Friday, March 30, 2012

Maryland Attorney Gets 18 Months For Ripping Off Client's Dead Mother's Estate Out Of $300K+

In Anne Arundel County, Maryland, The Baltimore Sun reports:
  • A disbarred Annapolis lawyer was ordered Thursday to serve 18 months in the Anne Arundel County jail plus five years on probation for siphoning nearly $308,000 from a client.(1)


  • Jerold K. Nussbaum, 60, whom Karen Gunther hired to handle her mother's estate, stole most of it in 2005 and 2006, according to prosecutors and court records. He had pleaded guilty in January. "Mr. Nussbaum not only stole my money, but I've lost my home," Gunther, the heir, told Judge Paul A. Hackner, according to a recording of the court hearing. She said she had to move in with a cousin and still pay $6,000 a year in taxes on a house "I can't even live in" because she couldn't afford needed repairs.


  • Nussbaum, who practiced mostly tax and bankruptcy law and now works for a start-up company, was in financial trouble because of clients' bankruptcies, was going through a divorce and was using Gunther's funds to stay afloat, according to his attorney, Drew Cochran. He plans to repay the funds, Cochran said.


  • Nussbaum was disbarred in 2007 after using other clients' money between 2003 and 2005 for his expenses and seeking to cover it up when questioned by the Attorney Grievance Commission.

Source: Disbarred Annapolis lawyer jailed for stealing client's money (He siphoned $308,000 from estate he was handling for heir).

(1) The Client Protection Fund of the Bar of Maryland (formerly "The Clients' Security Trust Fund") was established to reimburse clients who have suffered a loss due to misappropriation or embezzle­ment by a Maryland-licensed attorney.

For similar "attorney ripoff reimbursement funds" that sometimes help cover the financial mess created by the dishonest conduct of lawyers licensed in other states and Canada, see:

Maps available courtesy of The National Client Protection Organization, Inc.

Sticky-Fingered Attorney Cops Guilty Plea For Pocketing $2M+ In Closing Proceeds Meant To Pay Off Existing Mortgages On Sold, Refinanced Real Estate

From the Office of the U.S. Attorney (Montgomery, Alabama):
  • On March 22, 2012, James Boyd Douglas, Jr., who previously practiced law in Lee County, Alabama, pled guilty to engaging in a multimillion-dollar mortgage fraud scheme, announced the United States Attorney’s Office in the Middle District of Alabama.


  • Between January 2005 and September 23, 2011, Douglas handled numerous real estate closings and real estate refinancing transactions on behalf of his clients. As part of the real estate closings, Douglas received the proceeds of new mortgage loans.


  • Douglas was supposed to use the proceeds from new mortgage loans to repay the old mortgage loans on the properties that were being sold or refinanced. But instead of using that money to repay the old loans, Douglas embezzled more than $2,000,000 from his clients’ real estate closings over approximately six years.(1)

For the U.S. Attorney press release, see Lee County Attorney Pleads Guilty to Mortgage Fraud Scheme.

(1) The Client Security Fund of the Alabama State Bar was established to reimburse clients who have suffered a loss due to misappropriation or embezzle­ment by an Alabama-licensed attorney.

For similar "attorney ripoff reimbursement funds" that sometimes help cover the financial mess created by the dishonest conduct of lawyers licensed in other states and Canada, see:

Maps available courtesy of The National Client Protection Organization, Inc.

Florida Lawyer Gets Six Years For Looting $2.4M+ Of Entrusted Funds Belonging To Clients

In Fort Myers, Florida, Gulf Coast Business Review reports:
  • U.S. District Judge John Steele sentenced Fort Myers attorney Joseph Troiano, 63, [...] to six years in federal prison for mail and wire fraud. Steele also ordered Troiano to pay restitution to his victims totaling nearly $2.5 million. A jury convicted Troiano in November of six counts of wire fraud and one count of mail fraud for misusing client funds.


  • He used $2.4 million of client money to pay off loans and invest in real estate from 2005 to 2010 without his clients’ permission, according to a statement from U.S. Attorney Robert O’Neill.(1)

Source: Fort Myers attorney sentenced.

(1) The Florida Bar's Clients' Security Fund was established to reimburse clients who have suffered a loss due to misappropriation or embezzle­ment by a Florida-licensed attorney.

For similar "attorney ripoff reimbursement funds" that sometimes help cover the financial mess created by the dishonest conduct of lawyers licensed in other states and Canada, see:

Maps available courtesy of The National Client Protection Organization, Inc.

Las Vegas Attorney Under State Bar Probe For Allegedly Illegally Pocketing Ten$ Of Thousand$ In Client Ca$h

In Las Vegas, Nevada, the Las Vegas Review Journal reports:
  • In an emergency petition, the Nevada State Bar is seeking to suspend the license of a politically active Las Vegas attorney, alleging he misappropriated tens of thousands of dollars in client funds and tried to cover up his actions.


  • The bar called attorney Barry Levinson a "substantial threat" to the public and said it wants the Nevada Supreme Court to issue a "swift and immediate suspension" of his license while the bar conducts formal disciplinary proceedings against him.


  • "In short, Levinson has repeatedly misappropriated funds and has compounded his misconduct by repeatedly lying to clients and the State Bar regarding his delay in disbursing funds to the appropriate parties," according to the bar in a 24-page complaint [...].


  • "Levinson's lies, combined with his failure to cooperate, constitute an obstruction to the State Bar's investigation, as does Levinson's failure to provide information requested." Disciplinary proceedings against Levinson could result in an additional suspension or disbarment.

For more, see State Bar targets Las Vegas attorney.

(1) The State Bar of Nevada's Clients' Security Fund was established to reimburse clients who have suffered a loss due to theft by a Nevada-licensed attorney.

For similar "attorney ripoff reimbursement funds" that sometimes help cover the financial mess created by the dishonest conduct of lawyers licensed in other states and Canada, see:

Maps available courtesy of The National Client Protection Organization, Inc.

Thursday, March 29, 2012

Suit Alleges Deutsche Bank Unauthorized To Conduct Foreclosures In Arkansas; All Related Sales, Title Transfers Could Be Void If Court Agrees

Law 360 reports:
  • Deutsche Bank National Trust Co. was hit Thursday with a proposed class action in Arkansas seeking a declaration that the bank wasn't authorized to operate in the state when it foreclosed on homes and transferred their titles in 2010.


  • Deutsche Bank, acting as trustee for Morgan Stanley ABS Capital I Inc. and other foreign and domestic trusts, conducted many foreclosures and foreclosure sales in Arkansas without obtaining the proper certificates from the secretary of state, invalidating all of the related title transfers, according to the complaint ....

Source: Deutsche Bank Wasn't Cleared To Foreclose In Ark., Suit Says.

For the lawsuit, see Dial v. Deutsche Bank National Trust Company, et al.

Thanks to Deontos for the heads-up on the story.

State AG To Federal Appeals Court: 'MERS Has No Business Interfering In Oregon Non-Judicial Foreclosure Process!'

In Portland, Oregon, The Oregonian reports:
  • Oregon Attorney [General] John Kroger fired a shot across the mortgage industry's bow Tuesday, arguing for the first time that a national electronic loan registry can't trump state records laws.


  • If courts agree, it could route thousands of Oregon foreclosures through courtrooms, creating a drawn-out and much more costly process. That prospect might make banks more willing to bargain with at-risk homeowners, say homeowners' rights advocates.


  • Kroger weighed in on a case that won't by itself have the power to bind decisions in state or other federal courts. But it could influence similar cases, and/or the entire case could be transferred to the Oregon Supreme Court to decide on the issue of state law.


  • The state Department of Justice filed a brief in the 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals, arguing that the Mortgage Electronic Registration Systems, or MERS, can't stand in for lenders when it comes to county records in what's called "a non-judicial foreclosure" -- one that does not go through court.


  • The electronic registry system was formed by the mortgage industry to track loans as they're bundled, bought and sold by investors. It's designed to avoid the cost and hassle of going through all the documentation normally required by state recording laws. The bundling of loans, known as securitization, wasn't envisioned by lawmakers when Oregon's recording law was written. But the Department of Justice said Tuesday that the industry's digital workaround didn't meet the standard of transparency the state law intended.


  • "Lenders using the MERS system have to follow Oregon law just like everyone else," Kroger said in a statement. "The Department of Justice will not tolerate lenders cutting corners in their rush to foreclose on Oregon homeowners."


  • The state's non-judicial foreclosure process requires beneficiary of a loan -- the entity that holds the note -- to be recorded after every transfer. Simply listing MERS as beneficiary on a multitude of deeds doesn't cut it, Kroger argued, if other entities really own the loans.


