After operating a residential mortgage scam that defrauded four Phoenix seniors of more than $400,000, Rick Thomas McCullough, a Phoenix mortgage broker, has been sentenced to three-and-a-half years in prison along with seven years probation and ordered to pay $343,811 in restitution. According to court documents, McCullough was the president of licensed mortgage broker CactusCash. In 2005 and 2006, he used this position to persuade four seniors, two single women and one couple, to refinance their homes through him for amounts far greater than the balance of their existing mortgages. McCullough also convinced them to invest their net refinancing proceeds with him, effectively obtaining for himself much of the equity that these elderly clients had in their homes. He claimed he would invest the victims' funds in real estate and personally guaranteed the loans. According to the terms of their investments, McCullough agreed to make monthly payments between $650 and $3,150 to the victims when in fact he lacked the assets to guarantee any of the loans and failed to make payments to three of the victims after several months. In one case, he failed to make any payments at all. Instead, McCullough used the money to make personal purchases.
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A tour of the technology that banking has run on, dating back to Franklin's anti-counterfeit measures and the bank-note bulletin that preceded American Banker.
July 3 -
Issuances of new HECM-backed securities dropped off in June on both a monthly and yearly basis, according to a new report from New View Advisors.
July 2 -
The vote to approve the $12 per share deal, which rejected a hostile bid from UWM Holdings, came following several postponements of a special meeting.
July 2 -
A mortgage customer claims his data was compromised in a hack last year at a tax and accounting firm reportedly used by the wholesale giant.
July 2 -
The government-sponsored enterprise clamped down on project review requirements and certain factory-built home appraisals while loosening other guidelines.
July 2 -
The June jobs report is creating an overhang on economist forecasts for interest rates going forward, especially when combined with recent inflation data.
July 2









