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Mortgage-fraud crackdown
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Until, of course, the market turns, and then everybody starts pointing fingers. Nobody involved in this whole sordid process is innocent. It's very hard to cheat an honest man.
Title to the property should be imediately given to the mortagee and all fees reversed. The mortgage loan should be cancelled and recorded as paid in full. Only the home owner comes out ahead.
It should be the responsibility of the Investor to guarentee the honosty and legality of the transaction. Investors who fail to practice good principals should be heavily fined and removed from the mortgage market.
With mortgage brokers/loan officers, you find that the only way that they can commit fraud is not by lying on the loan but by creating the documents to support that lie. That happens but nowhere near what is perceived. Out of several thousand loan officers in the state maybe a hundred plus do something like this. That means 97%+ are completely on the up and up.
And besides for a few years there was a loan called a No Doc loan. No documentation, proof of income, bank statements, W-2s, tax returns reviewed. Nothing! The only thing they do is look at your credit. If they think your credit supports the income you claim, and the income you claim is in line with reasonable industry earnings, you get the loan. Basically no questions asked beyond credit and type of job. And they don't even verify that you have the job.
Why would a loan officer commit fraud when they can do a No Doc loan?
The Mortgage Mistake in Utah
Dave thought he was becoming a real estate investor. �Good credit was a curse,� he says. Dave says it was his good credit alone that bought a home in Draper and a house in St. George, both with no money out of his pocket. Now at the age of 27, Dave owes more than a million dollars in mortgage loans.
Sounds like he makes a lot of money, but quite the opposite is true. Dave is a college student and waits tables after school. He makes maybe $11,000 a year, yet he bought the Draper house for more than $700,000.