  • "Although the trust deed refers to MERS as the 'beneficiary,' courts need not accept that assertion at face value," the brief says. However the case is ultimately decided, it could have a chilling effect on out-of-court foreclosures.


  • "If the Hooker case is upheld, then it's just going to be another nail in the coffin for MERS, which may result in more banks simply going the judicial route rather than taking their chance in non-judicial foreclosure," said Phil Querin, a Portland real estate attorney.


  • The case in question revolves around a $260,000 loan taken out by Ivan and Katherine Hooker in 2005 that had traded hands twice before they fell into foreclosure in May 2010. In September of that year, the couple filed suit to block Bank of America from seizing their house. U.S. District Judge Owen Panner halted the foreclosure, saying the MERS system violated state recording law.(1)


  • On Tuesday, Kroger weighed in on the side of upholding Panner's decision. The Department of Justice is taking a side now because this case is the first to reach the U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals, said Keith Dubanevich, Kroger's chief of staff. "We felt that it's the perfect opportunity for the attorney general to express the legal view of the state of Oregon," he said.


  • Dubanevich said a decision in this case could have a controlling influence on others in the federal courts, which would normally look to state courts for guidance on issues of Oregon law.


  • It would take a state Supreme Court decision to definitively validate or invalidate the MERS system. Or the legislature could write a fix into state law. "This is not the final chapter by any means," Dubanevich said.

Source: Attorney General John Kroger weighs in on MERS foreclosure case.

(1) Hooker v. Northwest Trustee Services, Inc., et al., Case 1:10-cv-03111-PA (D. Or. May 25, 2011).

See also:

Pending Foreclosures Falling Through Cracks Lead To Rent-Free Living For Some Central Florida Homeowners

In Orlando, Florida, the Orlando Sentinel reports:
  • A few blocks from West Colonial Drive in Orlando is a weathered, split-level house that has been in foreclosure since 2007. The longtime owner has lived there for nearly five years without making a payment.


  • It's not the only Central Florida house that has idled in foreclosure longer than some kindergartners have been alive. Scattered across Metro Orlando, where 15 percent of all mortgaged homes have received a foreclosure notice in recent years, are more than 20 houses that have fallen through the cracks of local courts and mortgage companies for almost half a decade, according to records provided to the Orlando Sentinel by the real-estate-research company RealtyTrac Inc.


  • As these long-term foreclosures flounder between the homeowners and the banks that hold the mortgages, front-lawn weeds grow taller, lenders lose revenue, neighbors' property values decline, and courts get further backlogged. The homeowners live rent-free but end up with credit records so ruined that few landlords will risk renting to them should they be evicted from their properties.

For more, see Some Orlando-area homes stuck for years in foreclosure limbo.

Accusations Of Pocketed Monthly Payments, Forged Loan Mod Approval Leads Investigators To 16 Possible Victims Of Suspected Foreclosure Relief Racket

In Fresno, California, KFSN-TV Channel 30 reports:
  • The Fresno County district attorney's office is investigating U.S. Foreclosure Relief and some associated businesses, all tracing back to one suspect. Espi Chavez is used to taking ownership. She owns her own beauty salon in Selma, and a few apartments around town, but she no longer owns her own home. The modest house, a few blocks from Selma High School, sold at foreclosure auction last July. But Chavez didn't find out until someone from the bank told her she needed to move out.


  • For the previous nine months, Chavez had been writing checks to U.S. Foreclosure Relief, trying to get her mortgage loan modified.


  • She even received a letter saying the modification was approved a month before the foreclosure auction. She now believes it was a fake, manufactured by the owner of U.S. Foreclosure Relief, Vickie Fuentes.

***

  • Fresno County district attorney's office investigators served a search warrant at one of the business' former addresses, as well as at the home where Vickie Fuentes lived with her husband. They discovered at least 16 possible victims.


  • Action News tried to contact Fuentes, but no one answered the door and phone calls went unanswered. Espi Chavez doesn't expect to ever hear from her again, but she wants to see her... in police custody.

For the story, see Selma woman loses home in foreclosure relief scam.

Wednesday, March 28, 2012

Prosecutors: Mortgage Broker Forged Loan Mod Approvals, Ripped Off Homeowners Out Of $105K In Loan Payments, Leaving Some Facing Foreclosure

In Baltimore, Maryland, The Baltimore Sun reports:
  • An Owings Mills man has been arrested on charges of forging loan modification documents that led five homes into foreclosure proceedings, state licensing officials said. Rodney Getlan, 45, has been charged by the Baltimore County State's Attorney with felony theft, operating without a license, mortgage fraud and other counts, according to a statement Friday from the Maryland Department of Labor, Licensing and Regulation.


  • For three years, from Jan. 2009 through Jan. 2012, Getlan forged documents that showed his victims had been approved for loan modifications by their mortgage lenders, according to the licensing department.


  • In the charges filed this week, nine homeowners, authorities say, were told by Getlan that they were approved for better mortgage interest rates. Getlan then stole their monthly payments —totaling more than $105,000 — and changed the contact information they had listed with their lenders, so the homeowners would not receive past due and foreclosure notices, according to the statement.


  • Two of the nine homeowners who used Getlan as a mortgage broker had their homes sold at foreclosure auction, the statement said, and three others have been notified that foreclosure is imminent.


  • Getlan was arrested [] on the 46 new criminal counts and is being held on $500,000 bail. In addition to the new counts, Getlan pleaded guilty in February to stealing from a victim of his mortgage fraud scheme. He was given a two-year suspended sentence. He also has an arraignment scheduled next week on different burglary and theft charges.

Source: Licensing Dept.: Owings Mills man stole more than $100,000, put five homes into foreclosure.

NJ Appeals Court: Bankster's Failure Submit Certification To Court That It Notified Defendant Of Lawsuit Sinks Foreclosure Sale

Lexology reports:
  • A recent New Jersey case, LaSalle Bank National Association as Trustee v. Plata, App. Div. 06-2-5386, shows how technical the notice requirements are for sheriff sales in New Jersey and how a lender can be tripped up by them.


  • Martha Plata owned an interest in a property in Union City, New Jersey. LaSalle Bank obtained a final judgment for foreclosure and obtained an order for Plata’s property to be sold by the sheriff. LaSalle’s attorney sent a letter to Plata notifying her of the scheduled October 22, 2009 sheriff’s sale by both certified mail and regular mail.


  • The sheriff’s sale was adjourned to March 25, 2010. That morning, Plata filed a bankruptcy petition, resulting in the sale being further adjourned. The sale was subsequently adjourned a number of times until finally taking place on May 27, 2010. LaSalle Bank bid the property at the sale so there were no third parties involved in the sale.


  • Plata submitted a certification to the effect that at the time that she delivered a copy of her bankruptcy petition to the sheriff’s office, an employee of the sheriff’s office told her that the sale had already taken place on March 25, 2010. On May 3, 2010, Plata filed a motion in the trial court seeking to set aside the sale, which she believed had taken place on March 25, 2010.


  • Plata certified that when she called the sheriff’s office on June 17, 2010, she was informed that the sale had taken place on May 27, 2010. Plata claimed she was never notified that the sale would take place on May 27, 2010, as she was under the impression that the sale had already taken place on March 25, 2010.


  • LaSalle’s attorney provided the court with a copy of a letter informing Plata of a May 20, 2010 sheriff’s sale date and she testified that she provided Plata with a copy of a subsequent letter requesting postponement of the sale until May 27, 2010.


  • Plata claimed that she never received these letters. Court rules provide that when a court authorizes the public sale of property, notice must be sent to the owner at least ten days prior to the date set for the sale by registered or certified mail. As mentioned above, LaSalle’s attorney specified that she had done this, and although the certified letter had never been claimed, the regular mail letter had not been returned.


  • Subsequent notices of postponements of sheriff’s sales are not required by rule to be sent by certified or registered mail. Instead, in the case of adjournments, the rules and case law require that “some reasonable communication” be made informing the owner of the adjournment.


  • Although LaSalle’s attorney testified as to sending the letters specifying the adjournments, she apparently failed to furnish the court with a certification stating that (1) the mailing was correctly addressed; (2) proper postage was affixed; (3) the return address was correct; and (4) the mailing was deposited in the proper mail receptacle or at the post office.


  • The Appellate Division held that LaSalle’s failure to provide a certification as to all those items caused its notice to Plata to be defective. The court further noted that even had Plata seen the notice adjourning the sale to May 20, 2010, LaSalle did not show evidence that it had informed Plata of the further adjournment to May 27, 2010, when the actual sale took place.


