Expose Realtors ~ Email me Your Story

NAR is NOT listening, State Realtor Associations is NOT Listening,
Law Makers - Attorneys - Judges are Not Listening..
State Real Estate Boards Are NOT Listening...

Title Companies, Lawyers, Good Realtors ...
Can DO Nothing.. so Email ME
Crystal L. Cox Real Estate Whistleblower
and Get your Story Heard...
Expose Realtors on our
Real Estate Industry Whistleblower...
Tell your Story...

Crystal@CrystalCox.com

NAR - the Ultimate Wolf in Sheeps Clothing

NAR - the Ultimate Wolf in Sheeps Clothing
Time to Hold NAR Accountable
to Those Code of Ethics
that are Simply Gibberish
they make Newbies Swear to
But have No Intention
or System in Place to
Make this REALLY Happen.

Time For the Truth About
the National Association of Realtors.

the National Association of Realtors is a Hoax.

NAR is NOT of a "Higher Standard" as they Claim to Be.

NAR does not Provide Consumer Protection in ANY way.

The National Association of Realtors NEEDS

you to REALLY buy into the Illusion that they
are the "Voice of Real Estate"
that way you will Simply not know that you can use
a Real Estate Broker that is NOT Part of the
Real Estate Cartel known as
National Association of Realtors.

And You Believe that an NAR Member Offers you
More Protection in your Real Estate Transaction
When In Fact that is a Flat Out Lie.

NAR is so Engrained in your Life that ALL of you Use
the Word "Realtor" for the WordS "Real Estate Agent"
though NAR tells me that is Illegal. Law Books Do it, you Do it
But NAR wants to STOP me from Doing it.

The National Association of Realtors
Violates Anti-Trust Laws, Violates Mortgage Laws,
Violates RESPA Laws, they pay Attorneys to
Advise members at the State Association Level
that is Information Biased on What NAR Needs
to be the Course of Action, to Keep NAR in Business.

Even to the Point of Convincing Members they
are doing something Illegal when they try and
benefit the Real Estate Consumer.

NAR Pushes State Real Estate Governing Agencies
to Make E and O insurance Mandated -
when in FACT this E and O insurance is What Enables
the Realtor to Legally Committ Fraud and
there is nothing you Can do unless you have
BIG Money and a WHOLE lot of Years to Fight.

The National Association of Realtor IS NOT the
Voice Of Real Estate. NO WAY.


Lenders and Realtors

Lender Fraud Real Estate Fraud
Mortgage fraud's costs go beyond the loan
Widespread mortgage fraud has completely skewed home prices in some neighborhoods and raised questions about the late days of the housing boom.

Kai Ryssdal: Even as the housing market gropes for the end of its slide, those rising interest rates aren't making mortgages any cheaper. Unless you cheat.
A new study from the Mortgage Asset Research Institute says mortgage fraud in 2006 was up 30 percent from the year before. The head of the Mortgage Bankers Association figures that's just the tip of the iceberg, because the number included only included banks — not private lenders that aren't federally insured.
From WCPN in Cleveland, Mhari Saito reports that in some neighborhoods, fraud has completely skewed home prices and raised questions about the late days of the housing boom.
Mhari Saito: When contractor Chris Mansour bought his $340,000 home in the Cleveland suburb of Solon four years ago, he was moving up. His daughters could go to one of the region's best public schools. They could do their homework in their roomy, eat-in kitchen, or play in the living room with vaulted ceilings.
But it wasn't long before police started to regularly visit homes on the street and neighbors started to move in the middle of the night.
Chris Mansour: Well, like one particular house two doors down from me at this point has had six different residents in four years. And that's not an exaggeration. And actually seeing people on the street move from one residence to another residence on this same street . . . I mean, just something didn't make sense.
Over half of the homes on his street are being investigated for mortgage fraud.
Solon police say everyone — from the builder to the mortgage broker to the title company — were in on taking out loans and splitting the cash, with no intention of repaying them. Often, fraudulent owners had the cheek to rent the homes out for more cash. Some scammers did make mortgage payments as they borrowed still more by refinancing or taking out equity lines.
Solon detective Christopher Viland:
Christopher Viland: While the housing market was good and they could keep transactions going to keep themselves afloat, it didn't come to anybody's attention. So it wasn't until the market went into a slump and people couldn't make the notes anymore that a lot of these things came to light.
One of the homes under investigation was bought with a loan from Argent, one of the country's 10 largest subprime lenders. A spokesman for the Orange Country company says Argent has zero tolerance for fraud, and procedures to prevent it.
But Cleveland-area appraiser Robert Ruckstuhl says lenders were simply too focused on making money to notice.
Robert Ruckstuhl: How many times can you see the same names of the same brokers, or same loan officers, or the same borrowers coming through your system and not raise a question or raise a red flag?
Prosecutors are finding mortgage fraud all over the country. The FBI calls it one of the fastest-growing economic crimes, skimming at least $1 billion off the lending industry in 2005. Experts say the boom in mortgage fraud is tied directly to the boom in subprime lending and relaxed underwriting standards.
Scott Gilbert: As the lenders loosened up their rules, it made it easier for fraudsters to come in and take advantage of those changes to the rules.
Scott Gilbert heads the white-collar crime unit for the Cleveland FBI office. The so-called industry innovation that makes him the craziest are no-document loans. These are mortgages that require little or no proof of income. Last year, nearly half of all subprime loans were no-doc loans.
Gilbert: It's much easier to commit fraud, because you can fake the bank statements and there's no real verification of history or work employment.
In 2005, Eloise Anderson used no-document loans to borrow over a million dollars to buy four homes in five months, including one in Solon. Not bad for a U.S. postal worker making $55,000 a year. A county grand jury said Anderson lied to lenders about her income. She didn't return calls.
Dale Grubb lives across the street from one of Anderson's houses. He says he saw various people going in and out, but didn't know who they were. And the most upsetting thing is not knowing what the fraud will do to his biggest asset.
Dale Grubb: If we needed to sell the house, we have no idea what value it now has, given that we have a large inventory of houses now on the street in foreclosure at a questionable value — nowhere near what their actual value is.
Many in the industry, like Detroit realtor Ralph Roberts, say at the end of the housing boom, lenders were frantically boosting their loan volume and selling off loans to Wall Street. Many lenders rewarded local brokers that sent borrowers their way with hefty commissions.
Ralph Roberts: They were getting millions of dollars in bonuses for bringing business in the front door. Well the problem is the quality control on those deals coming in the front door wasn't being managed.
In Ohio, a new state law has clamped down on no-document loans, and prosecutors have launched highly public anti-mortgage fraud efforts.
But privately, law enforcement isn't so sure anyone will ever pay for the damage. That's because sentences for mortgage fraud are relatively light — from two to six years — and that's if defendants get jail time.

