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Manuel Ruiz Quiroz, 43, Miami, Florida has been convicted of two counts of mail fraud in connection with his submission of false documents in his applications for mortgages to refinance and purchase two homes, one at 352 SW Lakehurst Drive and the other at 866 SW Curry StreetPort St. Lucie, Florida. The two closings took place on February 10, 2006.

According to the evidence presented at trial, Quiroz lied about his place of work, income, and personal assets in order to obtain more than $400,000 in mortgage loans. Quiroz procured and submitted false pay stubs, W2 tax forms, and forged bank statements that inflated his personal account balance, thus qualifying him for the loans. In addition to the two transactions in February 2006, the evidence showed that Quiroz had engaged in the same type of fraud in connection with another home purchase in January 2005.

The verdict was returned after a one-day trial before U.S. District Court Judge K. Michael Moore. Sentencing has been scheduled for September 13, 2010, at 1:30 p.m. Defendant Quiroz was remanded pending sentencing.

Wifredo A. Ferrer, United States Attorney for the Southern District of Florida, and Daniel W. Auer, Special Agent in Charge, Internal Revenue Service (IRS), Criminal Investigative Division, made the announcement.

Mr. Ferrer commended the investigative work of the IRS Criminal Investigation Division on this case. In addition, Mr. Ferrer thanked Credit Suisse, JP Morgan Chase, Saxon Mortgage, Bank of America, and TD Bank (formerly Riverside National Bank) for their cooperation during this investigation. Mr. Ferrer also commended the Port St. Lucie Police Department and the Drug Enforcement Administration for their assistance. The case was prosecuted by Assistant U.S. Attorney Theodore Cooperstein.

On July 8, 2010, the Florida Office of Financial Regulation (OFR) will stop accepting applications for mortgage broker, mortgage brokerage business, mortgage lender and correspondent mortgage lender licenses, so that current applications can be processed before October 1. Beginning October 1, 2010, Florida will begin participation in the Nationwide Mortgage Licensing System, and all existing loan originators, brokers and lenders and mortgage business owners will be required to reapply for licensure. December 31, 2010, is the last day to apply for licensure.

Over the last two years, OFR has developed and implemented tougher licensing requirements for the mortgage industry to better protect Florida’s consumers. As authorized by federal and state law, the Office will now raise the bar even higher for anyone wanting to stay or enter the mortgage industry.

The new licensing process includes having state and federal criminal backgrounds checked and a credit report pulled. For the first time, the Office will be able to evaluate credit reports, giving regulators a larger set of criteria to determine that a person can demonstrate character, general fitness and financial responsibility before granting a license. The Office will look at items on the credit report such as bankruptcies, outstanding tax liens or other governmental liens, outstanding judgments, foreclosures and charged off accounts.

Additionally, licensees will now be required to renew their licenses on a yearly basis to include resubmitting to state and federal criminal backgrounds checks and a credit report. The Office will not renew a license if the applicant does not continue to meet the same standards required at initial licensure. Prior to this, mortgage brokers, businesses and lenders were only required to submit to a state criminal background check during initial licensure and were allowed to renew every two years without a subsequent background check.

“We encourage applicants to apply now so that they have a better chance of being approved before October 1. If unlicensed by this date, individuals will not be able to work in the industry until the new application is approved,” said Tom Cardwell, Commissioner of the Florida Office of Financial Regulation. “Applicants should submit information that is complete, correct and containing full-disclosure to minimize delays to processing their application.”

More information on the new mortgage licensing requirements, process and fees is available on our website at http://www.flofr.com/Finance/index.htm. Additional questions can be answered through the Office’s Licensing Department at 850-410-9805.

Representatives of the Financial Fraud Enforcement Task Force will meet in the first of a series of Mortgage Fraud Summits on WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 24, 2010 in Miami. President Barack Obama established the interagency Financial Fraud Enforcement Task Force to wage an aggressive, coordinated and proactive effort to investigate and prosecute financial crimes. The task force includes representatives from a broad range of federal agencies, regulatory authorities, inspectors general, and state and local law enforcement who, working together, bring to bear a powerful array of criminal and civil enforcement resources.