  • The court ruled that LaSalle’s failure to prove that it had properly sent the notices caused the sale to be defective, and the court ordered the sale to be vacated.


  • The lesson here is that courts will strictly construe notice requirements for sheriff’s sales, so lenders have to be aware of this and be prepared to show how notices were delivered. One small, technical slip up could result in a sale being overturned.


  • It should be noted that the Appellate Division stated at the end of the opinion that because the property was sold to LaSalle, and there was no evidence that innocent third parties had any interest in the property, the court was proceeding with vacating the sale. The result might have been different had a third party purchased the property at the sheriff’s sale.(1)

Source: Lenders beware - sheriff sale notices in New Jersey (may require subscription; if no subscription, GO HERE; or TRY HERE - then click the appropriate link).

(1) Had an innocent 3rd party purchased the property, the result probably should not have been any different. For a purchaser at a judicial foreclosure sale to avail itself of the protections accorded to a bona fide purchaser, said foreclosure sale purchaser arguably has the obligation to acquaint itself with the foreclosure file sitting at the local court house, and examine everything contained therein. Such a review of the file would reveal that the certification that was required to be submitted to the court was missing, thereby placing said purchaser on notice of the possible defect in the sale. Said purchaser such not enjoy the benefits of its own neglect.

Such a proposition has support in other jurisdictions. See, for example, Kordecki v. Rizzo, 106 Wis.2d 713, 317 NW 2d 479 (Wis. 1982), in which the court stated that had the party claiming bona fide purchaser status at a foreclosure sale examined the record prior to purchase, which he did not, the purchaser would have found the lis pendens recorded against the property being foreclosed. The lis pendens, in turn, would have led the purchaser to the county circuit court file on the foreclosure proceedings (the foreclosure court file number is typically noted on the lis pendens), and more specifically to the documents contained in said foreclosure file that, had they been examined, would have placed the purchaser on notice of defects in the process. Accordingly, the court ruled that the purchaser was not entitled to protection as a bona fide purchaser.

See also,
Carnation Co. v. Midstates Marketers, Inc., 2 Kan. App. 2d 236, 577 P. 2d 827 (Kan. Ct. of App. 1978), supporting the proposition that an adequate title search of land requires the inspection/examination of a court file which is referred to in a recorded instrument affecting title to land.

Failure To Make 'Public Announcement' Of Auction Cancellation Voids Subsequent F'closure Sale 10 Weeks Later; Legal Secretary Screw-Up Sinks Bankster

The following facts are taken from a recent Hawaii foreclosure case decided by the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 9th Circuit:
  • A foreclosure sale of a home in Hawaii was scheduled and then postponed on four separate occasions.


  • For each of the first three postponements, the sale's postponement was made in accordance with Hawaii state law.


  • On a fourth occasion, the following narrative taken from the ruling describes what happened:

    On September 23, 2005, the law firm attempted to postpone the sale yet again, a fourth and final time. The auction was scheduled to occur at noon at a flagpole located in front of Hale Halewai, a local community center.

    The firm delegated the task to a legal secretary who had never before postponed a foreclosure sale. The secretary arrived ten or fifteen minutes before noon.

    Rather than shouting out the postponement to all those present, the secretary asked several of the people present if they were interested in Debtor's property. Everyone she spoke to said they were not. She did not attempt to speak to those individuals who appeared to be there for another auction that was occurring at the same time, and she did not speak to everyone in the area. She did not tell those she spoke with that the auction was postponed to December 2, 2005.

    The secretary stayed at the flagpole until approximately 12:25 PM, after the other auction had finished and the area was deserted. She left without ever announcing or posting the information that the sale of Debtor's property had been postponed
    .



  • The foreclosure sale took place on December 2. The successful — and only bid — was a credit bid made by the auctioneer on behalf of Lenders.


  • The homeowner subsequently sued the foreclosing parties for all kinds of things, one of which being the fact that the fourth sale was cancelled without any "public announcement" being made at the time the sale was cancelled.


  • On this issue, the homeowner sought to void the foreclosure sale.


  • Federal bankruptcy court Judge Robert J. Faris agreed with the homeowner, but on initial appeal, the Bankruptcy Appelllate Panel reversed Judge Faris' ruling.

On second appeal, to the 9th Circuit Court Court of Appeals, the court respectfully considered the ruling of the Bankruptcy Appelllate Panel and promptly reversed it, agreeing with the initial determination of Judge Faris, essentially saying that the legal secretary in fact screwed up by failing to make a "public announcement" of the cancellation at the sale, and accordingly, ruled that the foreclosure sale was to be voided.(1)

For the ruling, the thorough analysis of what constitutes a "pubic announcement" under Hawaii state law, as well as the other issues litigated in this case, see In re Kekauoha-Alisa (Kekauoha-Alisa v. Ameriquest Mortgage Company), No. 09-60019 (9th Cir. March 26, 2012).

Thanks to Deontos for the heads-up on the ruling.

(1) In the following excerpt, the appellate court emphasized the importance of strict compliance with (seemingly hypertechnical) procedures governing non-judicial foreclosure sales, such as the procedures in Hawaii:

  • That Hawaii law requires strict compliance with statutory foreclosure procedures is confirmed by the Hawaii Supreme Court's recent decision in Lee, a decision that was not available at the time the BAP issued its decision.

    The Lee court, answering a question certified to it by a federal district court, held that a foreclosure sale conducted after the mortgagors had cured their default was not valid.

    The court cited Silva for the proposition that the "foreclosure sale did not comply with the requirements of HRS section 667-5 and was, thus, invalid." Lee, 218 P.3d at 779. As in Silva, there was no discussion in Lee of the degree to which the violation of HRS § 667-5 prejudiced the mortgagor that would suggest that prejudicial impact is relevant under Hawaii's law.

    While Lee involved the violation of a different requirement of HRS § 667-5 than is at issue here, the court's reasoning encompasses the facts of this case.

    Finally, we note that a strict compliance requirement is not so out of step with the law of other jurisdictions that we have reason to second-guess our interpretation of Hawaii law.

    The BAP is accurate in noting that the majority of states draw a distinction between procedural defects that are insignificant and those that are prejudicial enough to render a foreclosure sale void or voidable. See, e.g., Gilroy v. Ryberg, 667 N.W.2d 544, 553-54 (Neb. 2003) (describing the majority approach and collecting cases).

    However, this trend is far from unanimous. Several states have long required strict compliance with nonjudicial foreclosure statutes. See Univ. Sav. Ass'n v. Springwoods Shopping Ctr., 644 S.W.2d 705, 706 (Tex. 1982) (mortgagee's failure to perform "ministerial act" of recording appointment of successor trustee grounds for voiding sale); Bottomly v. Kabachnick, 434 N.E.2d 667, 669-70 (Mass. App. Ct. 1982) (failure in notice of sale to identify the holder of mortgage voids sale).

    Other states have begun to strictly construe the terms of recently enacted statutes designed to protect mortgagors. See Aurora Loan Servs., LLC v. Weisblum, 923 N.Y.S.2d 609, 614 (N.Y. App. Div. 2011) (strict compliance with statutorily mandated notice requirements is condition precedent to foreclosure, without consideration of prejudice to mortgagor); EMC Mortg. Corp. v. Chaudhri, 946 A.2d 578, 586 (N.J. Super. Ct. App. Div. 2008) ("[A] lender's substantial compliance with the contents of a notice of intent, sent by a lender prior to initiation of foreclosure,. . . was not authorized by the statute's terms." (internal quotation marks omitted)).

    Hawaii's approach, therefore, might place it in the minority, but does not place it out of the mainstream.

Tuesday, March 27, 2012

Court Confirms Fannie, Freddie Cheated Taxpayers Out Of Million$ In Deed Taxes On Foreclosures By Improper Claims Of Government Entity Tax Exemptions

In Detroit, Michigan, WXYZ-TV Channel 7 reports:
  • Oakland County is celebrating a major win over mortgage giants Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac. The county said U.S. District Court Judge Victoria Roberts ruled in favor of the county on Friday, saying the lenders were not exempt from the real estate transfer tax.


  • Oakland County Treasurer Andy Meisner explained that when a house is sold, the seller pays the county $1.10 for every $1,000 in value, and pays the state $7.50 for every $1,000 in value. Meisner said the lenders failed to pay those fees because they claimed they were tax-exempt as government entities.


  • They’ve cheated,” Meisner told Action News [...]. “It’s cost us millions of dollars, and this is about taking one step toward recovering that and fighting back against the foreclosure crisis.”


