Wall Street Journal Publishes Front Page Article on Website on Reverse Mortgage Fraud

This morning the Wall Street Journal published an article on reverse mortgage fraud on the front page of their website. It is likely the article will make it into tomorrow’s print edition.  The article focuses on the allegedly growing number of reverse mortgage scams, but a closer look at the cases in the article indicates that they appear to be more cases of elder abuse than problems with the reverse mortgage program.

In the case that leads off the article, the borrower was defrauded by the title agent, who defrauded 10 borrowers by taking their money and never giving it to the lender. The title agent, Garry Martin, pleaded guilty to stealing $5 million from over 50 borrowers in mortgage-related frauds. But as the perpetrator of the fraud was a title agent, not indicating a problem with the product at large.

The other two cases mentioned were examples of elder abuse or simple fraud. In one, the son took the mother’s payments. In another, the son took out a reverse mortgage in the name of a deceased mother. He even gave the funeral director an incorrect social security number and birthdate so that the death certificate could not be found by those with the correct information.  In both of these cases, the fraud extended far beyond a reverse mortgage.

Reverse mortgages have a lot of protection built in to protect borrowers from fraud, and loan officers in most states and specifically trained in order to discover and prevent fraud.  Fraud occurs with almost any financial product, but 29 suspected fraud cases out of 165,000 reverse mortgage loans still indicates a pretty safe product- with fraud only occuring at a rate of 0.02% of the time.

More information is also available at reverse mortgage fraud and scams.


 

Reverse Mortgage Fraud Part 3: And The Verdict Is…

Protect your identity. Fraud rates are increasing.

Protect your identity. Fraud rates are increasing.

We knew that the mortgage fraud was occurring. We imagined the number was increasing, but we never knew by how much… until now.  The Philadelphia Inquirer published a story today noting that mortgage fraud increased by 26% in 2008 vs. 2007. Application fraud accounted for 61% of the reported incidents.  The article specifically cites identity theft as being a source of fraud in reverse mortgage applications, allowing applicants to appear older (or perhaps younger) than they might otherwise be for the purpose of securing a better loan.

While these numbers include more than just reverse mortgages, they help provide factual support to the conclusion that mortgage fraud is more prevalent now than it was during the real estate boom.  Both lenders and mortgagors should use caution to make sure they do not become another statistic. The growing marketplace means more avenues are available to those wishing to commit mortgage fraud–regardless of which kind of mortgage the mortgagor wishes to take out.