3 indicted in scheme involving mortgages
3 men accused of perpetrating fraud in 8 Wasatch Front cities
A federal grand jury has indicted three people in a mortgage-fraud scheme involving a dozen homes along the Wasatch Front, the latest in a growing problem that has been frustrating federal authorities.
Ronald William Haycock Sr., 61; Lyle Clay Smith, 43; and Jamis Melwood Johnson, 57, were indicted on 10 counts of mail fraud, 12 counts of wire fraud, 15 counts of money laundering and a single charge of conspiracy. The 38-count indictment accuses the men of perpetrating a multimillion-dollar fraud scheme involving homes in Highland, Draper, Salt Lake City, Sandy, Pleasant Grove, Provo, Alpine and Farmington.
"They recruited straw buyers with good credit scores to use their names to purchase residences," U.S. Attorney for Utah Brett Tolman said Wednesday. "Haycock and Smith paid all the down payments, paid the monthly payments and controlled the properties."
The straw buyers were paid anywhere from $7,000 to $20,000 in incentive money to sign their names to the papers, Tolman said, while the accused men falsified loan applications, inflated appraisals and inflated the straw buyers' income — "sometimes as much as 400 to 500 percent of the straw buyers' income." The men also are accused of fabricating assets and siphoning excess proceeds from the loans.
"These were not unsophisticated defendants who engaged in misconduct but individuals with some knowledge who schemed in order to take advantage of unsuspecting homeowners, unsuspecting straw buyers and unsuspecting lenders," said Tim Fuhrman, the Special Agent-in-Charge of the Salt Lake City office of the FBI.
The indictment lists a number of mortgage lenders as "victims" of the scheme, and Tolman was unsure about whether the straw buyers were victims, too.
"We have seen in some instances where they are more akin to a victim. But we have also seen very sophisticated straw buyers, very aware of what is happening, contributing to the deceptions that were being placed on the mortgage industry," he said.
Tolman said they would look at each straw buyer and assess their level of sophistication in the scheme before deciding to pursue criminal charges against any of them.
The straw buyers were told they would have no financial risk and would not have to make payments or even occupy the home. But then the loans stopped being paid, "leaving the straw buyers with mortgages that they had no ability to repay, and mortgage lenders with non-performing loans secured by the properties worth far less than the outstanding loan balances," the indictment said.
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