In the morning session, the task force members will meet with the general public as well as banking, mortgage and real estate industry representatives to discuss the effect of mortgage fraud on the community. Following the public portion of the meeting, the representatives will hold a press conference to discuss the work of the task force to combat mortgage fraud. In the afternoon, the task force members will meet privately with law enforcement agencies involved in the investigation of mortgage fraud.

Leading the press conference will be Assistant Attorney General for the Civil Division Tony West, U.S. Attorney for the Southern District of Florida Jeffrey H. Sloman, U.S. Attorney for the Eastern District of California Ben Wagner, U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD) Inspector General Kenneth M. Donohue, Florida State’s South Florida Deputy Attorney General Cindy Guerra and FBI Deputy Assistant Director for the Criminal Division Karen Spangenberg.
Also participating in the summit will be the Executive Director of the Financial Fraud Enforcement Task Force Robb Adkins and representatives from the U.S. Secret Service, Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation (FDIC) and the Miami-Dade Police Department. The Miami summit is the first in a series of meetings to occur in the coming months, with additional dates and locations to be announced.

Mortgage fraud is a key focus of the Financial Fraud Enforcement Task Force’s efforts. The task force is working to improve efforts across the federal executive branch, and with state and local partners, to investigate and prosecute significant financial crimes, ensure just and effective punishment for those who perpetrate financial crimes, combat discrimination in the lending and financial markets, and recover proceeds for victims of financial crimes.

9:00 A.M. EST Opening remarks to the Mortgage Fraud Summit.
U.S. Attorney’s Office
Southern District of Florida
Second Floor Media Room
99 N.E. 4 Street
Miami
OPEN PRESS, OPEN TO THE PUBLIC

9:35 A.M. EST Panel one: Community Impact and Other Effects of Mortgage Fraud.
U.S. Attorney’s Office
Southern District of Florida
Second Floor Media Room
99 N.E. 4 Street
Miami
OPEN PRESS, OPEN TO THE PUBLIC

11:00 A.M. EST Panel two: Trends – The Evolution of the Fraud.
U.S. Attorney’s Office
Southern District of Florida
Second Floor Media Room
99 N.E. 4 Street
Miami
OPEN PRESS, OPEN TO THE PUBLIC

12:30 P.M. EST Press conference hosted by Assistant Attorney General for the Civil Division Tony West, U.S. Attorney for the Southern District of Florida Jeffrey H. Sloman, U.S. Attorney for the Eastern District of California Ben Wagner, HUD Inspector General Kenneth M. Donohue, South Florida Deputy Attorney General Cindy Geurra and FBI Deputy Assistant Director for the Criminal Division Karen Spangenberg.
U.S. Attorney’s Office
Southern District of Florida
Second Floor Media Room
99 N.E. 4 Street
Miami
OPEN PRESS

1:30 P.M. EST Task force members will meet with law enforcement agencies involved in the investigation of mortgage fraud.
CLOSED PRESS

NOTE: Those planning to attend the summit should confirm their attendance to usafls-rsvp@usdoj.gov. Press inquiries regarding logistics should be directed to Alicia Valle at 305-961-9001. Media who cannot be in attendance, but wish to call in should contact Xochitl Hinojosa for call in information at 202-514-2007 or Xochitl.Hinojosa@usdoj.gov.

NOTE TO SPANISH MEDIA OUTLETS: South Florida Deputy Attorney General Cindy Guerra will be available following the press conference for a brief media availability in Spanish. Please contact Hannah August at 202-305-5543 or Hannah.August@usdoj.gov for any ques

Noel Albanes-Gomez, formerly of Miami, Florida, was convicted on Thursday, October 22, 2009, of conspiracy and mail fraud charges for his participation in a mortgage fraud scheme. Sentencing has been scheduled for Friday, January 22, 2010, before the U.S. District Court Judge Jose E. Martinez. Albanes-Gomez and his co-defendants were originally indicted in January of 2009, as previously reported on Mortgage Fraud Blog.

In May 2006, Port St. Lucie Police began an investigation, soon joined by the Drug Enforcement Administration, that led to the discovery of numerous hydroponic marijuana grow houses in St Lucie County, Florida. These marijuana grow houses were established and operated by the Pupo organization. According to the trial evidence, in September 2005, at the behest of Elieser Pupo, defendant Noel Albanes-Gomez purchased a house on Chello Lane, in Port St. Lucie.

