Each mortgage scam contains some type of misstatement,
misrepresentation, or omission relied upon by an
underwriter or lender to fund, purchase or insure a loan.
Mortgage scam is easily practiced particularly where
mortgage industry professionals are involved. The true
level of mortgage scam is largely unknown because a
significant portion of the mortgage industry is void of any
mandatory fraud reporting and in addition, mortgage fraud
in the secondary market is often under reported. Based on
various industry reports and analysis, mortgage scam is
pervasive and growing. Mortgage scam can be basically
analyzed as:
* Fraud for Profit - Sometimes referred as "Industry
Insider Fraud" and the motive is to falsely inflate the
value of the property, issue loans based on fictitious
properties or revolve equity. Based on existing approximate
reports, eighty percent of all reported mortgage scam
losses involve collaboration or collusion by industry
insiders
* Fraud for Housing - An illegal action perpetrated
solely by the borrower. This type of mortgage scam is done
by a borrower who makes misrepresentations regarding his
income or employment history to qualify for a large loan.
The motive behind this scam is to acquire and maintain
ownership of a house under false pretenses
Fraud for Housing can not be compared to the scam done
by mortgage scam industry professionals which affect the
borrowers. Predatory lending usually is targeted towards
senior citizens, lower income and challenged credit
borrowers. Mortgage lending representatives force borrowers
to pay exhaustive loan settlement fees, sub-prime or higher
interest rates, and in some cases, unreasonable service
fees. The usual result is the borrower defaulting on his
mortgage payment and undergoing foreclosure or forced
refinancing. Our focus is to recognize the mortgage scam
that could happen to us, the borrower.
MORTGAGE SCAM SCHEMES
False or Stolen Identity - A fake identity may be used
on the loan application. The applicant may be involved in
an identity theft scheme and use someones personal
information without the true person's knowledge.
Inflated Appraisals - An appraiser acts in collusion
with a borrower and provides a misleading appraisal report
to the lender. This report inaccurately states an inflated
property value.
Silent Second Mortgage - Buyer of a property borrows the
down payment from the seller through the issuance of a
non-disclosed second mortgage. The primary lender believes
the borrower has invested his own money in the down
payment, when in fact, it is borrowed. The second mortgage
may not be recorded to further conceal its status from the
primary lender.
Nominee Loans - The identity of the borrower is
concealed through the use of a nominee who allows the
borrower to use the nominee's name and credit history to
apply for a loan.
Equity Skimming - An investor may use a nominee, false
income documents, and false credit reports, to obtain a
loan in the nominee's name. Subsequent to closing, the
nominee signs the property over to the investor in a quit
claim deed which relinquishes all rights to the property
and provides no guaranty to title. The investor does not
make any mortgage payments and rents the property until
foreclosure takes place a few months later.
Property Flipping - A property is bought, falsely
advertised at a higher value, and then quickly sold. What
makes this property illegal is that the appraisal
information is fraudulent. The schemes typically involve
one or more of the following; fraudulent appraisals,
doctored loan documentation and inflated buyers income...
Kickbacks to buyers, investors, property and loan brokers,
appraisers, title company employees are common in this
scheme. A home may be appraised for $100,000 but is
actually worth $30,000.
Air Loans - This is a non-existent property loan where
there is usually no collateral. A broker invents borrowers
and properties, establishes accounts for payments, and
maintains custodial accounts for escrows. They may even set
up an office with a bank of telephones, each one used as
the employer, appraiser, credit agency for verification
purposes.
Foreclosure Schemes - Are one of the worst. The loan
agents mislead the homeowners into believing that they can
save their homes in exchange for a transfer of the deed,
usually in the form of a Quit-Claim Deed, and up-front
fees. The perpetrator profits from these schemes by
re-mortgaging the property or pocketing fees paid by the
homeowner without helping to prevent the foreclosure. The
victim suffers the loss of the property as well as the
up-front fees. Be aware of offers that promise to save
homeowners who are at risk of defaulting on loans or whose
houses are already in foreclosure. If you are near a
foreclosure seek a qualified credit counselor or attorney
to assist.
Mortgage Scam per e-Mail - Many of the emails imply that
the recipient has already been approved for a loan by
making a vague statement such as "we are accepting your
mortgage application". Recipients may believe that they are
actually being offered a loan. These emails are basically
just poorly implemented tricks to get recipients to click
on the link provided and fill out a form which in turn will
defraud you in one way or another. If enough information is
provided, scammers might even be able to steal your
identity. A lot of the sites will last only a few days
before they are taken down. But new will arise as soon as
they are suppressed. Often they consist of just one page
containing a form.
There is no information about the company offering the
service, no privacy policy or a legal document, and no
contact options other than the form provided. Often,the
form is not secure (https), which is a good indicator that
the site is not legitimate. No credible company would
expect potential clients to submit information via an
unsecured form. Never deal with spammers, regardless of how
attractive their offer may seem. If they are unscrupulous
enough to send unsolicited email, or allow their affiliates
to send unsolicited email, then they have immediately shown
themselves to be untrustworthy and you should avoid them at
all cost. In general try to avoid the use of online
mortgage loans.