigator? After interviewing and re-interviewing , and checking and cross checking documents, I came to the realization that my clients believed that a threat of an investigation would coerce brokers, or other parties to the loan transactions, to give them the promised to them in their deals. In a , it’s hard to recover if you’re in on the .

In one case that I was hired to conduct an investigation, an unemployed eighty-year-old blind and diabetic man was unknowingly sold a $680,000 by his granddaughter’s husband who had refinanced the several times and had depleted all of the equity in the process. With the assistance of an unlicensed “Loan Consultant” and unscrupulous , they falsified the grandfather’s date of birth (he was now 45 years old) and his income (it was stated he earned over $100,000 as the owner of a service) on the loan application. The appraiser inflated the value of the . The and his unlicensed “Loan Consultant” profited almost $20,000 in , and over $27,000 (4%) for selling the . The granddaughter’s husband profited $80,000 in the sale. The eighty-year-old grandfather, who had nothing to lose but his credit, immediately the in . The granddaughter’s husband became enraged when he determined that the charged him a fee to sell the . He wanted all or a portion of the $27,000. The granddaughter’s husband was the client who came to me claiming the had wronged him.

There are the clients that “loaned” their credit and signatures for a price, and then complained when they did not receive the payments promised or when their credit was ruined because the buyers they had never failed to make the payments. Every client that came to me crying predatory lending had claimed that they earned over $100,000 as owners on their loan applications. But in reality they were maids and maintenance men, dishwashers and makers earning minimum wages. They came to me claiming they had been deceived about the payments. But the real problem was that they had been led to believe that they could in a year when the payment on their adjustable adjusted upward, and they suddenly found themselves with a three-year prepayment penalty. Their loan consultants had made extra putting them into a prepayment penalty loan, but neglected to explain to them that they would be penalized when they refinanced. But the clients didn’t stop and think about the fact that they had falsified their on their loan applications, and that they should never have been given the initial loan, much less a . These are just a few of the , believe me there are many, many more.

Why did began giving out like drunken sailors? I theorize that an attempt was made to forestall a in 2002, and resorted to a ponzi-loan sharking type so initial in the know would profit millions of dollars. The others, the flippers, and the ones that were misled to believe they could make a quick buck from the , were left holding the bag. What was not taken into and anticipated was the devastation that the would leave in it’s wake.

What should alarm every payer who will help bail out these is that few lawsuits are being filed and few are going to jail. Although, we may never experience this type of fiasco again, both the and industries are in dire need of regulatory changes. California’s Department of should also be reorganized. The D.R.E. should be empowered to settle and mediate claims of predatory lending and . And, they should also require licensees to be insured and bonded, and that their license is printed on all . Will this prevent completely? Absolutely not, but it will deter the conduct that has been prevalent in the industry.

I realize that my observations and opinions will be questioned and maybe create a big brouhaha, because they will ask what do I know? I am only a gumshoe.


source: offshoreblog.net

link to the original post:
http://offshoreblog.net/what-do-i-know-i-am-only-a-gumshoe/


Fort Lauderdale Blog and Real Estate News
Rory Vanucchi
RoryVanucchi@gmail.com

http://waterfrontlife.blogspot.com
www.FortLauderdaleLiving.net

Nov 15, 2008

Public safety column: Thieves go high tech

By Sallie James SunSentinel.com
November 14, 2008

Thieves can be imaginative when it comes to stealing your money, with some of the most popular schemes involving automatic teller machines or phony land deals.

High-tech crooks have found ways to install removeable card readers in the machines, enabling them to steal personal information from the card you slip it into the slot, said Broward Sheriff's Sgt. Jay Leiner.

They've also figured out ways to hook up tiny cameras that record your personal identification numbers.

When you complete your transaction, the thieves remove the equpment, hook it up to a computer, and download your personal information, Leiner said.

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Everything they need to know is contained in the magnetic strip on your card.

"They run the numbers and make up cards," Leiner said.

For thieves, it's a lucrative business. For the victims, it means untold headaches.

"It's becoming quite commonplace, especially at gas stations," Leiner said. "We might not see it for months at a time, and then we see it happen several times -- a couple times a month and then it disappears," he said.

To avoid becoming a victim:

Pull on the spot in the ATM or gas pump where the card goes in. If anything comes off, don't use the machine.

Be watchful of your surroundings. The thieves are usually watching because they don't like to leave their equipment unattended.

In another twist, thieves have also used hand-held card readers to steal credit card information from restaurant customers, said Palm Beach County Sheriff's Sgt. Keith Conley.

The waiter skims the cards of his customers, and gets paid for every card he skims, Conley said.

The thief who owns the skimmer downloads the credit card information to a computer, without the victim ever knowing, Conley said.

Real-estate rip-offs are another type of burgeoning crime, police said.

One of the most common involves fake real estate sales.

An alleged landowner tries to sell land that he doesn't own or that doesn't even exist, Leiner said.

In October, the Broward Sheriff's Office charged a North Lauderdale man with grand theft for selling an imaginary six-acre stretch to a buyer for $100,000.

The victim made two payments a year apart without ever seeing the property or obtaining a legal description of the tract, Leiner said.

"If you are going to be buying land, you might want to go look at it, check the county records and see who owns it, see if it's up for sale," Leiner said.

Stay Safe appears every Saturday in the Local section. Send questions or column suggestions to StaySafe@Sun-Sentinel.com, or to Stay Safe, Sun-Sentinel, 200 E. Las Olas Blvd., Fort Lauderdale, FL 33301

Sallie James can be reached at Sjames@sun-sentinel.com or 954-572-2019.


source: sun sentinal


link to the original post:
http://www.sun-sentinel.com/news/local/crime/sfl-1114publicsafetycol,0,1821664.story


Fort Lauderdale Blog and Real Estate News
Rory Vanucchi
RoryVanucchi@gmail.com

www.LasOlasLifestyles.com
www.FortLauderdaleLiving.net