  • A release from the county executive’s office estimates Oakland County taxpayers will recover as much as $1.5-million, but Meisner puts that number above $3-million. So far there is no word on if Fannie Mae or Freddie Mac will appeal the ruling. Action News attempted to reach both lenders for comment, but we have not heard back from either.

Source: Judge rules against Freddie Mac and Fannie Mae in Oakland County lawsuit.

Sacramento Feds: Developer Concealed Existence Of Liens, Used Phony Sales Contracts, Recorded Forged Land Documents In Attempt To Score Financing

From the Office of the U.S. Attorney (Fresno, California):
  • United States Attorney Benjamin B. Wagner announced the arrest [] of Aruna Kumari Chopra, 63, of Modesto. A federal grand jury returned an indictment against her on March 15, 2012, charging her with two counts of mail fraud and two counts of aggravated identity theft. The indictment was unsealed following her arrest.


  • According to the indictment, in 2009, Chopra purchased property [...] in Modesto. She sought to finance the development of the property by trying to convince the City of Modesto to put into place a Communities Funding District that would issue bonds for infrastructure improvements.


  • She allegedly concealed from the City of Modesto that there were pre-existing liens on the property. She also allegedly provided the City of Modesto with fictitious contracts of potential sales of a fully developed property to support a higher appraisal of the property.


  • The indictment alleges that Chopra attempted to defraud other lenders, including the persons who sold her the property, by filing documents with the Stanislaus County Recorder’s Office that contained forged signatures. She is charged with aggravated identity theft for two instances when she allegedly forged the signature and used the seal of a notary public on a publicly filed document.

For the U.S. Attorney press release, see Modesto Developer Arrested In Mortgage Fraud Scheme.

Another Homeowner/Victim Of Foreclosure Rocket Docket Scores Relief On Appeal; Rules On Good vs. Crappy Service Of Process Eludes Snoozing Trial Judge

The following facts are taken from a recent Florida appeals court ruling vacating a default judgment and setting aside a judgment of foreclosure (once again, we have a case that illustrates the need for a homeowner challenging a foreclosure in court to (1) understand that trial court judges are quite capable of dropping the ball on a pretty simple, basic issue of law, and (2) be ready, willing, and able to challenge a trial judge's ruling in an appeals court when the situation calls for it, as the homeowner did in this case):
  1. Bank begins foreclosure proceedings on homeowner, one Mr. Baker.

  2. Homeowner Baker happens to be in Europe on a business trip and, while he was away, he allowed the out-of-town parents of a friend, Mr. and Mrs. Vadim Saitgareev, stay at his home, while the the Saitgareevs met with medical providers in Sarasota.

  3. Homeowner Baker's friend arranged the entire stay. Baker was not present at the home at any time during the Saitgareevs' visit.

  4. The Saitgareevs did not talk to homeowner Baker to arrange the visit, nor did they talk to him during their stay at his home.

  5. While Homeowner Baker was in Europe on business, a process server dropped by to serve the lawsuit papers on him and, instead, met houseguest Mr. Saitgareev.

  6. Houseguest Mr. Saitgareev refused to accept service on behalf of homeowner Baker. Houseguest Saitgareev did not open the door for the process server, but said that homeowner Baker was not at home. Saitgareev told the process server that he would not see homeowner Baker and that Mr. Baker was a friend of their daughter.

  7. According to houseguest Saitgareev, the process server kept yelling at him and his wife through the door. Saitgareev told the man that he would not accept any paper for homeowner Baker because he did not expect to see him before he returned home.

  8. The process server proceeded to leave the lawsuit papers at the front door.

  9. Homeowner Baker had departed for Europe three days before the process server's visit and returned four days afterwards.

  10. The foreclosing lender subsequently obtained a default judgment and a judgment of foreclosure.

  11. Subsequently, homeowner Baker filed a motion to quash service of process, vacate default, and set aside the final judgment of foreclosure.

  12. At the hearing, the foreclosing lender's submissions into evidence was limited to the process server's return of service.

  13. Homeowner Baker submitted what the appellate court later found to be clear and convincing evidence in the form of affidavits from himself and Mr. Saitgareev,(1) as well as giving testimony in court attesting to the foregoing facts. Baker's testimony was substantially the same as his affidavit.

  14. Attached to homeowner Baker's affidavit were copies of pages from his passport displaying immigration stamps marking his entry and exit from Europe on the dates he claimed. He also stated in his affidavit that at no time between these dates did he leave Europe.

  15. The Bank failed to provide any further evidence or call any witness to refute the clear and convincing evidence provided by homeowner Baker.

  16. The trial court proceeded to deny homeowner Baker's motion to quash, vacate, set aside, etc.

In reversing the trial court screw-up, the Florida appeals court essentially said that, because:

  1. homeowner Baker provided clear and convincing evidence that he was not at the home on the day of the process server's visit, and that the Saitgareevs were merely "short term houseguests" who were not actually residing on the premises, and

  2. the foreclosing lender failed to meet its burden to refute the clear and convincing evidence provided by Baker,

the foreclosing lender had failed to establish that the service of process in this case was anything other than crappy. Accordingly, the appeals court reversed the ruling of Sarasota County Circuit Court Judge Charles E. Roberts, and booted the case back to him with instructions to grant the motion to quash service of process, vacate the default, and set aside the final judgment of foreclosure.(2)

For the ruling, see Baker v. Stearns Bank, N.A., Case # 2D11-2986 (Fla. 2d DCA, March 23, 2012).

(1) According to the appeals court ruling, Mr. Saitgareev stated in his affidavit that:

  • He was born in Russia and that English is not his first language.
  • His permanent residence is in Massachusetts and he resides at no other place (Mr. Saitgareev also attached a photocopy of his current driver's license to substantiate his Massachusetts address).
  • On the date of service in this matter, he was temporarily away from home as a houseguest of Mr. Baker.
  • Mr. Baker had permitted him and his wife to use his home while he was away in Europe because they needed a place to stay for a few days while attending medical treatment in Sarasota.
  • Mr. Baker was not present at the home at any time during their visit.
  • Their daughter is a friend of Mr. Baker and she arranged the visit. He and his wife did not talk to him to arrange the visit, nor did they talk to him during their stay at his home.

(2) The Florida appeals court provided the following analysis in explaining the obligations of the parties when establishing whether service of process is good or crappy (bold text is my highlight, not in the original text):

  • There is no issue whether Mr. Baker was personally served. The question then narrows to whether Mr. Saitgareev was "residing" at Mr. Baker's home when the process server left the papers at the door.

    This is so because the parties do not dispute any of the remaining elements of this statute, i.e., the place at which the process server left the summons and complaint was Mr. Baker's "usual place of abode," Mr. Saitgareev was fifteen years of age or older, and the process server did inform the person there of the contents of the papers he left at the front door.

    At the evidentiary hearing on Mr. Baker's emergency motion to quash service of process, vacate default, and set aside the final judgment of foreclosure, the Bank had the initial burden to sustain the validity of service because it was the party invoking the jurisdiction of the court. See Bank of Am., N.A. v. Bornstein, 39 So.3d 500 (Fla. 4th DCA 2010).

    The Bank carried its initial burden in this case because it presented as evidence at the hearing the return of service, which Mr. Baker admits is regular on its face. "A process server's return which is regular on its face is presumed valid absent clear and convincing evidence to the contrary." Bennett v. Christiana Bank & Trust Co.,
    50 So.3d 43, 45 (Fla. 3d DCA 2010).

    The burden then shifted to Mr. Baker to make a prima facie showing by clear and convincing evidence that the substituted service was defective. This he did by submitting not only the two affidavits, which are competent evidence on such issue, see Viking Superior Corp. v. W.T. Grant Co., 212 So.2d 331 (Fla. 1st DCA 1968), but also by testifying in person.

    He testified that Mr. Saitgareev was staying at his home while he himself was away on business, that Mr. Saitgareev was but a temporary houseguest who did not stay more than seven days—evidenced by the fact that the Saitgareevs were not there when he left nor when he returned—and that his home was the "usual place of abode" to no one but himself.

    Mr. Saitgareev's affidavit established that his own "usual place of abode" was in Massachusetts, and he attached a photocopy of his current driver's license to substantiate his Massachusetts address. Thus, his temporary stay in Mr. Baker's home for a few days to receive medical treatment in Sarasota merely made him a short-term houseguest.

    A short-term houseguest is not a person residing in the usual place of abode of the person to be served. Couts v. Md. Cas. Co., 306 So.2d 594 (Fla. 2d DCA 1975) (holding that a stay of a few days is insufficient to qualify that visitor to receive substituted service); Gamboa v. Jones, 455 So.2d 613 (Fla. 3d DCA 1984) (holding the same for a ten-day visitor).

