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Smiling JOe

SoWal Expert
Nov 18, 2004
31,648
1,773
Mortgage Fraudster Sentenced to 28 Years

(WSB Radio) -- The man authorities say was the ringmaster of a huge mortgage fraud ring has been sentenced by a federal judge to 28 years in prison. 51-year-old Phillip E. Hill was found guilty of perpetrating a fraud scheme that targeted the metro Atlanta housing and condo market from 2000 to 2003 resulting in multi-million dollar losses to lenders, neighborhoods and individuals.


According to the U.S. Justice Department:
Phillip E. Hill was the owner and operator of "We Build Atlanta, Inc.," "The Estate Firm, Inc.," "Estate Artistians of Georgia, Inc.," "Estates Atlanta, Inc.," and numerous other Georgia corporations. Hill controlled the affairs of each such corporation. Hill held himself out to be a real estate developer, and either individually or through one or more of the corporations he controlled, purchased and sold numerous residential properties in the Atlanta area. Hill oversaw the conspiracy, loan fraud, wire and mail fraud and money laundering activity related to mortgages obtained in the sale of over 50 homes and over 250 condominiums in eight Atlanta-area condominium complexes. These properties were all owned at one time by one of the Phillip Hill entities. Each property was sold at an inflated price to a "straw purchaser" who applied for a mortgage loan based upon the inflated price. Such a fraudulent transaction is called a mortgage "flip."


The straw purchasers who participated in these mortgage flips were paid a kick-back out of the excess loan proceeds for the use of their name and credit. The victim-lenders granted the loans based upon numerous false representations and documents regarding the credit qualifications of the straw purchaser, as well as false representations that the straw purchaser had paid a down payment, would reside in the home, and would be responsible for the loan payment. In addition, the lenders were induced to make the loans based on fraudulently inflated appraisals. Some of the properties were "flipped" more than one time.


Evidence at trial showed that the primary leaders of the complex fraud scheme included Phillip Hill, Leslie Rector, closely assisted by David Van Mersbergen. Hill alone received over $14 million in profits from the scheme. Evidence showed that Hill generated in excess of $112 million in fraudulent loans during the time of the scheme.

The appraisers who created the fraudulent appraisals used in the scheme were Julian Perez, Fred Farmer, and Barbara Brown. According to the evidence, appraisers were paid both their scheduled fees and received separate direct payments from Hill.

The loan officers, who provided submitted the fraudulent loans to the victim lenders included Wayne Jenkins, Theodore Tagalakis, Brant Petree, Wendell Higgs, Michael Flake and Wesley Golden, and Robert Powers. Evidence at trial showed that the loan officers received excessive fees for processing the fraudulent loans.


Hill was convicted of paying kickbacks to "recruiters" who found "straw borrowers" for the scheme. The recruiters included Christine Loudermill and David and Dean Thomas, William Chavis and Rashid Muhammad, who all received hundreds of thousands of dollars in the scheme. According to the evidence, David and Dean Thomas, and David Van Mersbergen also served as "straw borrowers" who received additional kickbacks for lending their credit to the scheme.

As part of the fraud scheme, two attorneys, Christopher Halcomb, of Cumming, Georgia, and Andrew Wolf helped facilitate the fraud by submitting fraudulent documents, and at property closings, facilitating the distribution of the monies to the co-conspirators.


In addition to the 28 year prison sentence, Hill will be on supervised release for five years and has been ordered to pay restitution of $41,764,244.40.

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Looks like the scheme involved crooks in nearly every business field relating to real estate.
 
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slandmarks

Beach Comber
Mar 23, 2007
36
0
www.southernlandmarks.com
Developer sentenced 28 years for fraud
September 23, 2007
Phillip Hill faced suits in Panhandle during the ?90s
Staff and wire reports​


