BALTIMORE—U.S. District Judge Catherine
C. Blake sentenced Todd R. Bettin, age 42, of Crofton, Maryland, to 51 months
in prison, followed by three years of supervised release, for conspiracy to
commit wire fraud in connection with a five-year scheme to divert or hold
mortgage payoff funds from clients’ closings on 17 Maryland properties. Judge
Blake also ordered Pierce to pay restitution of $3,392,047.51.
The sentence and guilty plea was
announced by United States Attorney for the District of Maryland Rod J.
Rosenstein; Special Agent in Charge Richard A. McFeely of the Federal Bureau of
Investigation; Special Agent in Charge Joseph Clarke of the U.S. Housing and
Urban Development Office of Inspector General-Office of Investigations; and
Howard County Police Chief William McMahon.
According to his plea agreement, Bettin
was the assistant manager of At Home Mortgage, owned by co-conspirator Gary
Pierce, who also owned and managed At Home Settlements LCC, in Gambrills,
Maryland. At Home Settlements provided settlement services and sold title
insurance policies to clients who were buying homes or refinancing existing
properties.
In 2007 Bettin refinanced the mortgage
on his home. Pierce acted as the settlement agent. Rather than paying off the
original mortgage as required, Bettin kept the payoff amount and never informed
the original lender that he had refinanced the property. Also in 2007, Pierce
obtained a mortgage loan on a property in Edgewater that he did not own. Bettin
acted as the loan officer on the transaction. Bettin and Pierce created false
documents purporting to show that Pierce owned the property and provided those fraudulent
documents to the lender. Bettin and Pierce used the funds obtained from the
lender to perpetuate the scheme and each personally diverted $50,000 to
themselves. The true owner of the property had no knowledge that documents had
been created purporting to show that the property had been sold to Pierce.
Beginning in 2007, Bettin and Pierce
diverted or held mortgage payoff funds from clients’ closings for a matter of
days, weeks, and sometimes years. Pierce falsely represented on HUD-1 forms
sent to the borrower’s lender that the payoff was made, when, in fact, Pierce
intended to divert the funds. Bettin and Pierce fabricated wire confirmation
reports, which purported to be a bank record of the transfer, to include in
loan files. These were created in advance of audits in order to deceive the
title insurers. Additionally, to forestall discovery by the lenders, Bettin and
Pierce contacted the mortgage lender who should have been paid off and posed as
the borrower/homeowner. Bettin would either create an online profile for the
borrower and stop any mail from being sent to the borrower, or he would tell
the lender that his, the borrower’s, address had changed and would re-direct
the lender to send all correspondence to a post office box owned by Pierce. Bettin
would then make monthly mortgage payments to the existing lender. Believing
that the bank had been paid off as a result of the settlement, the borrower
stopped making monthly payments on that mortgage. And since that lender was
receiving monthly payments, it had no reason to notify the borrower of any
delinquency. With no delinquency in the account, the scheme went undetected.
Because the existing mortgages were not
paid off, the liens against the property were not removed and clear title could
not be passed to the new lender and borrower. The total amount of diverted or
otherwise improperly obtained funds totals $4,971,380.
Judge Blake previously sentenced Gary
Pierce, age 44, of Edgewater, Maryland, to six years in prison and ordered
Pierce to pay restitution of $4,174,044.41.
The Maryland Mortgage Fraud Task Force
was established to unify the agencies that regulate and investigate mortgage
fraud and promote the early detection, identification, prevention, and
prosecution of mortgage fraud schemes. This case, as well as other cases
brought by members of the task force, demonstrates the commitment of law
enforcement agencies to protect consumers from fraud and promote the integrity
of the credit markets. Information about mortgage fraud prosecutions is
available www.justice.gov/usao/md/Mortgage-Fraud/index.html.
This law enforcement action is part of
President Barack Obama’s Financial Fraud Enforcement Task Force. President
Obama established the interagency Financial Fraud Enforcement Task Force to wage
an aggressive, coordinated, and proactive effort to investigate and prosecute
financial crimes. The task force includes representatives from a broad range of
federal agencies, regulatory authorities, inspectors general, and state and
local law enforcement who, working together, bring to bear a powerful array of
criminal and civil enforcement resources. The task force is working to improve
efforts across the federal executive branch and, with state and local partners,
to investigate and prosecute significant financial crimes, ensure just and
effective punishment for those who perpetrate financial crimes, combat
discrimination in the lending and financial markets, and recover proceeds for
victims of financial crimes.
United States Attorney Rod J. Rosenstein
thanked the FBI, HUD-OIG, and Howard County Police Department for their work in
the investigation. Mr. Rosenstein commended Assistant U.S. Attorney Leo J.
Wise, who prosecuted the case.
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