    Having had its prima facie showing of regular substituted service rebutted, it was incumbent upon the Bank to provide competing evidence to overcome Mr. Baker's showing of substituted service upon a mere short-term houseguest. This burden-shifting is illustrated, in the analogous context of personal jurisdiction via the long-arm statute, in Hilltopper Holding Corp. v. Estate of Cutchin ex rel. Engle, 955 So.2d 598 (Fla. 2d DCA 2007).

    In Hilltopper, the plaintiff met its initial burden to establish personal jurisdiction over the defendants, but the defendants fully disputed, via sworn affidavits only, the jurisdictional basis alleged by the plaintiff. This shifted the burden back to the plaintiff to prove by affidavit or other sworn proof that a basis for personal jurisdiction existed. The plaintiff failed in this by offering no other sworn facts to establish personal jurisdiction over the defendants and refute their evidence that they were not subject to personal jurisdiction via the long-arm statute. Id. at 603. Accordingly, the trial court's order finding that personal jurisdiction over the defendants had been established was reversed.

    Like the plaintiff in Hilltopper, the Bank, as plaintiff, failed to refute Mr. Baker's factual evidence that Mr. Saitgareev was not residing in his home at the time service was attempted. The Bank presented no further evidence, such as an affidavit or testimony that Mr. Saitgareev's stay was of a longer duration so as to qualify him as a person residing at Mr. Baker's usual place of abode. Cf. Magazine v. Bedoya, 475 So.2d 1035 (Fla. 3d DCA 1985) (holding that mother-in-law's six-week visit qualified her as a person residing in the defendant's usual place of abode); Sangmeister v. McElnea, 278 So.2d 675 (Fla. 3d DCA 1973) (holding that a visit of four months establishes that person as a resident who may properly accept substituted service).

Monday, March 26, 2012

Ex-NY F'closure Mill King, Affiliated Document Preparation Sweatshop To Cough Up $4M In State AG Civil Suit Settlement Over Alleged Legal Work Abuses

Bloomberg reports:
  • Steven J. Baum PC, the largest foreclosure law firm in New York until it shut down last year, reached a $4 million settlement with the state over abuses in its legal work.


  • Part of the money paid by the firm, Pillar Processing LLC, Steven Baum himself and managing partner Brian Kumiega will be used to help homeowners facing foreclosure or victims of predatory lending, New York State Attorney General Eric Schneiderman said today in a statement. Baum formed Pillar in 2007 to process foreclosure documents.

***

  • In October, the firm, based in Amherst, New York, just north of Buffalo, reached a $2 million agreement related to its foreclosure practices with Manhattan U.S. Attorney Preet Bharara. After that settlement was announced, Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, the mortgage-finance companies under U.S. conservatorship, dropped Baum from their lists of law firms eligible to handle foreclosures. The firm then said it would close.

For the story, see Baum Foreclosure Firm Settles With New York for $4 Million.

Feds Warn Of Upfront Fee Scams That Claim Affiliation With OCC; Ripoffs Target Homeowners Facing Foreclosure

From the Department of the U.S Treasury, Office of the Comptroller of the Currency:
  • The Office of the Comptroller of the Currency (OCC) has been notified that a group using the names “855LAW5559” and “National Legal Help” has misrepresented that the OCC has directed their organization to send foreclosure grant review correspondence to banking consumers.


  • The OCC has no knowledge of or affiliation with the group responsible for sending the letters and did not direct it to send any letters to consumers.


  • Letters were apparently sent to homeowners facing mortgage foreclosure. The letters claim the recipient’s lender is being investigated for wrongdoing by banking regulators. The letters also state that the recipient’s mortgage loan is being reviewed for foreclosure fraud.


  • The letters inform the recipient of his or her approved eligibility to receive $10,000 in grant assistance and ask the homeowner to use the services of National Legal Help by mailing the organization a payment of $10,000 by a specific due date.


  • Based upon the OCC’s review of information and National Legal Help’s Web site (www.nationallegalhelp.com), the program does not appear to be legitimate and instead is likely an “up-front-fee scam.”

For the OCC press release, see Misrepresentation of Involvement by the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency in Independent Foreclosure Grant Review Scam.

Feds Score Wins In Civil Suits Shutting Down Scams Peddling Mass Joinder Lawsuit Participations, Forensic Loan Audits

In Santa Ana, California, the Los Angeles Times reports:
  • The offers of help arrive at a particularly vulnerable time for troubled homeowners, promising legal tactics that can fend off foreclosures or slash mortgage balances and rates. But the so-called mass joinder lawsuits against lenders often are only the latest foreclosure-rescue frauds designed to extract payments from financially strapped borrowers, the Federal Trade Commission warns.


  • "The firms involved in this scam promise relief but generally don't deliver," the FTC said in a consumer alert posted on its website Thursday. "In fact, many of the firms fail to use qualified attorneys or pursue homeowners' cases, and often leave their clients in worse financial shape than before."


  • The FTC said that at its request a judge this week shut down one of the alleged scams, a Santa Ana mortgage-relief operation headed by Sameer "Sammy" Lakhany, 31, of Chino Hills. The operation — five companies and three websites controlled by Lakhany — took in more than $1 million from hundreds of consumers, according to an FTC lawsuit filed in U.S. District Court in Santa Ana. Gerald Werkman, an Irvine attorney representing Lakhany, declined to comment, saying his firm had "just been retained in this matter."


  • The FTC suit identified Lakhany's companies as Credit Shop, Fidelity Legal, Titanium Realty, Precision Law Center Inc. and Precision Law Center LLC.(1) His websites — HouseHoldRelief.org, FreeFedLoanMod.org and MyHomeSupport.org — were shut down on orders from U.S. District Judge Cormac J. Carney, who issued a temporary restraining order against the companies and froze their assets.


  • The websites, featuring republished news stories describing the mortgage industry's legal troubles, suggested that the operation was a nonprofit effort to help right wrongs suffered by borrowers, said FTC consumer protection attorney Mark L. Glassman.


  • "They wrapped themselves in the cloak of good deeds that others are actually doing on behalf of consumers," Glassman said.


  • The FTC lawsuit is the second high-profile legal attack in California on lawsuits in which numerous plaintiffs team up to sue mortgage companies. State Atty. Gen. Kamala D. Harris in August sued several law firms and individual attorneys who allegedly operated a nationwide scam by deceptively marketing mass joinder suits. That litigation, including counterclaims against the state by the defendants, is pending, Harris spokesman Shum Preston said.


  • Mass-joinder lawsuits are similar to class-action suits in pitting many plaintiffs against a common defendant. But whereas class actions allege that all victims were harmed in the same way, the allegations and damages in mass joinder suits vary from plaintiff to plaintiff.


  • The FTC's lawsuit, its first targeting mass-joinder cases, said Lakhany's operation charged homeowners $6,000 to $10,000 each to join lawsuits against lenders. The pressure created by the suits was supposed to result in pretrial settlements that could stop foreclosures or produce major concessions, such as cutting the homeowners' interest rate in half or reducing their principal to 70% of the home's value. The lawsuits were filed but allowed to languish or dismissed, the FTC said.


  • In another alleged scam, the operation charged homeowners $795 to $1,595 for a "forensic loan audit" that borrowers were told would find violations by a lender at least 90% of the time, the FTC said.


  • The violations would supposedly give a homeowner leverage to get his or her mortgage modified. If the audit did not turn up any violations, the homeowner got the promise of a 70% refund while still getting a mortgage modification, the FTC said.


  • The companies also falsely described themselves as nonprofit, free, accredited or as housing counselors certified by the federal Housing and Urban Development Department, the FTC said.

Source: FTC cracks down on foreclosure-rescue scheme (The agency wins a court order shutting down a Santa Ana operation that charged struggling homeowners as much as $10,000 each to jointly sue mortgage firms).

For the FTC press release and links to relevant court documents, see FTC Legal Action Halts Alleged Mortgage Relief Scammers Who Lured Homeowners with Bogus Claims (Defendants Falsely Promised They Could Help Desperate Consumers Who Joined Group Lawsuits Against Their Lenders).

For more information from the FTC, see Mass Joinder Lawsuits: A New Twist on Foreclosure Rescue Scams.

(1) According to the FTC press release, to convince consumers that they should hire Precision Law Center, telemarketers working for the alleged racket followed up by mailing material to them promising that the mass joinder suit would result in:

  • “Forgiveness of all delinquent payments, fees and penalties,”
  • “Halt and reverse (sic) foreclosure proceedings,”
  • “Credit restoration,”
  • “Possible compensatory damages in the amount of $22,500.00,” and
  • “Possible punitive damages in the amount of $52,500.”