Co-defendant Magalys Fajardo, a mortgage broker, testified at trial that she falsified Albanes-Gomez‘s mortgage application as part of her agreement with Albanes-Gomez and co-defendant Elieser Pupo. The mortgage application contained materially false information regarding the intended use of the property and Albanes-Gomez‘s employment and income. Magalys Fajardo previously pled guilty and was sentenced to 27 months in jail on August 7, 2009.

Another witness, Liban Beritan, testified that he was recruited by Elieser Pupo to maintain the house that would be used to grow and distribute marijuana. This house was converted by Elieser Pupo and his brothers into a hydroponic grow house, equipped with a sophisticated timed watering and lighting system with electric meter diversions. According to Beritan, he was required to sign a lease with Noel Albanes-Gomez. As part of the agreement, Elieser Pupo paid for Beritan‘s living expenses and transportation, and supplied and set up the grow house materials (including marijuana plants). As well, Pupo taught Beritan how to care for and harvest the mature marijuana plants. Beritan testified that he was promised $1000 per pound of marijuana harvested.

Noel Albanes-Gomez testified in his own defense, and admitted that he bought the house at the behest of his lifelong friend, Elieser Pupo, because of his good credit and as an investment. He denied knowing the mortgage application was false. He also admitted that all payments were made by Elieser Pupo, including his deposit on the property. During his testimony, he admitted owning a grow house in Miami in November 2005, but denied any knowledge of the marijuana growing in his Port St. Lucie property.

The conspiracy to commit mail fraud and the substantive mail fraud count each carry a statutory maximum penalty of 20 years’ imprisonment.

Mr. Sloman commended the investigative efforts of the Port St. Lucie Police Department, the Drug Enforcement Administration, and the Internal Revenue Service, Criminal Investigation Division. The case was prosecuted by Assistant U.S. Attorney Carmen Lineberger.

 The conviction was announced by Jeffrey H. Sloman, Acting United States Attorney for the Southern District of Florida, Mark R. Trouville, Special Agent in Charge, Drug Enforcement Administration, Miami Field Office, and Daniel W. Auer, Special Agent in Charge, Internal Revenue Service, Criminal Investigation Division.

A Jamaican woman was sentenced Monday to nearly six years in prison and ordered to pay US$110,000 in restitution for her part in a multimillion-dollar mortgage fraud scheme dubbed ‘Operation Whose House’.

Robert B. Guest, Jr., 46, resident of St. Augustine, Florida, who resided in Orlando at the time of the events in the case, was sentenced by U.S. District Judge Myron H. Thompson to 50 months in federal prison for his role in a mortgage fraud scheme.

On June 18, 2008, Guest pleaded guilty to a one-count felony information charging him with conspiracy to make false statements to financial institutions, in violation of Title 18, United States Code, Section 371. According to the plea agreement and information, beginning in the Fall of 2002, Guest began engaging in the business of buying and selling houses. Guest would purchase a house in an area of low property values, at first in Birmingham, Alabama, and, beginning in 2005, in Montgomery, Alabama. Guest also bought and sold houses in Orange and Seminole Counties, Florida, and Nashville, Tennessee.

Prior to buying a house, Guest arranged to resell the house to another individual (the “Investor”). Guest‘s written contract with the Investor would provide that Guest would sell the property to the Investor for a price substantially in excess of the price Guest had paid for it. The properties were to be rented to “Section 8” tenants, and the rent payments were supposed to provide the Investor with enough funds to cover the amount of the mortgage, plus a profit.

The Investors financed the purchase through a mortgage loan from either a bank or a nonbank mortgage lender. The Investor would apply for an “80/20” mortgage loan, which meant that the Investor was supposed to be paying 20% of the purchase price, with the lender financing 80%. The Investor and Guest had an unwritten side deal whereby Guest would immediately refund the amount of the down payment to the Investor, typically within 24 hours. Therefore, the economic reality of the transactions was that the Investor was buying the house for the amount of the loan, and the lender was providing 100% financing instead of 80%. Both the loan application submitted by the Investor and the closing statement signed by Guest and the Investor represented that the Investor was putting 20% down without disclosing the side deal.

