On June 15, 2018, a federal jury in West Palm Beach,
Florida, convicted Vero Beach attorney Eric B. Granitur, 60, of participating
in a criminal conspiracy and making false statements to a federally insured
institution.
Benjamin G. Greenberg, United States Attorney for the
Southern District of Florida; Gavin Gumbinner, Resident Agent in Charge, Fort Pierce,
Florida, Federal Bureau of Investigation, (FBI); and Edwin Bonano, Special
Agent in Charge, Tampa, Florida, Federal Housing Finance Agency, Office of
Inspector General (FHFA-OIG) made the announcement.
Granitur was convicted, at trial, of one count of conspiracy
to commit the offense of making false statements to a federally insured
institution, in violation of Title 18, United States Code, Section 371; and two
counts of making a false statement to a federally insured institution, in
violation of Title 18, United States Code, Section 1014. Granitur’s co-conspirators, George Heaton,
Deborah Dentry Baggett, and Stephen McKenzie, have already pled guilty and are
awaiting sentencing.
According to the evidence presented at trial, in 2009, Eric
Granitur, a member of the Florida Bar, owned and operated Live Oak Title, which
conducted two real estate closings for the purchase of five condominiums at the
Vero Beach Hotel and Spa. The seller and
developer of the Vero Beach Hotel and Spa, George Heaton, offered numerous
incentives to buyer Stephen McKenzie to purchase the condominiums. Heaton agreed to pay the “cash-to-close”
amount that the buyer McKenzie was expected to bring to closing. Additionally, Heaton paid for the closing
costs and paid McKenzie additional incentives.
Granitur’s title company, Live Oak Title, conducted the
closings for the sales of the Vero Beach Hotel and Spa condominium units sold
to buyer Stephen McKenzie. As an escrow
agent, Granitur was required to truthfully and accurately prepare and
distribute a settlement statement to the financial institutions, known as a
“HUD-1,” in preliminary form for review by the financial institution, prior to
the closing of escrow. The closing
statement was required to accurately reflect, among other information, the
sales price, the closing funds provided by the borrower and all of the seller’s
contributions. As an escrow agent,
Granitur was responsible for receiving and holding in trust, in an escrow account,
the mortgage loan proceeds from the financial institutions that financed the
purchase of the condominium units, and he was responsible for disbursing those
loan proceeds only after final approval by the financial institutions.
On two occasions, Granitur knowingly caused a false closing
statement to be transmitted to a federally insured financial institution. The HUD-1 closing statements failed to
truthfully disclose seller credits and incentives. Additionally, the closing statements failed
to disclose that the seller was paying the buyer’s “cash-to-close.” The financial institutions relied upon the
closing statement in authorizing the release of funds.
Sentencing will take place before United States District
Judge Robin L. Rosenberg, in West Palm Beach.
A sentencing date has not yet been set.
Mr.
Greenberg commended the investigative efforts of the FBI and FHFA-OIG. This
case is being prosecuted by Special Assistant United States Attorney Joseph A.
Capone and Assistant United States Attorney Daniel E. Funk.
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