Pair Pinched On Multiple Grand Theft, Foreclosure Consultant Fraud Charges In Alleged Loan Modification Racket; Each Remains Free On $100K Bail

In Ventura County, California, the Ventura County Star reports:
  • An Oxnard woman and a Los Angeles man were charged with four counts of grand theft on allegations they collected thousands of dollars in fees on promises to reduce a woman's mortgage loan and save her home from foreclosure, prosecutors said.


  • Gloria Becerra, of Oxnard, and Hector Menendez, of Los Angeles, also were charged with 11 counts of foreclosure consultant fraud and one count of attempted grand theft, according to prosecutor Dominic Kardum.


  • Both were arrested Tuesday and remain free on $100,000 bail each, jail records show. Becerra, 46, and Menendez, 55, ran a fraudulent home modification and foreclosure rescue program, Kardum said in a news release. They used the business names of Sunset Beach Management, Financial Wellness for Homeowners LA and California Sky Premiers, Kardum said.


  • The victim received no services from the defendants. She lost thousands of dollars and her home to foreclosure, according to Kardum. Becerra and Menendez are due in court for a hearing April 16, court records show. If convicted, both could get up to 12 years and eight months in jail, Kardum said.


  • People who think they might have been deceived by Becerra and Menendez may call the Real Estate Fraud Unit at 662-1750.

Source: Oxnard woman, other person charged with theft in mortgage fraud.

Duo Who Ran Loan Modification Ripoffs Go Down On Theft, Foreclosure Fraud Charges; Approx. 400 Victims Fleeced Of Nearly $2M

In Santa Clara County, California, the Gilroy Dispatch reports:
  • Rene Alvarez and Mariano Ortega, the co-owners of M & R Contemporary Solutions, a Campbell foreclosure consulting firm, pled guilty and no contest Monday to theft and foreclosure fraud charges. The charges related to a scheme that, over a year, bilked about 400 mainly Hispanic homeowners out of close to $2 million.


  • A total of 10 victims were from South County: seven from Gilroy, two from Morgan Hill and one from San Martin, according to Mike Fitzsimmons, Deputy District Attorney for the real estate fraud unit.


  • Victims, who were in various stages of the foreclosure process, were told that M & R Contemporary Solutions would save their homes from foreclosure by facilitating the purchase of their existing lender's loan by a third party at a discounted price.


  • Ostensibly, the homeowners would then be offered a new reduced principal loan that would have significantly lower monthly payments. Homeowners paid from $3,000 to $10,000 each to M & R depending on how far along they were in the foreclosure process. The collection of up front fees from homeowners in foreclosure is a felony under California law regulating the conduct of foreclosure consultants.


  • In many instances, victims paid $10,000 even though they had already lost title to their homes via foreclosure. No M & R client ever received a new loan.

***

  • Sentencing for Alvarez and Ortega is scheduled for May 21 in Santa Clara County Superior Court, Department 30. They will receive a five year sentence of jail and mandatory supervision under the new California realignment law. A third defendant in the case, Cydney Sanchez, is still pending trial in the matter.


  • Investigators have seized $257,000 from M & R's bank accounts which may be applied toward restitution. Victims of M & R who seek information on the sentencing or restitution should contact the Santa Clara County District Attorney's Office Real Estate Fraud Unit at (408) 792-2879.

Source: Foreclosure consulting firm owners convicted of defrauding homeowners.

City To Hire Criminal Investigator Dedicated Strictly To San Diego Upfront Fee Foreclosure-Related, Loan Modification Probes/Prosecutions

In San Diego, California, KGTV Channel 10 reports:
  • The San Diego City Attorney's Office announced [] that will spend a $57,000 state grant to hire a part-time investigator to look into allegations of mortgage and foreclosure fraud.


  • The investigator will focus on loan modification and foreclosure consultant businesses that take advance fees in violation of state law.


  • "Violators must be stopped before they take large amounts of money from victims or waste critical months of homeowners' time with false promises and representations," City Attorney Jan Goldsmith said. "By proactively pursuing these bad actors at the beginning of their business dealings with misdemeanor prosecution, we can save many potential victims a lot of heartache."

Source: City Attorney To Hire Mortgage/Foreclosure Investigator ($57K State Grant To Be Used For Hire).

Sunday, March 25, 2012

Outfit Found Liable In Illinois Civil Case Involving Tax Lien Auctions Now Under Scrutiny By Feds In Alleged NJ 'Round-Robin' Bid Rigging Racket

Bloomberg reports:
  • M.D. Sass Investors Services Inc., a closely held manager of more than $5 billion, participated in an auction of New Jersey tax liens that has come under the scrutiny of U.S. antitrust investigators probing rigged sales.


  • A representative of M.D. Sass, whose tax-lien funds have as much as $110 million in assets, was among seven bidders vying for liens in the New Jersey borough of Newfield, according to records of a March 5, 2007, auction. Three people associated with the seven bidders pleaded guilty to antitrust charges and are cooperating with prosecutors.(1) The Justice Department subpoenaed records of the auction on Feb. 15. M.D. Sass hasn’t been accused of wrongdoing.


  • The U.S. records request comes amid a widening probe into rigged liens sales in New Jersey. Since August, five men have pleaded guilty to conspiracy charges. The guilty pleas were to an overall conspiracy and not to the particular auction in Newfield, 35 miles south of Philadelphia.


  • Units of Royal Bank America, which operates branches in Pennsylvania and New Jersey, co-owned lien-buying firms with one of the men admitting guilt. The units are subjects of the probe, regulatory filings show. Royal Bank America is a unit of Royal Bancshares of Pennsylvania Inc.


  • Justice Department prosecutors want “all tax sale bidder information,” according to a copy of the subpoena disclosed by Newfield in response to a request under the state’s public records law. That includes “the name and address of each person who attended the relevant tax lien sale,” according to the subpoena.


  • “M.D. Sass companies have no comment on any activity or investigation that may be under way at the Department of Justice,” Mark Rotert, a lawyer for the New York-based firm, said in an e-mail.


  • Separately, M.D. Sass was found liable last year in a Chicago trial over civil racketeering claims involving tax liens.

***

  • New Jersey municipalities seeking revenue sell about $100 million a year in local tax debt on commercial and residential property to investors, said Vincent Belluscio, executive director of the Tax Collectors and Treasurers Association of New Jersey. Firms that buy liens at auctions pay the tax liability in full and then seek to collect from the property owner. They may earn as much as 30 percent on their investment, Belluscio said in a phone interview. In addition to interest of as much as 18 percent on delinquent taxes, the firms may add penalties of as much as 12 percent, he said.


  • Bidders on the liens are supposed to compete fairly for the right to buy them and collect taxes on property. Buyers, who seek the return of their principal investment and interest, begin bidding at 18 percent interest and then lower that rate with each bid.


  • Each of the 59 liens sold in the Newfield auction went for 18 percent, according to borough records. That suggests the seven participants didn’t bid against one another, Belluscio said in a phone interview.


  • It makes it a little suspicious,” he said. “It’s very strange if you have that many lines up for sale, and they’re all going up for 18 percent.”


  • M.D. Sass bought four liens, including the two largest. Other firms purchased as many as 11, according to records. Daniel Lebar, a lawyer and tax lien investor who bought three, said participants at the auction chose not to compete because there were many liens available for the few bidders who showed up.


  • The sense was the list is long, we all know each other, there is no need to kill each other, so we’ll just bid round- robin,” Lebar said in a phone interview. “It was really just spur-of-the-moment,” he said. “There was no conspiracy.”


  • Lebar said lien buyers sometimes followed that practice at other New Jersey auctions including some in Camden County. “It’s a niche business,” said Lebar, 55, who followed his father into the business. “We have camaraderie among each other. If we get a sense that there’s enough for everybody, we’ll bid round-robin.”


  • Harry First, who teaches antitrust law at New York University School of Law, said such spur-of-the-moment decisions may violate antitrust law. “If you agree beforehand, there’s no requirement how beforehand it has to be,” First said in a phone interview. “If people show up and agree to allocate the bids, and there’s no bidding, they’ve done it.”


  • The Newfield auction attracted individuals or firms associated with individuals who pleaded guilty to an antitrust conspiracy charge in federal court in Newark, New Jersey. The three pleading guilty were Robert Stein, David Farber and William Collins. Stein’s lawyer, Paul Zoubek, and Farber’s attorney, Michael Mustokoff, didn’t return calls. Collins’ lawyer, Jack Wenik, declined to comment.

