Friday, March 23, 2012

Los Angeles Feds Step Up, Lend Assist In 86-Year Old Woman's Effort To Regain Ownership Of Home Of 40+ Years After Home Title Ripoff

In Los Angeles, California, NBC Los Angeles Channel 4 reports:

  • An alleged con who swindled a senior out of her house has local and federal agencies working to solve the case, which involves a former LAPD officer and the bishop of a local church.


  • In an attempt to block the foreclosure scheduled for Wednesday, Keta Davis filed bankruptcy on behalf of her mother, Vistula Graham, who is in a nursing home and unaware of what’s happening with her home.


  • The tangled web of fraud begins with Leroy Dowd, a 74-year-old, self-proclaimed charismatic leader of a now-defunct South LA church called Triumph Church of God. Dowd conned Graham into giving him money and signing over her house – a three-bedroom ranch in Lynwood that she bought more than 40 years ago and paid off in the late nineties, Davis said.


  • He called himself a bishop, he called himself a prophet,” she said. Profit off her mother is more like it, she said.


  • Davis said no one could believe the story until an exclusive NBC 4 investigation exposed the plot that investigators have been trying to untangle for years. “You did what you had to do and you investigated it,” Davis said.


  • After the NBC 4 report aired, the FBI took notice and did something the agency said it rarely does: the FBI gave Davis a letter to use in her fight to save her mother’s house. The letter identifies her mother, 86-year-old Vistula Graham, is a potential victim of real estate fraud scheme and that the case remains under investigation by the federal agency.


  • Detectives from three law enforcement agencies said Bishop LeRoy Dowd, who allegedly co-signed on more than $800,000 dollars in loans and bank accounts using Graham’s house as collateral. Police uncovered a fellow officer who apparently benefitted from at least one of the fraudulent loans.


  • I don’t know how that occurred, I never met this woman,” Davis said, referring to Darcy Greenfield, who was an LAPD officer at the time of the suspected con. Greenfield had the house put in her company’s name and received $261,000 as the beneficiary of a loan, according to records obtained by NBC 4.


  • Greenfield is no longer on the LAPD and is facing ten felony counts in an unrelated real estate fraud case in San Bernardino. Greenfield has pleaded not guilty, but in public statements has blamed Dowd for ripping her off.

For more, see Investigation: Daughter Files Bankruptcy for Mom Swindled Out of Her Home (In a rare move, the FBI intervened on the family's behalf following NBC 4's initial investigation).

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