Guest sold more than 200 houses pursuant to this scheme, approximately 100 of which were in Montgomery. The lenders for most of the Montgomery houses were Countrywide Bank, FSB and its affiliate, Countrywide Home Loans, Inc. Countrywide is expected to suffer a loss of more than $5 million as a result of these loans.

U.S. Attorney Leura G. Canary announced the sentencing. The case was investigated by the Federal Bureau of Investigation and prosecuted by Assistant U.S. Attorneys Andrew O. Schiff and Monica A. Stump.

 

Jeffrey Ryan Ayers, 29, Lithia, Florida was arrested charged with racketeering, conspiracy to commit racketeering, and grand theft in connection with a multi-million dollar mortgage fraud scheme that has victimized dozens of people since 2004.

Ayers worked for Advanced Mortgage Solutions, a mortgage broker company associated with a home improvement business that persuaded customers to take out home loans. Participants in the scheme would divert money and leave homeowners with large home loans and few, if any, home improvements.

The three-year investigation began when victims filed complaints about incomplete or substandard construction work being performed by construction companies affiliated with Advanced Mortgage Solutions. Ayers and the other co-conspirators secured mortgages for these homeowners to finance the home repair projects by submitting fraudulent documents to Argent Mortgage Company, one of the nation’s largest wholesale subprime mortgage companies. Investigators followed the trail of fraudulent applications back to the organized criminal operation which submitted nearly 130 loans to Argent which were funded for approximately $13 million.

Co-conspirators Scott Almeida, Frank Giffone, Adrienne White, Bradford Peck, Constance Golder, Michael Fetterhoff, Regina Diaz, William McKinney and William Medina have all previously pleaded guilty. Almeida received a 10-year prison sentence, Peck received an eight-year prison sentence, Giffone and White each received a five-year prison sentence, and McKinney received a two-year prison sentence. Co-conspirators Orson Benn and Samuel Green were previously found guilty and sentenced to 18 years and 9 years in prison, respectively.

Ayers arrest was the result of a joint investigation by FDLE, the Hillsborough County Consumer Protection Agency and the Tampa Police Department. Attorney General Bill McCollum’s Office of Statewide Prosecution will prosecute this case.

Ayers was booked into the Hillsborough County Jail on $110,000 bond.

Thomas Duane Roderick, 42, Wesley Chapel, Florida, has been indicted by a federal grand jury in Greeneville, Tennessee, charged with one (1) count of wire fraud, three (3) counts of bank fraud, and three (3) counts of money laundering. The indictment was issued on April 15, 2009, but was sealed until Roderick’s arrest in Florida on April 21, 2009. Roderick appeared before U.S. Magistrate Judge Dennis Inman in Greeneville today and was released on conditions. 

The details of the charges, which include: wire fraud, mail fraud, bank fraud and money laundering are outlined in the arrest warrant and supporting affadavit, which are filed as public records in the United States District Court for the Eastern District of Tennessee at Greeneville.

In summary, the affidavit alleges that, from approximately December 2004 until about July 19, 2007, Roderick, a mortgage loan broker and realtor in east Tennessee, devised a scheme to defraud others. The indictment states that Roderick worked with Premier Mortgage from 2005 until 2007 in Greeneville, Tennessee, and used various real estate closing agencies in Greene County. At the closings, Roderick would provide legal documents for the signature of the clients seeking loans, and the closing agency would disburse funds as required by the lending institution. Roderick allegedly set up a sham investment company entitled MSI and set up a checking account used to capture money from clients.

The indictment charges that Roderick caused one client to wire $20,000 to MSI, falsely telling this client that she would owe taxes on the $20,000 equity she received from the refinancing of her home mortgage. Roderick convinced her that if she turned the funds over to him, he would invest the money to avoid taxes. The indictment states that Roderick never invested the funds and immediately withdrew them within two days of the wire transfer.

Additionally, the indictment charges that Roderick persuaded another client to authorize $119,000 to be wired into his bank account by representing to her that he would use the funds to pay off her mortgage, pay her and her daughter’s outstanding bills, and to assist her granddaughter in obtaining a mobile home. Instead, the indictment states, Roderick spent the $119,000 within three weeks for his personal living expenses.

