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Consumer Affairs

Maryland Title Agency Operator Sentenced to Prison

Failed to make $3.9 million in payoffs to mortgtage lenders


A Maryland title company operator has been sentenced to 78 months in prison followed by three years of supervised release for wire fraud in connection with a mortgage fraud scheme to defraud lenders of approximately $3.9 million in just eight months.

U.S. District Judge Catherine C. Blake ordered Anthony Weis, 45, of Phoenix, Md., to pay restitution of $4,007,705, which includes the loss to the title insurance company and the expenses of the individual victims.

Mortgage lenders and borrowers depend on title companies to use loan proceeds to repay outstanding mortgages and other debts,” said U.S. Attorney Rod J. Rosenstein. “Maryland’s Mortgage Fraud Task Force will pursue criminals who defraud lenders and borrowers, and we will pursue restitution of any losses.”

According to Weis’s plea agreement, Weis was the president and a shareholder of Maple Leaf Title LLC (MLT), a real estate title agency located in Towson, Md. Weis directed MLT employees in 13 real estate closings conducted between February and September 2009 to withhold the payoff checks from institutions that held the existing mortgage loan notes on the properties. In each instance, the settlement statement sent to the borrower’s lender falsely represented that the payoff was being made.

In an effort to conceal the fraud scheme, Weis caused monthly mortgage payments to be made to the banks holding the mortgage notes. 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.

However, because Weis was unable to send checks in every case where he had misappropriated the payoffs from escrow, a number of MLT clients received delinquency notices for non-payment of the mortgage note. A few were threatened with foreclosure and were forced to hire attorneys to prevent being ejected from their homes.

Because the existing mortgages had not been paid off, the liens against the property were not removed and a title free of pre-existing liens and claims (clear title) could not be passed to the new lender and borrower. An insurance company had issued title insurance policies to the borrowers guaranteeing clear title. As a result of Weis’s criminal conduct, the title insurance company ultimately paid out $3.9 million to financial institutions that held mortgage notes.

Weis was ordered to report on May 17, 2011, to the prison which will be designated by the U.S. Bureau of Prisons.

 

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