Read more...

Real Estate Fraud

Real Estate Fraud News
Former Edmond real estate agent Ann Campbell is going to federal prison.
Campbell, 66, has been sentenced to two months, plus two years of supervised release and fined $4,000 for conspiracy to commit wire fraud in connection with mortgage fraud in the sale of homes in Edmond's upscale Oak Tree addition.


She also was ordered to pay $52,490 in restitution. She remains free on bail until reporting to prison or a magistrate no later than July 16, court documents show.
The prison's location could not be confirmed late Thursday.
Campbell — Theresa Ann Campbell in court documents — had asked U.S. District Judge Joe Heaton for probation, citing her failing health and extensive community and church service over the course of a real estate career that spanned more than 30 years.
Through her attorney, Dan Webber, she declined to comment.
"Ann is glad this episode is behind her,” Webber said. "She just wants to complete her short sentence and return to her family.”
Webber said the judge considered her poor health and community service — and the fact that she already had had her state-issued real estate license revoked — in handing down the sentence.
After a two-hour sentencing hearing May 29, Heaton opted to follow sentencing guidelines less than the 10 to 16 months he could have considered for the conviction, Webber said.
Campbell was involved in three home sales that involved mortgage fraud, prosecutors said. She pleaded guilty in December to conspiracy to commit wire fraud in the sale of a home at 5916 Morning Dove Lane near her own home.
Prosecutors said Campbell, representing the seller of the house, conspired with another agent representing the buyer to falsify a document that said the seller would pay certain closing costs that then were "kicked back” to the buyer through a title company account belonging to Campbell. The original list price of the home, $235,000, was raised to $310,000 on documents used at closing, prosecutors said.
Webber said Thursday that he and prosecutors agreed that Campbell did not know how "phony repair allowances” or down-payment assistance funds in the deal were to be used and that she "did not receive a dollar” from them. He said he and the government also agreed at the sentencing hearing that "there were three properties that had something not properly reported” on closing documents. Several others involved in mortgage fraud in Oak Tree remain to be sentenced. Campbell was the most prominent of those investigated.
Campbell is no longer a Realtor, said Connie Hamilton, president of the Edmond Board of Realtors. Hamilton said Campbell's membership in the trade organization ended when the state revoked her real estate license in January.
The Oklahoma Real Estate Commission's investigation of Ruth Boss, Campbell's sponsoring broker at RE/MAX Associates in Edmond, continues, a spokeswoman said Thursday. Boss is a co-owner of Dominion Group, which owns RE/MAX Associates.

Read more...

Other Sites..

www.CrystalCox.com

www.BrokersZone.com

Real Estate Whistleblower

www.BrokersConsultations.com

SavvyBroker.com

Crystal L. Cox
Real Estate Whistleblower

Consumer Advocate in Real Estate

  © Free Blogger Templates Columnus by Ourblogtemplates.com 2008

Back to TOP