The charges in the indictment relate to the wiring of the funds to Roderick for his use in the scheme, the mailing of the documents Roderick prepared in order for his clients to obtain the funds from the lending institutions, and the subsequent financial transactions Roderick conducted with the proceeds of his scheme.

This arrest was announced by United States Attorney James R. “Russ” Dedrick. USt Attorney Dedrick said, “Mortgage fraud is a priority program both for the Eastern District of Tennessee as well as the Department of Justice.

Members of the public are reminded that these are only charges and that every person is presumed innocent until their guilt has been proven beyond a reasonable doubt.

Steven Gordon, 49, Miami, Florida, pled guilty to wire fraud charges related to a five-year scheme to inflate the value of mortgage loans to increase his commission compensation. Sentencing has been scheduled for April 23, 2009 at 9:00 a.m.

Prior to his dismissal in 2006, Gordon was a principal at Bayview Financial, LP, a Coral Gables-based finance company that buys portfolios of loans from lending institutions. Bayview Financial pooled these loans into newly formed business entities, called “special purpose entities,” and then issued securities backed by those loans to the investing public. During fiscal years 2006, 2005 and 2004, respectively, Bayview Financial and its affiliates securitized approximately $2.056 billion, $0.954 billion and $1.428 billion, in offerings of residential and commercial mortgage loans, including $1.989 billion, $0.884 billion and $1.243 billion of residential mortgage loans.

While employed at Bayview Financial, defendant Gordon held the title of “Director of Residential Acquisitions.” One of Gordon’s primary duties was to negotiate the purchase of thousands of loans for Bayview Financial’s residential mortgage securitization program. Gordon’s incentive compensation was based, in part, on his ability to buy those loans at a low cost.

Today, Gordon admitted that between 2001 and 2006, he engaged in a scheme to defraud Bayview Financial, in which he regularly altered credit information affecting the value of more than 2,800 loans acquired for Bayview Financial’s residential mortgage securitization program. Gordon’s fraudulent scheme caused Bayview Financial to pay him more than $2.8 million in excessive and undeserved bonuses.

R. Alexander Acosta, United States Attorney for the Southern District of Florida, commended the investigative efforts of the FBI and the Miami Regional Office of the Securities and Exchange Commission. Mr. Acosta also recognized Bayview Financial’s outstanding cooperation with this investigation. This matter is being handled by Assistant U.S. Attorney Ryan Dwight O’Quinn.

Eleven defendants – including two foreign nationals – were arrested today on a 15-count federal indictment charging them with executing a scheme in which they stole the identities of elderly victims, used that information to obtain title reports for residential properties, then solicited millions of dollars in hard money loans from private lenders by falsely representing the loans as being secured by the elderly victims’ properties.

The following defendants were arrested this morning and all but two of them are expected to be arraigned this afternoon:

  • Nazaret Chakrian a.k.a. “Niko”, 65, Hollywood, California;
  • Arnold Moradians a.k.a. “Julian”, 57, Hollywood, California, an Iranian national who has an outstanding warrant for removal from the United States;
  • Avetis Hekimyan a.k.a. “Chef Avo ,38, North Hollywood, California;
  • Ross Tarkhan, 32, Glendale, California;
  • Tigran Hovanesian, 56, Glendale, California;
  • Armen Vardevaryan, a.k.a. “Gonch” ,55, North Hollywood, California;
  • Craig Higdon, 66, Naples, Florida, who will make his initial appearance in the Middle District of Florida;
  • Helen Spangler, 62, Oakdale, California, who will make her initial appearance in the Eastern District of California;
  • Victor Lossi, 43, Thousand Oaks, California; and
  • Marine Sarkisian, 49, Hollywood, California , an Azerbaijani national and green card holder.

The following defendant arrested today is expected to be arraigned tomorrow in Los Angeles federal court:

  • Cynthia Borjas, 51, Koreatown.

According to the indictment that a federal grand jury returned on February 5, 2026, from January 2021 to May 2023, Chakrian and Moradians fraudulently obtained the personal identifying information (PII) of elderly victims. The victims owned properties in Santa Monica and in the following Los Angeles neighborhoods: Hollywood, Hollywood Hills, Westwood, and Chinatown, California.

