Guilty Plea in Sovereign Citizen Mortgage Elimination Scheme

Rachel Dollar —  July 23, 2015 — 2 Comments

Jennifer McTigue, 48, Honolulu, Hawaii pled guilty to conspiring to commit wire fraud, mail fraud, and money laundering, as well as committing wire fraud, mail fraud and money laundering. McTigue pled guilty in federal district court before Senior District Judge Consuelo B. Marshall a day after jury selection for her trial was to have commenced.

In connection with her guilty plea, McTigue, who is representing herself and identifies herself as a “private non-citizen American national” stated:

“I feel I must take responsibility for people being damaged and that’s why I’m here today to plead guilty.”

Documents filed by McTigue in the court case had caused the Judge to order that she undergo a competency evaluation.

According to information produced in court, McTigue and codefendants Marc Melton and Sakara Blackwell operated a scheme to defraud lending institutions, buyers of real property and title insurance companies through a process of filing fraudulent mortgage release documents with the Hawaii Bureau of Conveyances. Once the Bureau of Conveyances accepted and filed the defendants’ fraudulent “satisfaction of mortgage” forms, McTigue, Melton and Blackwell were able to market and sell properties at substantial profit, since the lending institution holding the mortgage was never paid its outstanding debt. The scheme resulted in the defrauding of not only mortgage lenders, but also innocent buyers who unwittingly bought properties that appeared to be free and clear but were still subject to the existing mortgages. Documents filed in court allege that the defendants defrauded others of over $3.1 million through the operation of their scheme.

McTigue faces up to five years imprisonment as to one conspiracy and up to ten years imprisonment as to the other; up to 20 years imprisonment for wire fraud and mail fraud charges, and up to to ten years imprisonment on the money laundering charge. McTigue will be sentenced by Judge Marshall on October 26, 2015. Melton and Blackwell previously pled guilty and are to be sentenced by Senior District Judge Charles R. Breyer on September 29, 2015.

The investigation resulting in this prosecution was conducted by the Federal Bureau of Investigation. John A. Michelich, Senior Litigation Counsel of the Fraud Section of the Criminal Division of the Department of Justice, and Assistant U.S. Attorneys Marc A. Wallenstein and Kenneth M. Sorenson handled the prosecution.

Rachel Dollar

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2 responses to Guilty Plea in Sovereign Citizen Mortgage Elimination Scheme

  1. This just happened to me, I got scammed, I went to court twice did what they told me to do, and say. I was the first person to purchase a home and call myself a homeowner. I was told that I had to be out by today. I’ve always been a hard worker. I feel really dumb and hurt. My oldest son is getting married and November I do not want him to know, until then I have to keep a smile on my face. I don’t know what to do? Any information anyone’s got. I would be forever grateful to you.

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