While it has always been difficult to get a handle on the size of the mortgage fraud problem, a new report by a leading provider of fraud detection products indicates that the incidence of the crime may be much greater than anyone thinks. Analysts at Interthinx, Agoura Hills, Calif., say they found more than 42,000 mortgage applications in the second half of last year that contained significant misrepresentations of the borrowers' incomes. In total, the loans were worth nearly $11 billion. "I have no idea how many of the loans were funded, but I hope none of them," Ann Fulmer, the company's vice president of industry relations, said at the Mortgage Bankers Association's National Fraud Issues Conference in Chicago, where the six-month analysis was released. The questionable loans were discovered by Interthinx' income alert program, which warns clients that a borrower has submitted multiple loan applications and his income has jumped by at least 15% over a prescribed period. "Fraud is like water -- it always seeks the lowest level," Ms. Fulmer said. "That's why it is finding ways around the barriers lenders set up to uncover them." The company can be found on the Web at http://www.interthinx.com.
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