Thirteen New York state residents have been charged with conducting a subprime mortgage fraud scheme involving loans on residential properties in Long Island and the New York City area, totaling more than $10 million. The defendants are: Micah Meyers, Stephen Caputo, Dawn Hughes, Fnu Lnu, Jakob Gearwar, Brian Urraro, Michael Didio, Daniel Hampton, Jennifer Moschitta, Victor Avendano, Adrian Avendano, Janet McGuinness and Liam Leavey. According to the indictment, from 2005 through 2007, the defendants — many of whom were worked at Bridgewater Funding, an Islip-based brokerage firm — targeted residential properties in Long Island and the New York City area that could be flipped or the homeowners were facing foreclosure. Bridgewater says the defendants are former employees who have not worked with the company for three years. The defendants were unavailable for comment. The defendants allegedly convinced troubled homeowners that selling their properties to the defendants would pay off their debts and "save" their homes. To purchase the properties, the defendants allegedly submitted mortgage loan applications that contained false information. The loans exceeded the actual purchase price of the property, producing a "spread" from which the defendants profited.
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Mortgage fintechs are attracting investor attention and dollars with agentic AI processes in new origination-focused platforms and assistants.
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The portfolio for sale contains hundreds of millions of dollars worth of reperforming loans that the government-sponsored enterprise co-marketed with Citigroup.
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The S&P Cotality Case-Shiller home price index rose 0.8% year over year in April, while U.S. Federal Housing's index climbed 2%. Both indexes declined monthly.
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While the nationwide purchase average declined nearly 3% in 2025, these costs rose in 23 of 50 states and the District of Columbia, a study from LodeStar said.
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Priority Financial Network CEO Marc Shenkman allegedly told a former employee to "keep his resume out there" because he planned to get Lendwise shut down.
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Lisa Cook can keep her seat on the Federal Reserve Board thanks to the Supreme Court's procedural concerns. Deeper questions about the central bank might not come for years — if at all.
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