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Posted: 11:03 PM Apr 19, 2010
Kansas City Builder Sentenced In Mortgage Fraud Case
F. Jeffrey Miller, 49, Stanley, Kan., was sentenced to 108 months on one count of conspiracy, one count of money laundering and two counts of criminal contempt.
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A Kansas City builder has been sentenced to 108 months in federal prison for conspiracy to commit bank fraud and money laundering in a $5 million mortgage fraud scheme.
F. Jeffrey Miller, 49, Stanley, Kan., was convicted in 2008 on one count of conspiracy, one count of money laundering and two counts of criminal contempt. Also sentenced Monday was co-defendant Hallie Irvin, 30, Lenexa, Kan., who was sentenced to 24 months.
During trial, prosecutors presented evidence that Miller, a building contractor in Kansas, Missouri and other states, conspired with co-defendants to commit bank fraud. The conspiracy involved defrauding financial institutions that loaned money to people who purchased houses built by Miller or other home builders on lots owned and developed by Miller, who operated under the name Star Land Development. The lenders were defrauded by loan applications and house appraisals that overstated the borrower’s income, overstated the borrowers’ financial history and strength, inflated the value of the house through manipulated appraisals and overstated the contract price. The fraud also involved failing to inform lenders that the builders rather than the borrowers paid the down payments and/or closing costs for some buyers and covered the cost with a second mortgage.!
The result was lenders extended loans, at a higher loan-to-value ratio than their loan documentation indicated, to borrowers whose incomes could not support the loan payments and whose credit history indicated that they were poor risks for payment. Most of the borrowers ultimately defaulted on the loans and foreclosure proceedings followed.
During trial, there was testimony characterizing Miller as the person in charge who directed the scheme and profited from it all. There was testimony that it was Miller who decided to target home buyers who had poor credit and to do “whatever it took” to get financing.
Miller also was ordered to pay a money judgment of $2.67 million.
Latest Comments
The next trial for Miller for the original indictment that came down in the spring of 2006 was in 2010 for $25,000,000 more mortgage fraud. In spite of overwhelming evidence he was unfortunately found not guilty in that case. Hundreds of homeowners whose documents were forged know the truth. Fraud did occur and they are now homeless. It's unfortunate that the jury apparently didn't believe the testimony of the homeowners who lost everything and the co-defendants who plead guilty and testified about exactly how the fraud was done. Thanks goodness after the original indictment Miller found new people to continue to do mortgage fraud with so that he will spend 9 years in prison. It is a shame that fraud discovered in 1998 and continued for so many years took so long to come to trial. Even after indictments in 2006 it took two years to get to trial on the $5,000,000 indictment and almost four years for trial on the $25,000,000 indictment. This is unacceptable.
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