***

  • M.D. Sass has been buying tax liens since 1993, according to testimony in October at the unrelated civil racketeering trial in federal court in Chicago. The firm has invested hundreds of millions of dollars buying liens in states including New Jersey, Kentucky and Massachusetts, Kirk Allison, a vice president at M.D. Sass Investors Services, testified at the trial.

***

  • A federal court jury found in favor of two lien-buying firms that claimed that M.D. Sass and other companies secretly worked together to buy and trade liens, according to court records. The damages awarded will exceed $10 million, said Jonathan Quinn, a lawyer at Reed Smith who represented the plaintiffs.


  • Rotert, the lawyer for M.D. Sass at the trial, said the firm plans to appeal. “We believe the verdicts are incorrect as to the facts and we think certain errors of law took place before and during the trial,” Rotert said.


  • The Chicago case is Phoenix Bond & Indemnity Co. v. Bridge, 05-cv-04095, U.S. District Court, Northern District of Illinois (Chicago).

For more, see New Jersey ‘Round Robin’ Tax Lien Auction Spurs Probe.

(1) Another example of squealing schemers abandoning a 'sinking conspiratorial ship', winning the race to the prosecutor's office and seeking to take down fellow co-conspirators by 'throwing them under the bus' to score a better break on a plea deal. Vrooooom!!! As noted by one learned Federal judge:

  • "When a conspiracy is exposed by an arrest or execution of search warrants, soon-to-be defendants know that the first one to "belly up" and tell what he knows receives the best deal. The pressure is to bargain and bargain early, even if an indictment has not been filed." United States v. Moody, 206 F.3d 609, 617 (6th Cir. 2000) (Wiseman, J., concurring) (referring to the not-uncommon 'race to the prosecutor's office' that breaks out among participants in an 'about-to-fall-apart' criminal conspiracy).

Upfront Fee Loan Mod Scammer Buys Out Of Hard Time; Gets 6 Months-County Jail vs. 3 Yrs-State Prison In Exchange For Flimsy Promise To Pay Restitution

In Salinas, California, the Monterey Herald reports:
  • After an emotional and sometimes tense hearing, a Gonzalez woman was remanded into custody [] for a real estate scam that bilked 57 people. Judge Adrienne Grover sentenced Maria Ponce to a three-year prison sentence but suspended imposition, saying her priority was for Ponce to pay full restitution to her victims. She placed Ponce on probation and ordered her to serve 180 days in jail.


  • To further facilitate the possibility of restitution, she said Ponce can apply to serve the sentence on home confinement. In the meantime, due to the seriousness of the crime and Ponce's failure to pay any restitution since she pleaded no contest in November, she was immediately sent to jail.


  • Ponce, 55, who suffers from severe rheumatoid arthritis, could not reach her arms behind her back to be handcuffed. On the day her trial was to begin, Ponce admitted her role in the Ponzi scheme that took $145,000 from 57 people facing foreclosure.

***

  • The victims described themselves as poor, desperate people who trusted Ponce despite their misgivings, paying her with "money we earned with our sweat." "We are all humble people," said Alicia Hernandez. "You believe anything they tell you when you're desperate."

***

  • The judge ordered her to get a job or show her probation officer regular proof she was seeking one. [...] She warned Ponce that if she did not meet the terms of her probation and did not make an effort to pay restitution, she would impose the three-year prison sentence.

For more, see Gonzales woman who ran real estate scam ordered to pay restitution (Bilked 57 people of $145,000).

Use Of Novel Dual Criminal/Civil Prosecution Targeting Sale Leaseback-Peddling Racket Yields Guilty Pleas, Keeps Victims From Getting Boot From Homes

From the Office of the U.S. Attorney (Philadelphia, Pennsylvania):
  • Anthony J. DeMarco, III, 33, of Conshohocken, pleaded guilty [] to conspiracy and fraud charges in connection with a mortgage fraud scheme involving more than $30 million in loans. From 2006 through July 2009, DeMarco owned and operated DeMarco REI, Inc., a foreclosure rescue company.


  • A 15-count indictment charged DeMarco with conspiracy, mail fraud, wire fraud, bank fraud, and money laundering. Three others were charged in the conspiracy with him. Michael Richard Roberts, Sean Ryan McBride, and Eric Bascove previously pleaded guilty. DeMarco will be sentenced on June 27, 2012. He faces approximately 210 to 262 months in prison under sentencing guidelines.


  • DeMarco REI, Inc. was headquartered in Center City and employed Roberts and Bascove. DeMarco’s business claimed to be able to assist homeowners facing imminent foreclosure. Between June and December 2008, the defendants would scour public records filings to find homeowners in financial distress and pitch a “sale-leaseback” arrangement to them.


  • The pitch was that DeMarco REI would buy the homeowner’s house, the homeowner would remain in the house and pay rent to DeMarco REI, and when the homeowner got back on his or her feet financially, the homeowner could buy back the house. The defendants solicited straw buyers for properties, used fraudulent documents to obtain mortgage loans from lenders, stole the sellers’ equity in the homes at closing, and eventually failed to make the monthly mortgage payments. DeMarco used the sellers’ equity to run his company and to pay lavish personal expenses.


  • The houses went into foreclosure with the straw buyers listed on the mortgage, the original homeowners facing eviction from their own homes, and the mortgage lenders stuck with loans in default.


  • Only one couple ever acquired the means to repurchase their home but, after they wired approximately $245,000 to DeMarco at his direction and for that purpose, DeMarco instead used their money to purchase a Ferrari for himself and jewelry for his girlfriend, and to pay miscellaneous expenses.


  • McBride was a title agent and Chief Financial Officer at Settlement Engine, Inc. in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. Settlement Engine closed approximately 30 loans for DeMarco REI from June 2008 to early December 2008. McBride pleaded guilty to conspiracy, wire fraud, bank fraud, and faces a sentence of approximately 63 to 78 months in prison when sentenced on June 27, 2012; Roberts pleaded guilty to conspiracy, wire fraud, bank fraud and faces approximately 78 to 87 months in prison when sentenced on May 7, 2012; Bascove pleaded guilty to conspiracy and bank fraud and faces approximately 78 to 97 months in prison when sentenced on June 27, 2012.


  • At the time of indictment, the U.S. Attorney's Office Civil Division filed a verified complaint and temporary restraining order to help the original homeowners save their homes. The complaint and temporary restraining order sought novel relief that would bring all the individuals and entities that have a stake in the homes before the Court in an orderly process by which the damage caused by the defendants' alleged fraud could be mitigated.


  • In 2011, U.S. District Court Judge Michael Baylson approved conversion of the temporary restraining order into an injunction that stopped foreclosures and evictions that were related to the alleged fraud, and that set forth the details of the mediation process. Currently, the majority of the banks and the original homeowners are still in the process of attempting to reach resolutions.

For the U.S. Attorney press release, see Foreclosure Rescue Scammer Pleads Guilty.

For the charges brought by the Feds in this criminal/civil, 'dual' prosecution, see:

Feds, Colorado AG Shut Down National Foreclosure Rescue Scam That Ripped Off Homeowners Through Fraudulent Sale Leaseback Deals

From the Office of the Colorado Attorney General:
  • The United States Attorney for the District of Colorado, John F. Walsh, and the Colorado Attorney General, John W. Suthers, announce the end of a national foreclosure rescue scheme. The perpetrators, operating through Bella Homes LLC, had promised hundreds of distressed homeowners that Bella Homes would help homeowners avoid foreclosure.

***

  • The Civil Action that put an end to the scheme was filed in the United States District Court for the District of Colorado on February 14, 2012, and resulted in a Consent Judgment, in which Bella Homes “admits the allegations in the Complaint and acknowledges its role in defrauding homeowners who signed over title to their homes to Bella Homes.”

***

  • The Scheme: As alleged in the Complaint, the Defendants, through Bella Homes, engaged in a fraudulent scheme in which they solicited homeowners to convey title to their homes to Bella Homes for no consideration and to enter into purported lease agreements under which the homeowners, instead of making their mortgage payments, paid Bella Homes monthly “rent.”


  • To entice homeowners into this arrangement, Defendants made or caused to be made numerous material misrepresentations to homeowners to convey the false and fraudulent impression that:

    1) Bella Homes would stop any foreclosure on the home;

    2) Bella Homes would purchase or otherwise settle the existing mortgage on the home from the lender;

    3) Federal law provided the homeowner the right to remain in the home for the duration of the lease with Bella Homes; and,

    4) The homeowner would have an option to repurchase the home in three years from Bella Homes for significantly less than the amount currently owed on the mortgage.

