“Operation Malicious Mortgage” – A Nationwide Mortgage Fraud
Initiative
Produces Results in Oregon and Southwest Washington
Four Substantial Investigations Yield Charges or Convictions Related to
More Than
$50 Million in Fraudulent Loans
Portland, Ore. – United States
Attorney Karin J. Immergut, the Portland Office of
the
Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI), the Internal
Revenue Service – Criminal Investigation,
and several federal law enforcement partners today
announced significant charges and
convictions as a result of Oregon’s participation
in “Operation Malicious Mortgage,” a
nationwide effort to investigate and prosecute mortgage
fraud. Oregon’s federal law
enforcement response underscores the strong efforts
being undertaken by federal law
enforcement and regulatory agencies to combat this
threat to worldwide credit markets.
In addition to the
U.S. Attorney’s Office, FBI,
and IRS, agencies participating in the
Operation include the Postal Inspection Service;
Department of Housing and Urban
Development – Office of Inspector General;
Department of Veterans Affairs – Office of
Inspector General; United States Secret Service;
and the Oregon Department of Finance and
Corporate Securities. This broad cooperation highlights
both the significant threat posed by
mortgage fraud for federally insured and uninsured
lenders and the ongoing efforts to crack
down on financial and mortgage fraud.
“Mortgage fraud puts banks and
other lenders at risk by inducing them to make bad
loans
based on false loan applications or fraudulent appraisals,” stated
U.S. Attorney Immergut. “This
harms not only the lenders, but honest buyers and
sellers as well. By prosecuting these cases, we
hope to discourage others from engaging in this illegal
conduct and help restore faith in credit
and real estate markets.”
Portland is one of 38 metropolitan areas
that have formed a task force or working group
to combat mortgage fraud. Law enforcement agencies
in Oregon are coordinating their efforts in
a Mortgage Fraud Working Group, which includes the
agencies listed above and numerous other
federal, state, and local law enforcement agencies
that meet regularly and share information about
this significant crime problem.
As part of Oregon’s participation
in Operation Malicious Mortgage, U.S. Attorney
Immergut announced the filing of the following charges
and other dispositions in major
mortgage fraud investigations since March 1, 2008.
United States v. Howlett
On Tuesday, June 18, 2008, an information
was filed charging Lee Howlett, 45, of
Portland, with conspiracy to commit wire fraud, aggravated
identity theft, and money laundering.
The information alleges that between 2002 and 2006,
Howlett conspired with others to purchase
real property in the name of co-conspirators. He caused
false information to be given to
mortgage lenders in applications for mortgage loans
by the co-conspirators to induce lenders to
approve mortgage loans. He allegedly created false
appraisal reports for certain properties used
in the conspiracy and signed the reports using the
name and license number of a licensed
appraiser without the appraiser’s knowledge or
authority. Appraisals on some properties were
inflated, and the higher value was used to apply for
larger loans.
Howlett took the excess funds for his
own use and/or to share with his co-conspirators.
The properties were either sold or went into default.
The information also charges that Howlett
caused interstate wire transfers of mortgage proceeds
and that he deposited those funds into
accounts he controlled.
Conspiracy carries a maximum
penalty of five years in prison and a $250,000 fine.
The
case is being investigated by the FBI and IRS. No
court date has been set for Howlett’s
appearance. Filing of an information often indicates
that an agreement has been reached to
settle the case. This case is being prosecuted by
Assistant U.S. Attorney Lance Caldwell.
United States
v. Folwick
On June 18, 2008, Marty Folwick, 50,
of Portland, was arrested and appeared in federal
court in Portland. On June 12, 2008, a federal grand
jury in Portland returned a 15-count
indictment charging Folwick, a local loan officer,
with bank fraud, wire fraud, and money
laundering. According to the indictment, Folwick,
acting as a loan officer for Lighthouse
Funding Group, would recruit straw buyers and induce
them to buy properties with mortgage
loans in excess of the true sales price.
To obtain
the loans, the indictment alleges that the loan applications
contained numerous
material false statements relating to the buyer’s
income, employment status, intention to live in
the house being purchased, other mortgage loans obligations,
and ownership of funds needed to
close the transactions. The indictment further states
that the lenders were not told the mortgage
amount was greater than the true sales price, with
the difference being kicked back to Folwick
through two mechanisms used to conceal and disguise
the fact that Folwick was both the loan
officer and the recipient of kickbacks. The indictment
focuses on five properties in the Portland
area.
Folwick pleaded not guilty to the charges
and was released from custody. Trial is set for
August 19, 2008 before the Honorable Garr M. King.
