Credit Investor, Straw Buyers, and Mortgage Fraud

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I know many of you may know or have heard that the FBI has is cracking down on mortgage fraud and in their attempt to due so certain


practices that a lot of investors use may be subject to criticism and prosecution. A hot topic of discussion these days along these lines


is what is consider a credit investor in a real estate


transaction? Is a credit investor legal? And how is a credit investor


different from a straw buyer?



I will answer these questions showing three major 3 differences


between a legitimate credit investor from a bogus straw buyer.





A straw buyer uses a stolen identity or lies on the loan application to qualify for owner-occupied financing;



A credit buyer uses their own identity and their credit is good enough to qualify for non-owner occupied financing.



A straw buyer is offered money just for the use of their name on the loan application and may never even know what the investment is.



A credit partner is involved in the decision making process, understands the investment, and is offered a split of the proceeds when the deal is profitable.



A straw buyer transfers title and relinquishes control to the mastermind behind the scheme once financing is in place.
A credit partner remains on title with the other partners (eg. tenants

in common, tenants by the entirety, etc.) or arranges to have title held in escrow (eg. a land trust) until the property is sold and profit is split between the partners.



These qualifications in my opinion are the finer distinctions that help investors use a credit investor is the appropriate way.

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