Chakrian and Higdon then used the victims’ PII to create counterfeit identification documents. Borjas and Hekimyan created email accounts in the victims’ names to impersonate them.

Using the victims’ PII, the fraudulent ID documents, and the fraudulent email addresses, Chakrian, Moradians, Hekimyan, Vardevaryan, and Spangler misrepresented themselves as the victims’ agents, brokers, representatives or relatives, and submitted fraudulent applications to private money lenders for hard money loans secured by the victims’ properties.

Chakrian, Hekimyan, Higdon, and Spangler created false and fabricated documents – including bank statements, rental agreements, doctors’ notes, and death certificates – to the lenders. These documents contained lies about the victims’ identities, assets, finances, and health as well as the loan proceeds’ intended purpose, and the types of properties being used to secure the loans.

Upon receiving closing documents from the lenders, Chakrian, Hekimyan, Lossi, and Sarkisian caused the documents to be fraudulently notarized and signed by individuals representing the victims.

Tarkhan used stolen PII to create synthetic identities – profiles or ID documents combining fictitious profile information with real victim PII. Using these synthetic identities, Tarkhan caused bank accounts to be opened under false names. These accounts were used to funnel proceeds derived from the scheme.

Private money lenders relied on the false statements, misrepresentations, and certifications to cause funds to be disbursed via check and wire to mailboxes and bank accounts controlled by Chakrian, Tarkhan, and others.

The total intended loss in this case is approximately $17.4 million, and the total actual loss is approximately $6 million.

All defendants except Hovanesian are charged with one count of conspiracy to commit wire fraud and seven counts of wire fraud. Chakrian, Moradians, Borjas, Hekimyan, Tarkhan, Spangler, Lossi, and Sarkisian are charged with one count of aggravated identity theft. Chakrian, Moradians, Tarkhan, and Hovanesian are charged with one count of conspiracy to commit money laundering. Tarkhan is further charged with five counts of money laundering.

“There is no shortage of massive fraud occurring within California,” said First Assistant United States Attorney Bill Essayli. “Today’s operation represents one of many sophisticated schemes used by criminals – including foreign nationals – to defraud U.S. citizens and taxpayers of their hard-earned property. Those days are over under this U.S. Department of Justice. These defendants will be facing significant prison time for their charged conduct.”

The growing problem of title fraud victimizes homeowners and lenders, many of whom are elderly and have their identities stolen, in addition to their hard-earned money,” said Akil Davis, the Assistant Director in Charge of the FBI’s Los Angeles Field Office. “An investigation by the FBI Eurasian Organized Crime Task Force, LAPD, and other law enforcement partners led to today’s arrests of multiple perpetrators of this cruel scheme who now face lengthy prison sentences.”

The defendants didn’t just steal identities, they used those stolen identities to secure high value real estate loans, fabricate financial documents, and move millions of dollars through a maze of fraudulent businesses and funnel accounts,” said Tyler Hatcher, Special Agent in Charge, IRS-CI Los Angeles Field Office. “Our agents traced every wire, every transfer, and every shell account to expose the financial backbone of this conspiracy. This indictment sends a clear message, IRS CI will dismantle the money pipelines that allow complex fraud schemes to flourish, and we will hold accountable those who profit from exploiting our financial system.”

This case reflects the relentless work of our investigators and the strong collaboration with our federal partners to unravel a complex and calculated criminal scheme,” said Interim Glendale Police Chief Robert William. “Their focus and determination ensured those responsible are held accountable and that justice is delivered.”

An indictment contains allegations that a defendant has committed a crime. Every defendant is presumed to be innocent until and unless proven guilty in court.

If convicted, the defendants would face a statutory maximum sentence of 20 years in federal prison for each fraud- and money laundering-related count, and a mandatory consecutive sentence of two years in federal prison for the aggravated identity theft count.

This case is being investigated by the Eurasian Organized Crime Task Force (EOCTF) and the Los Angeles Police Department – Commercial Crimes Division. The EOCTF includes agents and task force officers from the FBI, IRS Criminal Investigation, the United States Postal Inspection Service, the Los Angeles County Sheriff’s Department, and the Glendale Police Department.

Assistant United States Attorneys Claire E. Kelly of the General Crimes Section and Hava Mirell of the Criminal Appeals Section are prosecuting this case.