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Utah man to serve 4 years for fraud

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Ms. Loving | 12:48 p.m. July 9, 2009
White collar criminals deserve death.
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FBI NuT | 3:57 p.m. July 9, 2009
This article fails to mention the 15+ innocent poeple involved that fell victim to Baylor's fraudulent claims.
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Happens all the time. | 6:36 a.m. July 10, 2009
This is normal in the business world, take out several loans on the same property or development when one falls through. The intent is always fraud and common in Utah politics by all developers and public officials. Why aren't they being investigated and prosecuted for defrauding the public? Friends in high places?
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Numbers | 8:21 a.m. July 10, 2009
Doesn't seem like the article included all the data...in my mind a $1.2M fine doesn't equal the $1.2M + $920k loans he received. Maybe I need to learn the New Math or something to make it reconcile.
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FBI NuT | 2:58 p.m. July 10, 2009
If deliberate actions like forging signatures, submitting false deeds of re-conveyance, and creating false identities are all "normal" in the business world, then our world is in serious trouble!
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