An indictment is only an allegation and
not evidence of guilt. A person charged in an indictment
is presumed innocent unless and until
proven guilty beyond a reasonable doubt. The ongoing
investigation of Folwick’s mortgage
activities is being handled by the FBI and IRS and
could result in additional charges. The case is
being handled by Assistant United States Attorney
Allan Garten.
United States v. Richardson
On
May 27, 2008, an information was filed charging Jeremy
Richardson, 31, of
Ridgefield, Washington, with wire fraud. The information
alleges a scheme to defraud lenders
and individuals during 2006 and 2007 wherein Richardson
advertised and solicited persons
interested in buying real estate, either to live
in or as an investment. If an investor was not
able
to qualify for the necessary mortgage financing,
Richardson would falsify the buyer/investor
qualifications and information provided to the lender.
If the home was being purchased as an
investment, Richardson would advertise for persons
interested in participating in a “rent to
own” program to live in the home purchased by the investor.
The
information also alleges that Richardson inflated
the property transaction price on
certain transactions in order to get extra money
to use to pay business expenses, including
required mortgage payments on purchased real estate.
He created false invoices purporting to
represent repairs performed on certain properties
in support of the falsely inflated prices.
He also induced some customers to advance him money
which he represented would be used to
make a down payment on certain properties, but
which he instead used to pay personal and
business expenses. He used interstate wire transmissions
to communicate and advertise, and for
transferring funds to carry out the scheme, including
a $50,000 transfer from a California victim
investor’s Wells Fargo bank account, to a
Bank of America account in Portland, Oregon which
he controlled.
Wire fraud affecting a financial institution
carries a maximum penalty of 30 years in
prison and a fine of up to $1,000,000. The investigation
in this case, which is being conducted
by the FBI and IRS, is continuing and additional
charges are likely. Investigators have identified
as many as 100 fraudulent loans originated by Richardson
or through his company Richardson
Equities. The fact that an information has been
filed often indicates that a plea agreement has
been worked out. This case is being prosecuted
by Assistant U.S. Attorney Lance Caldwell.
United
States v. Bonneau
On April 8, 2008, Ryan Bonneau,
31, of Portland, was sentenced to 30 months in prison
for his role in a mortgage fraud scheme involving
two residential real estate transactions in
2004.
He will serve a period of five years supervised
release after completion of his prison term.
Bonneau
was indicted in 2006. Charges included wire fraud,
false statements to a
federally insured bank, money laundering,
and engaging in prohibited financial transactions.
Bonneau pled guilty to wire fraud and money
laundering in November 2007. He
admitted that he devised a scheme to defraud
the Union Federal Bank of Indianapolis
by making
false statements in mortgage loan applications
in connection with transactions involving
two
properties.
In each transaction the sales price
of the home was inflated so that Bonneau could apply
for a larger mortgage and divert the extra
cash to bank accounts he controlled. Bonneau
also
admitted submitting a false appraisal on each
property. At the closing of the property transactions,
false
closing statements were signed which concealed
the fact that the extra cash
was being diverted. The bank funded the mortgage
loans in reliance on these statements.
During
the time he was committing this fraud, Bonneau was
on federal supervised release
following a 2003 conviction for bank fraud,
wire fraud, and money laundering. He was arrested
in June 2006 for violating his supervised release
conditions, and indicted on these new charges
in
September 2006. In May 2007, Bonneau admitted
violating supervised release and received nine
months in prison. He remained in custody prior
to entering his plea and being sentenced.
The Bonneau prosecution stemmed from a federal
investigation by the IRS and the FBI, and the
case was prosecuted by Assistant U.S. Attorney
Lance Caldwell.
“Mortgage fraud takes a direct
aim at the American dream of owning your own home,” said
David Ian Miller, Special Agent in Charge of the FBI
in Oregon. “On an individual
level,
the victims’ losses are heartbreaking.
On a national level, the damage to our economy
is
very
real.”
“The term ‘mortgage fraud’ is
a catch-all phrase describing the illegal activity,
but
it fails
to fully illustrate the lives shattered by
these schemes that plague the real estate business,” said
Kenneth J. Hines, the IRS Special Agent in
Charge of the Pacific-Northwest. “Fraudulent
mortgage practices motivated by greed victimize
individuals and businesses, including low-income
families lured into home loans they cannot
afford. Let today’s nationwide announcement
put these con artists on notice that their
days of stealing the American dream are numbered.”
U.S.
Attorney Karin Immergut praised the outstanding
cooperation of the participating
law enforcement agencies and expressed the
view that Operation Malicious Mortgage
will serve
to identify and bring to justice those
who use fraud for profit at the expense
of property
owners
and mortgage lenders.
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