LEADER OF FORECLOSURE RESCUE SCHEME AND MORTGAGE
BROKER PLEAD GUILTY TO MULTIMILLION DOLLAR FRAUD
MICHAEL J. GARCIA, the United States Attorney for the
Southern District of New York, announced that MAURICE McDOWALL
and ALEKSANDER LIPKIN, a/k/a "Alex," pleaded guilty today in
Manhattan federal court to participating in a wide-ranging home
foreclosure rescue scheme, which defrauded homeowners who were
facing foreclosure and banks and other lenders who made mortgage
and home equity loans. LIPKIN also pleaded guilty to
participating in another scheme to defraud numerous subprime
mortgage lenders. McDOWALL pleaded guilty before United States
District Judge ROBERT P. PATTERSON, and LIPKIN pleaded guilty
before United States District Judge RICHARD J. HOLWELL.
According to the Indictment to which both McDOWALL and LIPKIN
pleaded guilty (United States v. Maurice McDowall, et al., 07 Cr.
1054), and the superseding Indictment to which LIPKIN also
pleaded guilty (United States v. Aleksander Lipkin, et al., S2 06
Cr. 1179), other documents filed in the cases, and statements
made during the guilty plea proceedings:
The Foreclosure Rescue Scheme
From November 2003 through April 2005, McDOWALL and
LIPKIN engaged in a fraud scheme targeting homeowners whose
homes, primarily in Brooklyn and Bronx, were in foreclosure or
facing foreclosure, by offering them a plan to "save" their
homes. The proposed plan included the refinancing of the
homeowners' debt with new, larger mortgages. Because the
distressed homeowners typically had poor credit and were not
eligible to refinance their debt at favorable terms, the
defendants induced them to "sell" their homes to third parties,
or "straw buyers," who would apply for loans to be used to "save"
the home. The defendants promised that once the straw buyer
obtained the mortgage, the proceeds would be used to pay off the
homeowners’ old debt and make one year’s worth of payments on the
new loans. The homeowners were told that, during that year, they
could continue to live in their homes and work on improving their
finances and credit. Finally, the defendants explained to the
homeowners that, at the end of the year, the title to their homes
would be returned to them by the straw buyers, with their credit
repaired and their homes saved. There were also cases in which
the defendants did not explain to homeowners that the plan to "save" their home required them to deed their house to a third
party and did not obtain permission to deed the homes to others.
In such cases, the defendants effectively stole the property of
the homeowners by forging the homeowners' signatures on various
documents that transferred the homes to straw buyers without the
homeowners' knowledge.
In furtherance of the scheme, McDOWALL and LIPKIN
submitted loan applications to various banks and lending
institutions on the straw buyer's behalf. In submitting these
applications, the defendants regularly used documents containing
false or misleading information, including information concerning
the straw buyer's income, assets, and existing debt, to improve
the straw buyer's credit-worthiness. In addition to false
statements concerning the straw buyers' financial profile, the
defendants misrepresented to lenders that the straw buyers intended to reside in the property that would secure each
mortgage or loan, when, in fact, the properties were already
occupied by the distressed homeowners.
McDOWALL, who directed the daily operations of the
scheme, and LIPKIN, a mortgage broker who coordinated the
submission of fraudulent information to lenders on behalf of
straw buyers, obtained more than eighty home mortgages and/or
equity loans valued at over $20 million. In some instances, the
defendants failed to make even one payment on the loans, causing
the loans to default immediately; in nearly every other case,
they eventually failed to make the payments and defaulted on the
loans, thereby "cashing out" on the properties. As a result, the distressed homeowners lost the titles to their homes and faced
eviction, the straw buyers owed the lenders hundreds of thousands
of dollars that they were unable to repay, and the lenders
suffered losses from the defaulted loans.
The defendants' profit consisted of the difference
between the value of the new and old loans; they also earned at
least $1.4 million in fees.
The Subprime Scheme
From 2004 through January 2007, LIPKIN participated in
a scheme to defraud various subprime banks and lending
institutions. LIPKIN conspired with other mortgage brokers and
processors who worked at the mortgage brokerages AGA Capital NY,
Inc. ("AGA Capital") and Northside Capital NY, Inc. ("Northside
Capital"), in Brooklyn, as well as with real estate appraisers,
loan account executives, a paralegal, a lawyer, straw buyers, and
others. LIPKIN and his co-defendants submitted loan applications
and supporting documents with false information and material
omissions, as well as other false documentation such as bank
statements, to subprime lenders in order to induce the lenders to make loans that otherwise would not have been funded. In some
instances, the conspirators obtained mortgages in the names of
persons whose identities had been stolen. During the course of
this scheme, AGA Capital, its successor, Lending Universe
Corporation, and Northside Capital brokered over one thousand
home mortgages and home equity loans with a total face value of
at least $200 million dollars. AGA Capital, Lending Universe and
Northside Capital earned a total of at least $4 million in
commission fees on the loans. The subprime lenders that issued
the mortgages and loans brokered by Northside Capital, AGA
Capital and Lending Universe have suffered actual losses of at
least $4.5 million as a result of the fraud scheme.
McDOWALL, 49, pleaded guilty to one count of conspiracy
to commit bank and wire fraud. He faces a maximum prison term of
thirty years and a maximum fine of the greater of $1 million or
twice the gross pecuniary gain or loss resulting from the crime,
and he must pay restitution to the victims of his crime. In
addition, McDOWALL also agreed to forfeit a total of $2.5
million. He is scheduled to be sentenced by Judge PATTERSON on
September 9, 2008.
LIPKIN, 29, pleaded guilty to one count of conspiracy
to commit mail, wire and bank fraud. He faces a maximum prison
term of thirty years and a maximum fine of the greater of $1
million or twice the gross pecuniary gain or loss resulting from
the crime, and he must pay restitution to the victims of his
crime. LIPKIN also agreed to forfeit a total of $7 million. He
is scheduled to be sentenced by Judge HOLWELL on October 10,
2008.
Of the four other defendants charged in United States
v. Maurice McDowall, et al., one has pleaded guilty and the rest
await trial, which is scheduled for June 23, 2008. As to the
defendants awaiting trial, the charges are merely accusations,
and the defendants are presumed innocent unless and until proven
guilty. Of the 26 other defendants charged in United States v.
Aleksander Lipkin, et al., four have pleaded guilty and the rest
await trial, which is scheduled for November 17, 2008. As to the
latter group, the charges are merely accusations, and the defendants are presumed innocent unless and until proven guilty.
Mr. GARCIA praised the efforts of the Federal Bureau of
Investigation, New York City Police Department, and U.S.
Immigration and Customs Enforcement. He also thanked the New
York State Attorney General's Office for its outstanding work in
the investigation.
Assistant United States Attorneys KATHERINE R.
GOLDSTEIN and JONATHAN B. NEW are in charge of the prosecution.
08-133