ATLANTA
A Liberty County man found guilty in March in a scheme that authorities said involved more than $112 million in fraudulent mortgage loans has been sentenced to 28 years in federal prison.
Phillip E. Hill, 51, of Sumatra, also was ordered Friday to serve five years of supervised release and pay restitution of nearly $41.8 million. Hill was indicted in June 2005 on charges of conspiracy, loan fraud, mail and wire fraud and money laundering totaling 166 counts.
According to federal prosecutors, Hill made more than $14 million through the scheme to obtain the mortgages in the sale of more than 50 homes and 250 condominiums in eight Atlanta-area complexes from 2000 to 2003.
Each property was sold at an inflated price to a ?straw purchaser,? who applied for a mortgage loan based upon the inflated price in what is known as a mortgage ?flip,? the U.S. Attorney?s office in Atlanta said in a statement. Some of the properties were ?flipped? more than once, with the assistance of fraudulent appraisers and loan officers who also were charged.
Hill stoked controversy in the Panhandle in the 1980s and 1990s before relinquishing his Florida contractor?s and real estate broker?s licenses in 1995.
In September 1990, several men from Franklin County sued Hill after they discovered problems in the St. George Island homes he built for them in the late 1980s.
Skeet Jernigan, one of the men who sued Hill, said that when it rained, water poured into the house. Jernigan and his two other associates hired a separate roofer, who said the metal roofing material was installed upside down.
?It was actually funneling water into the house,? Jernigan told The News Herald in 1997.
Hill lost one lawsuit, settled another and failed to comply with a court order in the third, according to court records.
In the midst of Hill?s problems in Franklin County, he moved to Bay County, where he set up shop as Hill Builders and Palm Bay homes. After customers began to complain, Hill gave up his Florida licenses and moved to Georgia, but he left unfinished houses and customers facing thousands of dollars in liens against their property.
Bay County Sheriff?s Sgt. Paul Vecker told the Atlanta Journal-Constitution in a 2002 article that Hill allegedly diverted money, which was to be used to build the Palm Bay subdivision houses, for other purposes. But Vecker?s investigation did not result in any prosecutions, according to the newspaper, in part because authorities could not nail down any illegal activity.
?Hill is a master of confusion,? Vecker told the paper in 2002. ?The paper chase was incredible, and it was endless.?
A few years before the Atlanta case, Hill was charged in Georgia with multiple counts of theft by conversion and theft of services. Georgia prosecutors said at the time that part of their legal strategy would be to show a pattern of dishonest business practices. When asked where the pattern might have begun, a Georgia investigator told The News Herald, ?Look at St. George Island.?
He was convicted and sentenced to 10 years of probation in that case, but he was released from probation early, according to the Atlanta Journal-Constitution.
Nearly two dozen people pleaded guilty in the Atlanta case prior to Hill?s eight-week trial. During the same trial, Marcus C. Alcindor, 42, St. Lucia, Ga.; Barbara Brown, 34, Marietta, Ga.; Fred Farmer, 59, Roswell, Ga.; Christine Laudermill, 40; Robert Powers, 45, Cumming, Ga.; David Thomas, 46, Hammond, La.; Leslie Rector, 35, Atlanta; David Van Mersbergen, 46, Atlanta; and Dean Thomas, 42, Atlanta, were convicted on similar charges.​

 

Bob

SoWal Insider
Nov 16, 2004
10,365
1,391
O'Wal
Phillip E. Hill took 3 years to generate 14 million dollars for himself. MSNBC reported on March 17, 2006, pre-surge, that the Pentagon is spending 200 million dollars a day in Iraq for our "war". 200 million a day of borrowed money.
 

Smiling JOe

SoWal Expert
Nov 18, 2004
31,648
1,773
Phillip E. Hill took 3 years to generate 14 million dollars for himself. MSNBC reported on March 17, 2006, pre-surge, that the Pentagon is spending 200 million dollars a day in Iraq for our "war". 200 million a day of borrowed money.


On Friday, I heard reports that the US is spending $3 Billion a week on the war, which would up that daily number a bit, and believe me when I say that I think that is ludicrous.
 

Bob

SoWal Insider
Nov 16, 2004
10,365
1,391
O'Wal
On Friday, I heard reports that the US is spending $3 Billion a week on the war, which would up that daily number a bit, and believe me when I say that I think that is ludicrous.
To think that our government is that detached and corrupt that this never ending war can be pursued is almost beyond my belief. Our dollar is now worth less than the Canadian currency precisely because borrowing is wildly out of control. It is almost like we have this massive amnesia about right and wrong. I believe American society is collectively behaving like a bunch of spoiled, narcissistic idiots.
 

elgordoboy

Beach Fanatic
Feb 9, 2007
2,513
887
I no longer stay in Dune Allen
At 115 billion barrels of oil reserves in Iraq..n/m I don't know where I am going with that. It is nauseating the waste of lives and money for no reason that I can discern..nation building is a fools game.. at least with the way it is now being played.
 

Pirate

Beach Fanatic
Jan 2, 2006
331
29
Weren't we talking about real estate and mortgages? There is even a whole area of the site to spew into.
 
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