For the entire press release, see National foreclosure rescue scheme permanently enjoined.

F'closing Bankster Scores Sleazy Win Over Unwitting Tenant; Boots Family Of 11 Receiving Sec. 8 Rent Subsidy By Failing To Ask For, Collect Back Rent

In Washington, D.C., WJLA-TV Channel 7 reports:
  • A family of 11 people in the District is on the street Tuesday night after getting caught in a foreclosure nightmare. The family got a shocking surprise Tuesday morning when a team of marshals showed up to throw them out of their home.


  • Janice Johnson knew a bank foreclosed on the house she rented through Section 8 for the past four years. She says she repeatedly talked with the bank about continuing in the federal housing program and assumed she could remain here.(1)


  • Johnson says the bank simply had to request it and would get back rent. Johnson says had she known in advance she would have found another space. On Tuesday night, while neighbors take some of her things off the street, others are scrambling to find a mother and her children somewhere to stay.


  • “There's a place were on Rhode Island Avenue we are going to go talk to to see what options are available,” Rev Robert Childs, of Berean Baptist Church says. While she wonders where her family will end Tuesday night, Johnson worries about her children returning from school to find their things on the street. “They should not have to come home from school to walk into something like this,” she says.

Source: D.C. family evicted after foreclosure nightmare.

(1) In the case of a tenant receiveing a Section 8 federal rent subsidy (ie. a "Section 8" tenant), federal law prohibits a new owner, including foreclosure purchasers and foreclosing lenders, from evicting Section 8 tenants unless they first go to court and prove they’re being economically harmed by having a tenant remain in a building, or show other good cause. However, many Section 8 tenants panic and don’t fight eviction notices, not realizing they have these special rights granted by Federal law (even if they do, may be unable to find and/or afford competent legal representation).

See generally, Foreclosures hit tenants (Activists: New owners trample on renters’ rights).

For the specific federal regulation on this point, see 24 CFR 982.310(d)(1). Go here for the regulations (24 CFR 982) regulating the Section 8 rent subsidy program.

Saturday, March 24, 2012

Ohio AG Tags Suspected Debt Settlement Racket With Civil Suit Alleging Deceptive Practices, Failure To Deliver Promised Services

From the Office of the Ohio Attorney General:
  • Ohio Attorney General Mike DeWine [] announced a lawsuit against Jeremy Nelson of Trabuco Canyon, California, and his two companies for operating debt settlement businesses that took money from consumers to settle their debts but failed to deliver on their promises.

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  • According to the Attorney General’s lawsuit, filed in the Franklin County Court of Common Pleas, Jeremy Nelson is the president of Jackson Hunter Morris & Knight, a Nevada corporation that represents that its principal place of business is in Newport Beach, California. Mr. Nelson was also the president of Nelson Gamble & Associates, which previously was a Colorado corporation and represented that its principal place of business was in Irvine, California. Neither business was registered with the Ohio Secretary of State to do business in the state.


  • Through his businesses, Mr. Nelson advertised that his businesses could help consumers settle their debts. He advertised online and gave consumers the impression that they were getting professional services associated with legal counsel.


  • Representatives told consumers over the phone that the business would negotiate with consumers’ creditors so that they could settle their debts by paying only a portion of what they owed. According to the Attorney General, consumers paid money for these services but did not have their debts settled.


  • The Attorney General’s lawsuit charges Jeremy Nelson and his businesses with violating Ohio’s Consumer Sales Practices Act and Debt Adjuster Act. Specific counts include failure to deliver, misrepresentation, and charging higher fees than Ohio law allows. Through the lawsuit, the Attorney General seeks injunctive relief, civil penalties, and consumer restitution.

For the Ohio AG press release, see Attorney General DeWine Sues California Man for Operating Unfair Debt Settlement Operation.

For the lawsuit, see State of Ohio v. Nelson Gamble & Associates, et al.

Trial Set After Plea Negotiations Break Down For Florida Cop Charged With Claiming Fraudulent Homestead Claim That Resulted In Lower Property Tax Bill

Down On the Florida Keys in Monroe County, Florida, KeysNet.com reports:
  • Negotiations over a plea deal for a suspended Keys state law enforcement agent charged with homestead-exemption fraud have fallen through, and now he's set for trial on April 23 in Key West. Following the breakdown in talks, Vince Weiner, 47, demanded a speedy trial and on Thursday, Monroe County Circuit Court Judge Mark Jones set the trial for the Freeman Justice Center.


  • The Florida Department of Law Enforcement arrested the Key West-based Weiner, an FDLE agent, last Aug. 17. He's charged with felony grand theft and misdemeanor homestead-exemption fraud.


  • Florida homeowners are allowed one homestead exemption, which allows for a property-tax break on their permanent residence. It can be claimed only when the owners live in the house.


  • Prosecutors say Weiner bought a Big Pine Key house in 2005, then got assigned to Fort Myers in 2006. While living in Fort Myers, Weiner rented his Keys house out but claimed the homestead exemption, they say.


  • The FDLE says Weiner claimed the Big Pine exemption for the tax years 2007 to 2010. As a result, the FDLE says, Weiner received at least $5,918 in tax exemptions to which he was not entitled.


  • Weiner had hoped he could cop a plea that would allow him to retain his state police certification. But prosecutors wouldn't go for a misdemeanor plea.


  • Weiner was assigned back to the Keys from Fort Myers in May 2010. He has worked in Fort Myers or Key West since becoming an FDLE agent in 1993. He previously was a Florida Highway Patrol trooper.(1)

Source: Trial set for suspended Keys FDLE agent.

(1) If, after Weiner was assigned to Fort Myers (assuming he didn't claim a homestead exemption for another residence in the interim), he had a good faith intention to ultimately move back to his home in Big Pine Key, it would seem unfair that Weiner would not be entitled to keep his tax exemption allowed under Article VII, Section 6 of the Florida Constitution. Certainly, he would have been entitled to maintain the exemption if, rather than renting it out, had he simply kept the home vacant, or even let people live there rent-free.

Further, there are Florida Supreme Court rulings that have allowed for the temporary rental of a homestead where the homeowner was entitled to keep the tax exemption associated with homesteads. See:

  • L'Engle v. Forbes, 81 So. 2d 214 (Fla. 1955) (in the context of a member of the armed services who was called away for military service and who intended to return to his home when his military obligation was satisfied; he was deemed not to have involuntarily abandoned his homestead despite the fact that he rented out the home during the entire period of his absence. Accordingly, he was entitled to the homestead exemption for the time he was away in the military);
  • City of Jacksonville v. Bailey, 30 So. 2d 529 (Fla. 1947) (holding that homestead was not abandoned where the property owner resided in home for six years; the owner rented the home out during the winter season; and during the course of the rental, left his personal items on the property);

See also:

  • Poppell v. Padrick, 117 So. 2d 435 (Fla. 2d D.C.A. 1959) (where an intermediate appeals court held that a property owner who rented his home during the winter months, over the course of several years to live with his widowed mother, and maintained his personal property in the homesteaded property did not abandon homestead and was entitled to the property tax benefit);
  • Florida Att’y Gen. Op. 058-229 (where the state Attorney General opined that a property owner who rents a home in another county for work purposes did not abandon homestead where property owner had maintained homesteaded address for voter registration and voted in the subject county).

However, subsequent to these court rulings, in 1959 (possibly in an attempt to nullify or otherwise minimize the significance of these court rulings), the legislature slipped a provision into the statute (See 196.061, Florida Statutes: Rental of homestead to constitute abandonment), that specifically states that, in the context of the tax exemption for homesteads, a rental of an entire homestead constitutes an abandonment (the legislature does carve out an exception to this rule for a "member of the Armed Forces of the United States whose service in such forces is the result of a mandatory obligation imposed by the federal Selective Service Act or who volunteers for service as a member of the Armed Forces of the United States", possibly to reflect the fact pattern in the aforementioned case, L'Engle v. Forbes). See, generally, Florida Bar Journal: The Loss of Homestead Through Rental.

Whether Section 196.061 constitutes an improper exercise by the legislature to change the provisions of the Florida Constitution, as interpreted by the then-existing case law, through legislative action has never been addressed by the Florida Supreme Court (keep in mind that the Florida Constitution can only be changed, altered , modified, etc. by constitutional amendment to be voted on by the citizens of the State, not by legislative fiat). Arguably, however, the wording of Article VII, Section 6 of the Florida Constitution is such that it does permit the state legislature some leeway in passing laws to implement the intent of the state Constitution (unlike the constitutional provisions in Article X, Section 4, which deals with the homestead exemption relating to forced sales, lien attachments - where no such leeway is permitted).