California Real Estate Fraud Report

This report spotlights real estate professionals and businesses lacking the ethics and conscience to treat their fellow humans in a fair, honest and upstanding manner. It is a clearinghouse for real estate fraud, mortgage fraud, loan fraud, appraisal fraud and elder financial fraud occurring in California, especially Los Angeles and Southern California. - Monique Bryher

Archive for the 'Identity Theft' Category

Orange County DA reports staggering losses to real estate fraud

February 25th, 2010 at 8:49am

The Orange County District Attorney’s Office reports that real estate losses reported to its special real estate fraud unit amount to $100 million, with over 1,000 victims. The unit, formed only last year, has had 346 referrals to it for mortgage fraud (and presumably, loan modification scams) and real estate fraud both from victims and real estate professionals.

The numbers so far:

Referrals to the DA of suspected real estate fraud: 346 +

Referrals from county Clerk-Recorder: 16

Investigations received from law enforcement agencies: 17

Filed criminal cases: 29

Cases rejected for filing: 30

Cases referred to other state or federal agencies: 12

Convictions: 14

Real estate crimes by white-collar criminals show no sign of abating. Please get multiple, independent references before giving your money to someone you do not know.

Read the full article in the Orange County Register, aka OC Register.

Panel Discusses Trends in Real Estate Fraud

June 28th, 2009 at 10:22pm

Many of the issues that are reported in the California Real Estate Fraud report - elder financial fraud, rental fraud, and the now tradition (sic) mortgage fraud, loan fraud and real estate fraud that became so common they qualified as business-as-usual during the subprime mania - were topics of discussion at a panel of real estate experts held in downtown Antioch last week.

Billed as the Contra Costa County Real Estate Fraud Summit, the summit included Terrence Christopher Patterson, of the state Department of Real Estate, an agent from the U.S. Secret Service who discussed identity theft resulting from loan applications being mined for personal data, and other local professionals.

Read the Full Article in the San Jose Mercury News.

Mortgage Fraud Convictions Served Up in Vallejo Valley

June 7th, 2009 at 10:14am

An escrow officer has been convicted of two counts each of felony grand theft and felony identity theft by an Alameda County jury.

Former Financial Title escrow officer Wonda Kidd, 58, was convicted for her vital role for aiding and abetting a “massive” Vallejo-based real estate fraud scheme, according to prosecutors. She faces up to five years in  state prison when she is sentenced. Co-conspirator and accused mastermind Karim Akil, 42, already pleaded guilty to grand theft charges in 2008 and is currently serving a three-year sentence in state prison.

Read the Full Article in the Times Herald.

Surprise! Real Estate Fraud in Orange County

June 3rd, 2009 at 10:49pm

An Orange County real estate broker, her former boyfriend and his brother are accused of using straw buyers to fraudulently purchase 35 properties, six of them in Kern County.

Kathy Chen, 48, a real estate broker in Westminster, Richard Salgado Gonzalez, 59, and his brother Daniel Gonzalez, 56, have been arrested and charged with 154 felony counts, among them conspiracy, grand theft, attempted grand theft, forgery, recording false documents, elder financial exploitation and identity theft, according to the Orange County District Attorney’s office. Chen, who owned Chen Financial, KC Realty and SBC Financial, and her co-conspirators are accused of using straw buyers to purchase 35 properties fraudulently.

Read the Full Article in the Bakersfield Californian.

California Legislature Proposes Bills that Would Facilitate MORE Mortgage Fraud

March 29th, 2009 at 8:57am

Any Californian who does not want to see more mortgage fraud in the state of California needs to write, email or call their state legislators to vote against two bills our legislature is considering. Click here to find out who your representatives are.

Senate Bill 461 (introduced by Senator Lou Correa / Santa Ana ) and Assembly Bill 442 (introduced by Assembly Member Juan Arambula / Fresno County) both seek to amend the California Civil Code Section 1185 by requiring Notaries Public to accept the Matricula Concular card of Mexico as legal proof of a signer’s identity.

Never mind that the FBI has referred to the Matricula Consular card as “unreliable due to the non-existence of any means of verifying the true identity of the card holder” - our two legislators are more interested in establishing new “rights” for foreign nationals than they are in protecting the rights of California citizens and legal residents against mortgage fraud.

According to the California-based National Notary Association, which vigorously opposes the proposed legislation because it mandates that Notaries accept a document that both the U.S. Department of Justice and the FBI consider untrustworthy:

“Allowing acceptance of the Matricula Consular will compromise the safety and security of California consumers and undermine the credibility of the state’s Notaries Public.”

Timothy S. Reiniger, Executive Director of the National Notary Association further adds:

“In this era of rampant document fraud and identity theft, requirements for establishing proof of identification should be tightened rather than compromised. Senate Bill 461 and Assembly Bill 442 will not accomplish this, and more importantly, will undermine our state’s efforts and recent successes in fighting mortgage fraud.”

and

“The enactment of the legislation requires Notaries to recognize a card of proven unreliability, weakening the California notarial system that protects the public from forged real property deeds and other important documentary transactions and identity crimes. Notaries in this state must not be forced to accept a card that the U.S. Department of Justice and the Federal Bureau of Investigation declare is not a trustworthy identifier.”

Here is what the U.S. Department of Justice and the FBI say about the Matricular Consular card issued by the government of Mexico:

1. The government of Mexico does not have a centralized database to coordinate the issuance of consular ID cards. So multiple cards can be issued under the same name, the same address, or with the same photograph.

2. The government of Mexico issues the card to anyone who can produce a Mexican birth certificate and one other form of identity. Mexican birth certificates have been listed as a large part of the fraudulent foreign document trade and they are easy to forge.

3. If an individual applying for a Matricula Consular cannot produce the above documents, he or she can still be issued a Matricula Consular card by the Mexican consular official if a questionnaire is completed and the individual satisfies the official that the person of his/her identity. [Note: I feel safe already]

4. 90 percent of the estimated 2 million Mexican Matricular Consular cards in circulation are merely laminated cards with no security features.

This legislation could result in more: identity theft, escrow fraud, title fraud, mortgage fraud, loan fraud, real estate fraud - all because real estate transactions rely upon the authenticity of documents attesting to the identity of the individuals who are signing those documents.

Read the Original Article on Virtualization

If You Can’t Trust Your Relatives . . .

January 13th, 2009 at 10:57pm

A Turlock real estate broker has pled not guilty to stealing more than a million dollars from his family, friends and classmates.

Bounthavy Tyler Manivong, 31, of Livingston is accused of stealing from his uncle as well as classmates at California State University Stanislaus as part of a real estate fraud scheme.

Read the Full Article in the Turlock Journal.

Sacramento Gets Its Own Real Estate Fraud Detective

November 3rd, 2008 at 9:41am

Sacramento finally has a position dedicated to real estate fraud, something most policing agencies could only dream of.

Police Detective Mike Wood’s position is funded partially by a county grant with the purpose of dealing with an influx of financial crimes that came with the boom and crash in the California real estate market. So far, Detective Wood, one of only a handful of real estate fraud detectives in Sacramento County, has caught up with an unlicensed contractor (Keith McGowan) who is now charged with elder fraud of a Del Paso Heights couple, identity theft of a Kentucky woman whose Social Security number had been fraudulently used to buy Sacramento real estate, and professional squatters, who collect rental deposits from properties they pretend to own.

Read the Full Article in the Sacramento Bee about real estate crimes in Sacramento County.

© Copyright 2007-2008 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 and appraisal fraud 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.