Wednesday, January 25, 2012

Pair Cop Guilty Pleas in Scams Involving Use Of Forged Mortgage Satisfactions, Rent Skimming To Screw Over Banks, Landlords

From the Office of the U.S. Attorney (District of Columbia):

  • The owners of a property management company, Bryan W. Talbott, 48, and Chester D. Ransom, Jr., 44, have pleaded guilty to defrauding their clients, mortgage lenders, and the government out of more than $2.8 million.

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  • According to the government’s evidence, Talbott was the president and Ransom was the vice president of a property management company located in Washington, D.C., that operated under multiple names, including Esquire LLC, Federal City Mowbray, and Private Properties Inc. (collectively referred to as “Esquire”). The defendants also lived together at a residence on North Portal Drive NW, Washington, D.C.


  • From 2004 to the present, the defendants engaged in three separate fraudulent schemes, resulting in more than $2.8 million in losses to the victims.


  • As part of [one of] their fraudulent scheme[s], the defendants frequently collected rental payments from tenants but did not pay the bills for the properties, despite falsely representing to the property owners that the bills had been paid. Instead, the defendants used these funds for their own benefit. In addition, the defendants also sent forged bank statements to some of their clients, misstating the balances in their clients’ accounts.


  • Through this fraudulent scheme, the defendants defrauded at least 54 clients out of a total of $1,269,278.


  • [In another fraudulent scheme,] On June 30, 2004, Ransom purchased the property on North Portal Drive NW for $975,000, financing the purchase, in part, with two loans in the total amount of $731,250 from WMC Mortgage Corp. , a mortgage lender. Ransom executed two deeds of trust on the property, granting WMC a security interest in the property.


  • On December 29, 2005, Ransom filed with the District of Columbia Recorder of Deeds two forged Certificates of Satisfaction, purporting to release the WMC liens on the Portal property.


  • Then, on January 13, 2006, Ransom sold the Portal property to Talbott for $1,110,000. The defendants provided copies of the forged lien releases to the settlement company. Talbott obtained a loan in the amount of $750,000 from Fremont Investment and Loan. Talbott executed a deed of trust on the property, granting Fremont a security interest in the property. Ransom received a check in the amount of $515,034 from the settlement.


  • Less than a month later, on February 2, 2006, Ransom again “sold” the Portal property to Talbott, this time for $1,250,000, despite the fact that Talbott was already the legal owner.


  • The defendants provided copies of the forged lien releases to the settlement company. Talbott obtained a loan of $890,000 from First National Bank of Arizona. Talbott executed a deed of trust on the property, granting First National Bank of Arizona a security interest in the property. Ransom received a check in the amount of $801,280 from the settlement.

For the U.S. Attorney press release, see Owners of Property Management Company Plead Guilty To Defrauding Clients, Mortgage Lenders and Government (Scheme Involved More Than $2.8 Million).

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