Loan Fraud Flashcards
Mortgage loan fraud consequences
Punishable by
* For making a fraudulent or false statement, up to five years in jail and/or a $100,000 fine
* For submission of a false mortgage loan application, conspiracy to commit fraud, or bank fraud, up to 30 years in jail and/or a $1 million fine
If loan goes into default and it is determined that fraud occurred in the origination of the loan
* The lender will often require the originating broker/lender to repurchase the loan
* The lender may also require an originating broker/lender to repurchase a loan in the event of early default (serious delinquency or in default within the first year), even if the loan did not result from mortgage fraud
Fraud red flags
(see also Red Flags Rule)
- Long or unrealistic commute from work to home
- Buyer is downgrading from a larger to a smaller home, unless empty-nesters
- The new home is too small to accommodate all the intended occupants
- Down payment is in a form other than cash
- Borrower claims they are going to resell the current home but have not put it on the market
- Deposit is a promissory note
- Stocks and bonds shown as assets are not from a publicly-traded company
- Face value of a life insurance policy is shown as a liquid asset
- Borrower is buying an investment property but currently renting their own home
- Price and date of the original purchase are not shown on a refinance application
- Borrower and co-borrower work for the same employer or hold stock in the employer
- Practice tip: discern whether they might be self-employed
- Same phone number is used for home and business
- Value of personal property is greater than one year’s salary
- New housing expenses are more than 150% of current housing expenses
- A high-income borrower discloses little or no personal property
- The credit report shows a DBA or AKA, particularly if this was not disclosed by the applicant
- Debt obligations are too high with respect to declared salary
- Significant differences between the handwritten and typed loan application
- Invalid Social Security Number
- **Years of schooling **are not consistent with stated job or profession
- Discrepancies between dates on application and verification forms
- Sales price is far below the property’s market value
- Deposit check dates are inconsistent
- Name and/or address on the deposit/down payment check are different from the borrower’s
- More than one purchase contract are used
- Large, recent deposits
- Earnest money/binder** check are not cashed**
- Borrower is not the purchaser shown on the contract (i.e., a straw buyer)
- Borrower is purchasing a home near the previous home to use as a primary residence