mandag den 9. juli 2012

Bradley Associates: Learn more about real estate and mortgage fraud


Every day, in every city across the country share real estate industry professionals and consumers and homeowners both fraudulent real estate transactions. Many are fulfilling a carefully orchestrated scheme, while others genuinely unaware that their actions are those fines, loss of license status (for industry professionals), or even jail time could bring. They believe what they are doing is legal and condoned because "so many established people are the same thing."
The key to the prevention and detection of fraud knowledge - by understanding what fraud is and how it works yourself as a homeowner can protect, and if you are a professional real estate industry, you important steps to your business and protect your customers .
According to the FBI, real estate fraud is one of the fastest growing white-collar crimes in the United States, and is committed in many ways, including:
• Artificially inflating the value of a home for a larger loan.
• Inflating the value of a house so the buyer money back at closing can receive.
• Filing false documents to secure financing, including Category: false salary and fake W-2.
• Taking multiple mortgages on a property that collectively much larger than the value of the property.
• Selling a house without disclosing to the buyer that a tenant.
• The same house sold to different buyers.

Bradley Associates said, "It does not matter what your role in a real estate deal is getting, you have the unique opportunity to affect the validity of the transaction." Every real estate transaction represents an opportunity for a fair experience, and every person who you work with has a responsibility to continue the transaction with the same integrity. When a borrower is passed from REALTOR to loan officer to processor underwriter to lender title and escrow, there are hundreds of opportunities for fraud. If you know what to look for (and refrain from infringing on the law itself), you can have a significant positive impact on the quality of the transaction.

Fraud for property
While fraud has evolved and become more complex as technology has improved and become more difficult to identify fakes, there are two basic types of real estate fraud: fraud for property and fraud for profit. In a transaction fraud for property, the loan application completed with falsified information, with the goal of someone in a loan that would not otherwise qualify. For example, a borrower's offer changed paycheck, "multiply" to their credit score, or claim that their deposit was a gift when in fact a loan from a third party (also called a "silent second" mentioned). Some applicants commit this fraud on their own and may or may not realize the seriousness of their actions, while others are "coach" by their broker or loan officer to distort the facts. It is often (and wrongly) considered a "crime" because the end result is someone getting the house of their dreams. This is a romanticized notion to say the least. When borrowers houses they can not afford to buy, they are at risk of defaulting and foreclosures. Where, perhaps a delinquency will not topple the real estate market - but believes that in the last quarter of 2005, the MBA reported a national delinquency rate of 4.44 percent, from nearly 41 million loans. That's a big hit for the industry to take.
Fraud-For-Profit
Alternately, is usually a fraud-for-profit scam designed to manipulate the lender of conspiring with appraisers, straw buyers or other insiders. These arrangements are more difficult to detect because there are often multiple people involved, and you may not know who is the "up and up." This is why it is so important to always work with associates you trust and confidence in . For brokers, will choose your appraiser, title company, or other industry partner based on price alone does not help you measure their value, as in most aspects of the real estate world are strong, reliable relationships are essential.
On the other hand, if you engaged in purchasing a new or second home, try to get an idea of ​​your broker ethics, procedures and fraud to gain knowledge. Even if the REALTOR an established figure in the industry, not assume that he / she is immune to fraud. Know your broker and do not be afraid to tell them when you feel their actions violate the law.

Four common arrangements should be on the lookout for the following:
Appraisal Fraud: A property is over - or undervalued, often because of pressure from loan originators and real estate agents reports Change. This pressure can be negative (yelling or threatening) or seemingly positive (gifts and other illegal kickbacks).

Mirror: A house is bought and "flipped" or sold immediately for a strict inflated price, often upwards of 30 to 50 percent of the original selling price. That first transaction is often hidden from the lender. The loan was never repaid and the lender is left high and dry.

Identity Theft: This can vary from to steal the identity of a client, for the use of false names to take out loans, appraisers to use another person's name to false valuations. Identity theft is fast, and almost impossible to find someone whose real identity you do not know after the loan is likely to be completed.

Straw buyers: One person (or company) pays someone else to pose as the home buyer, using their own information and credit score for buying a property. The scammers then take over the title and mortgage. In essence, the lenders think that they're lending money to a person, when in reality, the house owned by someone else.

Prevention of fraud
In 2005, more than 21,994 suspicious activity reports filed within the real estate, but only three percent were ever investigated. Imagine if you only three percent of the items on your task list is complete - you would be frustrated, scrambling for resources, and serious need of help. That is how the financial institution fraud unit of the FBI feels. Without sufficient resources, or a way agreed to finance all these cases, the FBI and other law enforcement officials left treading water.
So what can you do? Take action if you suspect that fraud. Do your due diligence on your broker, and if you are a professional real estate industry yourself, do your due diligence on any real estate transaction that on your desk to catch false information before a loan is closed, the chance of fraud. You never know who is involved in the deal, and which may have ulterior motives. Check the property background, look for recent sales, and get a second opinion if you think the numbers just are not right. Questions for backup control of questionable information.

If you know that someone has committed fraud, abuse. If you let it go, you can bet that person will continue to benefit from another unsuspecting homeowner or real estate business.

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