Feds charge 530 in widespread homeowner fraud case
WASHINGTONFederal investigators have charged 530 people for allegedly defrauding more than 73,000 desperate homeowners around the country who fell behind on mortgage payments, leaving them vulnerable to con artists offering to help them avoid foreclosure.
At a news conference discussing the results of a yearlong probe, Attorney General Eric Holder and Housing and Urban Development Secretary Shaun Donovan estimated the homeowners lost more than $1 billion in the fraud schemes.
- FTC sues firms in mortgage aid scam crackdown
- Feds shut down high-tech mortgage scammers
- Foreclosure fraud whistleblower wins $18 million settlement
- "Storm Chasers" scamming homeowners after storms
According to court records in the 285 criminal cases brought in the investigation, the struggling homeowners would pay substantial fees with promises that so-called investors would purchase the victims' mortgages. Other homeowners paid hefty fees in exchange for what turned out to be false promises that more favorable mortgage terms would be negotiated on their behalf.
Popular on CBSNews.com
- Tsarnaev friend implicates dead brother, self in murders 156 Comments
- Victims of deadly Oklahoma tornado 6 Photos
- Minn. park landslide leaves 1 child dead, 1 missing
- Up-close video of Moore, Okla., tornado Play Video
- Oklahoma tornado as seen by storm chasers Play Video
- Over 50 injured following Ind. school buses crash
- Boy Scouts to vote on allowing openly gay members
- Deadliest U.S. tornadoes 10 Photos
- linkicon reporticon emailicon
- The scammers are at it again, first in the mortgage scandals with the help of big banks and wall street, now again preying on people in trouble with their mortgages because of the recession. Until the Feds charge and convict a bunch of these crooks the problems they create will continue to ruin people's lives.
- reply
- linkicon reporticon emailicon
- That sounds like an epidemic of crime to me.
- reply














