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WESTSIDE
MORTGAGE BANKER AGREES TO PLEAD GUILTY IN MULTI-MILLION DOLLAR 'PROPERTY-FLIPPING'
FRAUD SCHEME
Former Bank
Insider Will Pay At Least $2.75 Million In Restitution
A West Los Angeles mortgage banker has agreed to plead guilty to federal
criminal charges in a massive mortgage fraud scam that caused more than
$18.5 million in losses to banks, including his former employer.
This afternoon in United States District Court in Los Angeles, federal
prosecutors filed criminal charges against Richard A. Maize, 53, of Beverly
Hills. Maize, a co-founder of Americorp Funding, a mortgage banking company
with offices in West Los Angeles and Pasadena, was charged with one count
of conspiracy to commit bank fraud and loan fraud, three counts of bank
fraud and one count of making a false statement on a federal tax return.
In a plea agreement also filed today, Maize agreed to plead guilty to
the five felony counts and to cooperate in the government's ongoing probe
of the scheme.
Americorp originated, brokered, funded and sold mortgage loans. Maize
was Americorp's top-producing mortgage banker, closing more than $192
million in loans in 2001 and more than $245 million in loans in 2002.
Maize owned 45 percent of Americorp until about December 2000, when he
and his partners sold Americorp to Prism Mortgage Company (later known
as RBC Mortgage Company). At that time, Maize became the president of
the Americorp division of a Prism/RBC subsidiary.
According to court documents, Maize and five others previously charged
in the case were involved in a wide-ranging and sophisticated conspiracy
to defraud federally insured mortgage lenders out of tens of millions
of dollars. As part of the scam, the conspirators obtained inflated mortgage
loans on expensive homes in some of California's most exclusive neighborhoods,
including Beverly Hills, Bel Air, Holmby Hills and Malibu.
Five people have previously been charged in the scam. They are: oCharles
Elliott Fitzgerald, 47, of Newbury Park;
· Mark Alan Abrams, 45, of Long Beach;
· Nicole LaViolette, 37, of Palm Springs;
· Jamieson Matykowski, 33, of Laguna Niguel; and
· Timothy Holland, 35, of Santa Ana.
Fitzgerald, who is in custody, is scheduled to go on trial on July 31
on a host of federal charges related to the alleged scheme. The other
four previously charged have pleaded guilty to charges related to the
fraud scheme and are pending sentencing.
According to court documents, in late 1999 or early 2000, Fitzgerald and
Abrams started a mortgage brokering company called Desert Pacific Financial,
Inc. (DPF). The company sent mortgage loan applications to lenders for
review and funding, and received commissions from those lenders when the
loans closed. In late 2001, Fitzgerald and Abrams renamed the company
Beverly Hills Estates Funding, Inc. (BHEF).
Fitzgerald and Abrams purchased homes at their real market values. Abrams
and his associates then recruited "straw borrowers" to obtain the inflated
loans that were used to purchase homes from Fitzgerald and Abrams. The
straw borrowers allowed the conspirators to use their names and credit
to obtain mortgages as part of this "property-flipping" process. Armed
with inflated appraisals and other false documentation, the conspirators
submitted false and inflated loan application packages. As president of
Americorp, Maize had contacts and business relationships with the victim
lenders, which he exploited to deceive the victim lenders into approving
and funding the inflated loans. He also abused his position as president
and defrauded his employer, Prism/RBC, by deceiving the company into funding
the inflated loans.
As one example, the case against Maize details the purchase by Fitzgerald
and Abrams of a Bel Air home for $735,000. When they flipped the property,
they "sold" the residence to a straw borrower for $2.37 million. A bogus
loan application package went to Lehman Brothers Bank, and the bank unwittingly
funded a loan of more than $1.4 million on the property - nearly double
the true $735,000 purchase price - almost all of which ended up in one
of the in-house escrow companies controlled by Fitzgerald and Abrams.
According to the Maize charges, Lehman Brothers Bank alone was deceived
into funding about 40 such inflated loans from March 2000 through July
2002. These 40 loans were for more than $28 million over the true prices
of the homes. According to court documents, Maize received hundreds of
thousands of dollars in kickbacks for his assistance in getting the loans
approved. In 2001, he failed to report more than $175,000 of these kickbacks
on his federal tax return.
Maize faces a maximum possible sentence of 98 years in federal prison.
In his plea agreement, Maize has agreed to pay $2.75 million in restitution
prior to his sentencing, although he may be ordered to pay more at sentencing.
The charges against Maize and the others are part of an ongoing investigation
being conducted by the Federal Bureau of Investigation and IRS-Criminal
Investigation Division.
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