Appraisal Service Anywhere In The United States
Mortgage
Fraud Regulation Change with Teeth
By Charlie Elliott Jr., MAI, SRA
One must have been out of touch,
not to hear about mortgage fraud in recent weeks
and months. There seems to be much more talk
about it than action taken to do anything about
it. It is reminiscent of the old adage,
“Everybody talks about the weather but nobody
does anything about it.” There is one big
difference here in that there is precious little
that we can do about the weather, however, there
is much that can be done about loan fraud, given
the will of the powers that be, to seriously
address the problem. This is not to say that
nothing is being done to prevent fraud, but
suffice it to say that too little is being done.
Exactly what is fraud? While taking a college
business law course too many years ago to count,
I seem to recall the definition of fraud as
being “the misrepresentation of a material fact
for personal gain.”
The FBI has reportedly broken down
mortgage fraud into two segments, fraud for
profit and fraud for property. Fraud for profit
is estimated to account for 80 percent of
mortgage fraud and consists usually of insiders,
such as lenders, lawyers, real estate agents and
appraisers committing fraudulent acts to make a
profit. Fraud for property is estimated to
account for 20 percent of mortgage fraud. It
occurs when buyers of property misrepresent
facts, such as income or assets, in an attempt
to qualify for a purchase loan, which they
intend to repay.
As an industry professional, I would choose to
break down mortgage fraud in a different way. I
would classify it in two ways, also. The first
would be “blatant mortgage fraud” and the second
would be “subtle mortgage fraud.” Blatant fraud
is the type exhibited when moneys are stolen
outright, as in the case of a closing where
participants abscond with the proceeds
designated to pay off an existing loan. The
subtle forms of fraud would fall into the
category of such practices as overstating
borrower income, ignoring a negative credit
rating or pressuring appraisers for a higher
appraised value on a property. I suggest to you
that the latter is the most prevalent form and,
perhaps, on balance, the most monetarily
damaging. Furthermore, subtle fraud is more
difficult to detect and less likely to cause a
major concern when uncovered.
Listed below are a number of news reports and
professional opinions, which offer some idea as
to the magnitude of the problem.
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The FBI reported that
mortgage fraud quadrupled from 4,225
reported cases in 2001 to over 17,000 in
2005.
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Georgia Attorney General
Thurbert Baker reports that dealers are
leaving the drug trade to enter the loan
fraud arena as a safer alternative.
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The FBI also reported that
mortgage fraud has the potential to be an
epidemic that could have as much impact as
the Savings and Loan crisis.
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Rebecca Hauck pleaded guilty
on May 15, 2006, in a federal district court
to a mortgage fraud scheme involving victims
in Georgia, Florida, Alabama, South Carolina
and North Carolina, where she stole their
identity and placed mortgages on their
properties. She was charged on 42 counts of
various forms of fraud.
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In April 2006, New York
Attorney General Elliott Spitzer indicted
eight individuals who allegedly participated
in a scheme that defrauded residential
mortgage lenders of tens of millions of
dollars over the past five years. The
83-count indictment involved hundreds of
falsified mortgage applications, the
purchases and financing of properties
through straw buyers. It was accomplished
with the assistance of attorneys and
appraisers.
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Lenders lost more than $1
billion in 2005, up from $429 million in
2004, according to the FBI.
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A number of cases involving
Al-Qaeda allegedly funding Middle East
operations through mortgage fraud are in the
news. My search in Google News with search
words “Al-Qaeda mortgage fraud” generated
160,000 hits.
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As a recent participant in
an industry loan fraud discussion panel,
made up of a number of industry
professionals, it was the consensus of many
of the participants that as much as 25 to 30
percent of all loan transactions are
affected by some form or fashion of fraud.
While there is no ethical or
moral justification for such behavior, we find a
wide array of barriers to eliminating the
environment, which tolerates and promotes fraud.
These barriers, in many cases, are established
and supported by those very people responsible
for monitoring and regulating the financial
health of our system. It appears, from my
vantage point, not to be much different from
that of our immigration problem. It stems from a
very multifaceted and complex system, involving
government, politics, money, lobbyists and
power. We see many responsible for monitoring
the system looking the other way, in many cases
to protect their jobs and the positions of those
who protect them, a kind of “I scratch your back
and you scratch mine.” There is one primary
difference in that merely scratching someone’s
back is still legal, however, fraud is not.
Who are the victims? We all are victims in one
way or another, but there will be individual
cases where some of us lose more than others.
Much is lost by a few when a small bank loses a
million dollars to fraud, due to a dishonest
closing agent. Individual borrowers lose in a
big way when they suddenly find that money,
which they paid to cancel a mortgage, was stolen
and that the mortgage still exists. Furthermore,
society loses when the incidence of fraud is so
prevalent that banks charge higher interest to
everyone to cover fraud losses. This is no
different from the retail store charging
everyone more to cover shoplifting.
In conclusion, mortgage fraud is out of control
and must be dealt with more seriously. Change
must begin at the top in Congress with a
no-nonsense attitude toward directing regulatory
agencies in eliminating gaps in the system where
fraud occurs. Loan closings must be monitored
more closely, borrower documentation must be
verified more carefully and appraisers must be
selected by risk-management professionals
disassociated with loan originators. The use of
more independent closing vendors must be
subscribed to for loan settlement services,
reducing the potential for influence from any
and all individuals with a financial interest in
a transaction.
Charlie W. Elliott Jr., MAI, SRA, is President of
ELLIOTT® & Company Appraisers, a national real estate appraisal company.
He can be reached at (800) 854-5889 or
charlie@elliottco.com or
through the company’s Web site at
www.appraisalsanywhere.com.
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