Friday, February 22, 2008
Florida Fraudster Sentenced To 7 Yrs And $2.3M In Restitution
Justin D. Barker, 31, Jacksonville, Florida, to seven years’ imprisonment for his participation in a mortgage fraud scheme. After his release from prison, Barker will be on supervised release for five years. Barker entered a plea of guilty to conspiracy to commit wire and bank fraud on September 24, 2007. At his sentencing, Barker was ordered to pay restitution in the amount of $2,353,339.91 and to forfeit $4,419,024.15, jointly and severally with other conspirators.
As previously reported by Mortgage Fraud Blog, the scheme operated in 2005 and 2006. Barker negotiated the purchase of residential real estate properties, either on behalf of himself personally, on behalf of an entity he controlled, or on behalf of a third-party buyer. Barker, the entity, or the buyer entered into a purchase and sale agreement with the seller of the property. Barker then retained a licensed real estate appraiser to appraise the property at a significantly inflated price. The appraiser would appraise the property at the price that Barker requested, using inappropriate comparable properties and other fraudulent methods to obtain the price requested. At the closing on the property, Barker or an entity controlled by him would receive the difference between the loan amount, which was based on the inflated appraisal, and the actual purchase price, usually described with terms such as “assignment fee” or “payoff of second mortgage” that did not exist. This difference was the proceeds of the fraud.
During the course of the scheme, fraudulent loans totaling about $17.7 million were obtained on more than 40 properties. These loans would not have been approved but for the fraud. Barker received approximately $4.4 million in gross proceeds from the fraudulent transactions. To recover some of these illicit proceeds, the government seized from Barker a 2004 Bentley Continental, a 2007 Cadillac Escalade, a 2002 BMW 745Li, a 2005 Chaparral 330 Signature 36’ boat, a 1997 19’ Wellcraft boat, a 2006 Yamaha motorcycle, a 2001 Yamaha motorcycle, a 2-carat loose diamond, a 1-carat diamond necklace, a .5-carat diamond necklace, diamond stud earrings, and two Movado watches.
mortgage fraud
What happened to the appraiser?
Posted by on 02/27 at 04:34 PM
17 million in fraud loan including 2-carat loose diamond, a 1-carat diamond necklace, a .5-carat diamond necklace, diamond stud earrings, and two Movado watches? Thats just nutts. Thats some gang of con artists
Posted by on 05/30 at 11:41 PM
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24-7PressRelease.com - USA
US consumers looking to refinance their homes or to secure a home loan to purchase their dream homes would be well advised to educate themselves...
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Because she had title insurance, Kunda will probably get back her money from the 2007 purchase, but the incident highlights cracks in the real estate market and the risk from international scammers who are growing more sophisticated.
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The U.S. Justice Department has formed more than 40 mortgage fraud task forces nationwide as prosecutors and investigators struggle with a flood of mortgage-related criminal cases. The FBI reports that its mortgage-fraud caseload has more than doubled in three years to about 1,600 investigations that have cost lenders at least $4 billion. About 200 FBI agents are assigned to the cases, up from 120 a year ago.
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Sarasota attorney John Yanchek is expected to plead guilty to mortgage fraud next week, statements from a federal prosecutor and the judge presiding over the high-profile criminal case seem to indicate.
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Mortgage Fraud Jumps by 45% on Fewer Loan Applications in U.S., Per... MARI
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Key findings from the MARI Quarterly Fraud Report include that fraud most often occurs at the beginning of the loan process. More than 65 percent of fraud incidents are attributed to "General Application Misrepresentation"
Seven Are Accused Of Identity Theft And Mortage Fraud
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Seven people have been arrested in connection with an international identity-theft scheme that targeted home equity lines of credit and siphoned at least $2.5 million away from dozens of banks, including more than 10 in New Jersey, according to documents unsealed today.
Suthers Cracks Down On Mortgage Fraud
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Suther’s office also indicted 10 individuals last March in an $11 million mortgage fraud ring involving 34 local properties...Several other investigations of mortgage fraud are ongoing.
Previous Articles
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Trial coverage provided by Anne Mitchell, Crazy Fish Realty.
U.S. v. Miller, et al.
Thursday, December, 18, 2008
Verdict:
F. Jeffrey Miller Guilty of Conspiracy and Money Laundering
Steven Vanatta Guilty of Conspiracy , Money Laundering and Bank Fraud
Hallie Irvin Guilty of Conspiracy , Money Laundering and Bank Fraud
Sandra Jo Harris Not guilty- all counts
More Trial Coverage
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