TRENTON
– Attorney General Jeffrey S. Chiesa
announced that five people have pleaded
guilty for their roles in a scheme, led
by a Hudson County woman, to defraud a mortgage
lender of $431,200 by filing a false loan
application and purchasing a home in Newark
in the name of a man who was deceased. The
final defendant, a Morris County lawyer,
pleaded guilty today.
The
leader of the scheme, Genilza R. Nunes,
38, of Kearny (aka Leticia Wilchez, Geny
Silva, Gena Nunez and Genilza Borges), pleaded
guilty on May 8 to second-degree money laundering
before Superior Court Judge Salem Vincent
Ahto in Morris County. Under the plea agreement,
the state will recommend that she be sentenced
to 10 years in state prison, including two
years of parole ineligibility, and be
ordered to pay a $150,000 fine.
Today,
, 46, of Madison, a lawyer
who laundered stolen funds through his trust
account, pleaded guilty to second-degree
money laundering before Superior Court Judge
Thomas V. Manahan in Morris County. Under
his plea agreement, the state will recommend
that he be sentenced to eight years in state
prison and be ordered to pay a $150,000
fine.
“Home
sales typically involve various professionals,
including real estate agents, attorneys,
title agents and mortgage brokers, who are
responsible for providing multiple layers
of review and oversight to prevent fraud,”
said Attorney General Chiesa. “In
this case, however, we had dishonest operators
in every one of those roles, leading the
unsuspecting lender to provide a $431,200
mortgage loan to a dead man. We will continue
to work diligently to uncover such mortgage
fraud schemes and send those responsible
to prison.”
“In
this troubled economy, we’re working
hard to stop those who engage in financial
fraud,” said Stephen J. Taylor, Director
of the Division of Criminal Justice. “We’ve
made it a priority to investigate and prosecute
major white collar crimes, including complex
mortgage fraud and money laundering cases.”
Three
other defendants pleaded guilty during the
past two weeks:
-
Lillian Veras, 40, of Kearny, (aka Lillian
Urena) pleaded guilty on May 14 before
Judge Manahan to second-degree money laundering.
Veras, a real estate agent and notary,
helped prepare false loan documents for
the scheme and forged signatures. She
faces a recommended sentence of seven
years in prison and a $150,000 fine.
- Maureen
R. Stillwell, 50, of Somerville, an employee
of Ideal Title Agency, LLC, who helped
prepare false closing documents, pleaded
guilty before Judge Ahto on May 8 to second-degree
money laundering. She faces a sentence
of up to seven years in prison and a $25,000
fine.
- , the owner of
Ideal Title Agency, LLC, pleaded guilty
on May 7 before Judge Manahan to third-degree
money laundering. She admitted that she
illegally distributed the loan funds as
escrow agent. She faces a recommended
sentence of up to three years in prison
and a $150,000 fine.
A
sixth defendant, Nuno J. Sousa, 37, of Union
City, agreed to be charged by accusation
with third-degree securities fraud and was
admitted by the court into the Pre-Trial
Intervention Program in April. All six defendants
who have pleaded guilty or entered PTI are
required to pay restitution to the lender,
Provident Funding Associates, equal to one-sixth
of the $431,200 loan amount, or approximately
$71,867 each.
Deputy
Attorney General Marysol Rosero took the
guilty pleas for the Division of Criminal
Justice Financial & Computer Crimes
Bureau. Detective Sgt. Louis A. Matirko
and DAG Rosero conducted the investigation
and were assisted by Deputy Attorney General
Michael Rappa, Special Agent Tanya Chavez,
Office of Inspector General, U.S. Department
of Housing and Urban Development, Special
Agent Robert Manchak, Office of Inspector
General, Federal Housing Finance Agency,
and Division of Criminal Justice Interns
Andrew Davenport, Brittany Kieran and Cara
Ogulin.
Nunes
is scheduled to be sentenced on June 29.
Her co-defendants are scheduled to be sentenced
as follows: on July 6; Veras on
June 22; Stillwell on June 29; and
on June 29.
Nunes,
the mastermind of the scheme, acted as a
principal of Leska Management, a bogus real
estate management company. With Veras’
assistance, she arranged for the purchase
of a home in Newark from a woman who had
fallen behind in her mortgage payments.
The seller owed $477,196 on her loan, but
the holder of the mortgage, Kondaur Capital
Corp., agreed to a “short sale”
for $260,000 to a purported buyer identified
by the defendants. A “short sale”
is a pre-foreclosure sale where the mortgage
holder agrees to permit the home to be sold
for less than the amount due on the loan.
That
sale was never completed. , who
held himself out as the attorney for both
the buyer and Leska, told Kondaur the sale
had fallen through. He then negotiated with
Kondaur to assign the mortgage to Leska
at a discounted price of $219,877. He never
disclosed that, prior to assignment of the
mortgage, the home was sold at an inflated
price of $539,000 to a fictitious buyer
created by the defendants. Nunes, with assistance
from Sousa, a mortgage broker, fraudulently
applied to Provident Funding Associates
for a $431,200 mortgage loan and purchased
the home using the identity of a deceased
man whose last name was “Benazi.”
Nunes created counterfeit bank records,
employment records and false identification
documents for Benazi for the loan application,
and she had another man pose as Benazi at
the closing. No payments were ever made
to the lender on the loan. The seller was
never notified of the closing, and her signature
was forged on the closing documents.
Stillwell
handled the closing for Ideal Title and
assisted in the creation of false closing
documents used to deceive the lender. She
never collected monies due at closing from
the buyer, and falsified HUD settlement
statements to indicate that they had been
collected and that the prior mortgage had
been paid off. In her role as escrow agent,
, the owner of Ideal Title, misappropriated
loan proceeds by wiring $376,032 to ’s
attorney trust account at Nunes’ direction.
used $219,877 of the misappropriated
funds to pay for the assignment of the mortgage
and wired the balance of $156,155, representing
the net illegal profits, into a bank account
controlled by Nunes and Veras. Stillwell,
and were all compensated
for their participation in the scheme.
### |