California Real Estate Fraud Report

NOW THE #1 PRIVATE RESOURCE ON GOOGLE FOR REAL ESTATE FRAUD! This blog educates law enforcement and consumers as to real estate fraud and other real estate crimes being committed in California. Sign up for a free subscription to the most comprehensive news source for real estate fraud and receive weekly, timely news reports about real estate fraud, mortgage fraud, short sale fraud, REO fraud, loan fraud, appraisal fraud, affinity fraud, loan modification scams, securities fraud, rent skimming and elder financial fraud. – Monique Bryher

Archive for the 'Elder Financial Abuse' Category

Victorville Woman Accused of Stealing Mother’s House

January 12th, 2012 at 10:17pm

Leilani Luahiwa, 52, has been charged with elder financial abuse and theft for stealing her mother’s home.

Luahiwa’s 87-year old mother thought she was signing paperwork that would make her daughter her caregiver.  She only learned she no longer owned the home when another daughter discovered the property taxes had not been paid for four years.

The case was investigated by the San Bernardino County Sheriff’s Department.

Read the original article on ABC 7.

Stockton Man Arrested for Real Estate Investment Fraud

January 12th, 2012 at 11:59am

Keith Wilson, 55, of Stockton has been arrested and charged with securities fraud, money laundering, grand theft and elder abuse.

The 22-month long investigation by police into his businesses Tribeca Properties, LLC, and Lone Cedar Corporation led authorities to believe Wilson defraud seven people in the Bay Area out of over $300,000. The real estate fraud scheme was unraveled when the purported victims found out that Wilson had not purchased the foreclosed properties he had claimed to have bought.

Read the original article in the San Francisco Appeal.

Real Estate Agent Caught Stealing Title to Parents’ Home

January 6th, 2012 at 8:49am

An unemployed real estate agent in Clayton has been one of the first bad guys to get caught by a new computer system in Contra Costa County designed to catch those who forge grant deeds to properties (title fraud).

Walter Roberts, 63, forged the signatures to a grant deed to his elderly parents’  home (elder financial abuse, elder financial fraud). In just two weeks, the newly-implemented computer system in Contra Costa County mailed a notification, which Roberts’ five siblings read, causing them to contact authorities. As a result, the 92- and 85-year old parents still own their property.

Ken McCormick, the deputy DA who heads the Contra Costa County District Attorney’s Real Estate Fraud Unit was quoted as saying,  ”Quite frankly, we would never have caught (the suspect) under the old system.”

Read the original article in the San Jose Mercury News.

Two Men Charged with Real Estate Fraud for Stealing Dead Woman’s Home

December 23rd, 2011 at 9:47am

San Bernardino County prosecutors have charge Troy Preston, 41, and Mario McKinley, 31, with forgery, theft from an elder or dependent adult (elder financial fraud) as well as other crimes. They allegedly obtained title to a deceased woman’s home (title fraud) and sell it to a third party.

McKinley was a notary public; he is accused of notarizing the fraudulent documents (notary fraud).

Read the original article in SFGate.

Eureka Woman Sues Son for Elder Financial Fraud

November 24th, 2011 at 2:53pm

Francis Bagley is a 70-year-old woman who at one time had equity in two homes and a comfortable retirement account.

Now Bagley is suing her son Eddie L. Shields, charging that he failed to keep his promise to repay her if she lent him money against the properties and her retirement account. Shields is being sued in Humboldt County Court by his mother for  ”financial elder abuse, breach of contract, promise without intent to perform, money lent, and intentional infliction of emotional distress,” according to a report in Courthouse News Service. His mother said he has completely defaulted and not paid her back any of the money.

Serial Monogamist Charged in Elder Financial Fraud

November 16th, 2011 at 7:17pm

A 39-year old woman who is already working on Husband #5 has been charged felony financial elder abuse, grand theft and forgery. She is accused of defrauding her former mother-in-law, a retired physician, by telling the woman she would invest her money in what turned out to be a non-existent commercial development in Rancho Bernardo.

