'Solid Citizen' Profile Can Be A Sign Of Mortgage Fraud

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Kenneth R. Harney, Washington Post Writers Group

Published October 17, 2004



WASHINGTON -- When a home buyer has a high FICO credit score in the upper 700s, is self-employed with an annual income of more than $100,000, owns a few rental properties, is purchasing a house priced well above the area average and is buying it alone, what comes to mind?



Solid citizen? A good addition to the neighborhood? An excellent bet to get a big mortgage with a great rate? Sure.



But would you believe fraud? Would you believe that statistically the buyer with that profile is more likely than other loan applicants to be involved in some form of mortgage rip-off skulduggery.



Welcome to the booming -- and sometimes bizarre -- world of mortgage fraud.



With larceny in their hearts and sophisticated electronic document-preparation programs in their laptops, unethical mortgage loan officers, brokers, real estate agents and lawyers can create fake FICO credit scores, fake tax returns, fake identities and order up inflated appraisals.



And, according to witnesses at an Oct. 7 congressional hearing, mortgage fraud is now one of the hottest con games going.



An FBI assistant director testified that fraud is pervasive in the mortgage market and is growing fast.



Rep. Bob Ney (R-Ohio), chairman of a House financial services subcommittee, cited industry studies suggesting that "between 10 and 15 percent of all home loan applications involve some fraud or misrepresentation."



The potential costs to home buyers and mortgage lenders could be in the billions of dollars a year.



Some of the fraud may seem minor -- a little fibbing on the application about a borrower's income, or a lack of candor about where the buyer's down payment cash really came from.



But other fraud is far more organized.



In Charlotte, N.C., the FBI last month cracked a ring of 35 "mortgage industry insiders" who had combined to obtain 380 fraudulent home loans exceeding $70 million, according to Chris Swecker, Assistant FBI director for criminal investigations.



In Phoenix, 48 out of 64 home loans originated by one loan officer involved "pervasive document fabrications," according to HUD Inspector General Kenneth M. Donohue Sr.



Frequently, mortgage fraud ends up hurting innocent consumers too.



Marta McCall, senior vice president of San Diego-based American Mortgage Network, cited the example of a first-time buyer who was persuaded to purchase a property that was overvalued because of a fraudulent appraisal.



The seller pocketed big profits, but now the buyer finds herself unable to refinance and unable to pay off her loan by selling the house because the property is worth less than the mortgage amount.



Faced with more fraud than ever before, lenders nationwide are adopting defensive tactics to sniff out con jobs before they succeed.



In one instance described at the hearing, a lender has developed its own risk alert system based on statistical analysis of "red flags" associated with documented cases of fraud.



HSBC Mortgage Services Inc, of Prospect Heights, Ill., which specializes in loans to borrowers with credit problems, uses its proprietary FraudScore on all of its new mortgages. Some of the red flags are counterintuitive.



For example, Loren J. Morris, HSBC senior vice president, said in an interview that among the key telltale signs of fraud in applications are unusually high FICO scores combined with high incomes and higher-than-average mortgage amounts and home values for the neighborhood.



That may sound strange since all these characteristics would normally be associated with cream-puff, problem-free applicants.



But in the murky world of mortgage fraud, the bad guys know this too, and they often try to make a loan application "look as good as possible, so it will sail through" automated underwriting systems, said Morris.



Other red flags: self-employed, single purchasers who are buying a home but say they already own one or more rental houses.



HSBC's FraudScore system assigns weights to these and other factors -- including city and state -- on a scale of zero to 52.



When an applicant presents combined factor weights exceeding a score of 30, an alarm goes off and the company's fraud investigation procedures kick in.



What's the takeaway here for buyers and borrowers who harbor no fraud in their hearts?



First, be aware that mortgage cons are rapidly on the rise. Not all appraisers or loan officers you encounter are necessarily playing the game straight. Though they often target big lenders, con artists frequently harm innocent buyers who end up with loans they don't want, can't afford and can't get rid of.



Worse yet, if lenders keep losing millions of dollars to fraud, they're going to pass along those costs to all borrowers in the form of higher fees and interest rates.

Comments(2)

  • Darryle-CA29th October, 2004

    That was an excellent article.

  • ceinvests29th October, 2004

    I had read this in the Post's RE Section a few weeks ago. Excellent reading, btw, with Bob Bruss, Harney, and others.

    Anyway, it worried me, as I am now single, now self employed (even tho I might head back out there... and speaking of fraud, try the work word these days!!), an owner of several rentals, and have/had good scores per all the right reasons. My concern is that this new fraud trigger will go off w/the company and they will turn you away. period. end of story. I just had Citi close my zero bal long-standing credit card. No reason. They can 'just do that'. How do you prove that you are the honest but frugal person that you are?

    I am saddened by hearing what goes on in RE per 'flipping', scams, dishonesty and I support whatever has to be done to clear up the 'fraud', but I worry about labeling that when you do the right thing you could look like the 'counterfitters' per a computer.

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