Tara Moore, of Point Loma, has pleaded not guilty to the charges.  Prosecutors allege that Moore continued to take the elderly woman’s money for the development right up until the time she filed for bankruptcy.

San Diego Deputy District Attorney Bill Mitchell has informed the court that Moore is also being investigated by the Department of Veteran’s Affairs for continuing to take spousal support money from the federal government, even after she was married subsequently and should have informed DVA she was no longer eligible for the payments.

Read the original article in SignOn San Diego.

Two Sonoma Developers Lose Civil Suit in Elder Financial Abuse Case

October 27th, 2011 at 10:01am

Two well-known Sonoma County developers have been found liable in an elder financial abuse lawsuit that involved redrawing the property lines of a married couple.

The dispute arose out of a disagreement in which the elderly couple, Joseph Bonfigli, 83, and his wife, Helen, 78, accuse Alan Strachan and Michael D. Smith, the President of Argonaut Constructors of taking a portion of their land for one of their developments almost 10 years ago.

Each defendant must pay $300,000 for financial elder abuse, with an additional award by the jury for $48,000 in punitive damages against Alan Strachan. Strachan could also be liable for another $535,000 in damages for “civil fraud by deception, false promises or misrepresentation,” but that claim is in dispute by the two parties.

Read the original article in the Santa Rosa Press Democrat.

Governor Brown Signs Elder Abuse Protection Legislation

October 6th, 2011 at 9:07am

California Governor Jerry Brown has just signed several bills designed to protect senior citizens against elder financial abuse.

Due to budget cuts to the state, less staff are available to take calls of elder financial abuse. SB718 sets up a confidential Internet reporting system to replace the jobs lost.  

AB1293 allows courts to seize and/or freeze the assets of a person accused of stealing more than $100,000 from a senior (elder financial fraud).

SB33 extends SB1018, which was set to expire in two years. That law requires bank and other credit-related employees to report suspicious financial activity on an elderly person’s account. 

Read the original article in the Mercury News.

Antioch Family Investigated in Real Estate Fraud

September 15th, 2011 at 3:48pm
The brother of an Antioch man who has been arrested and charged with stealing from fellow Latinos in the San Francisco area has also been charged in the same case.
 
Edwin Parada, who worked simultaneously as a real estate agent, restaurant owner and Spanish language radio host, was arrested first, in 2008. Now his brother Carlos Parada has been arrested and is facing multiple counts of conspiracy, grand theft, money laundering and elder abuse. Carlos’ daughter Karla is also a subject of the investigation, according to and article in Examiner.com.
 
Authorities believe the Paradas collectively may be involved with taking as much as $2.2 million from 31 people, the latest being an elderly woman who sought a loan from Carlos, also a real estate agent and pastor, to help pay her husband’s funeral expenses. Instead, authorities allege that Carlos diverted some of the money out of escrow from the refinancing of the woman’s home (escrow fraud).
 
Note: I could find no indication that either Carlos Parada or Edwin Parada hold a real estate license in California. Karla Parada does have a real estate license.

Seal Beach Real Estate Agent Arrested

September 9th, 2011 at 9:03am

Real estate agent John Wesley Martynec is awaiting trial after been charged by the Orange County District Attorney’s Office on 34 counts that include elder abuse and grand theft.

Martynec is accused of operating a real estate investment fraud business in which he solicited money from investors and promised them profits from purchasing foreclosed homes and flipping them.

Read the original article in the Downey Patriot and the OC Register.

© Copyright 2007-2012 Monique Bryher

Legal Disclaimer.

The information and notices contained on The California Real Estate Fraud Report are intended to summarize recent developments in real estate fraud, mortgage fraud, short sale fraud, REO fraud, appraisal fraud, loan modification scams, loan modification fraud and other real estate related crimes occurring in Los Angeles and California. The posts on this site are presented as general research and information and are expressly not intended, and should not be regarded, as legal advice. Much of the information on this site concerns allegations made in civil lawsuits and in criminal indictments. All persons are presumed innocent until convicted of a crime. Readers who have particular questions about real estate fraud, mortgage fraud and appraisal fraud matters or who believe they require legal counsel should seek the advice of an attorney.

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