After being convicted of 51 counts of conspiracy, fraud and money laundering in connection with a mortgage fraud scheme, Harold Stafford of Sumner County, Tenn., has been sentenced to eight years in prison, followed by three years of supervised release. His co-defendants, Miles Jackson Black and Jeffrey Dunn Hathcock, also from Sumner County, were each sentenced to a year and a day in prison, followed by five years of supervised release. All three defendants were ordered to jointly pay $1 million in restitution and a special assessment of $5,100. According to the U.S. attorney's office for the Middle District of Tennessee, Stafford engaged in a scheme that involved the purchase of 22 luxury homes in Hendersonville, Gallatin and Goodlettsville through unqualified straw buyers. Stafford, Black and Hathcock caused the submission of false mortgage loan applications to lenders that overstated the straw buyers' income, falsely stated that the homes would be the straw buyers' primary residences and failed to disclose other recent home purchases by the same straw buyers. All of these mortgage loans ended in default and foreclosure, resulting in losses to mortgage lenders, after foreclosure, totaling $2,214,700.
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The promotion offers rate cuts as much as 25 basis points on new-home purchases as well as rate-and-term and cash-out refinance loans from May 4 through May 17.
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"In looking at eight currently available proprietary RM products, there is a distinct relationship between HECM growth rates and proprietary product availability," Reverse Market Insight said.
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The top bullet point in Two Harbors' rejection notice is the Mizuho credit facility does not constitute committed financing for UWM to pay for the deal.
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The combination adds to a wave of broader merger and acquisition activity that includes an ongoing bidding war over RoundPoint Mortgage owner Two Harbors
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The litigants, with some of the industry's deepest pockets, may be filing the rare cases to flag and potentially punish bad brokers, one expert said.
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Market watchers think Jerome Powell will maintain a low-key presence on the Fed board as he awaits the release of an inspector general report examining cost overruns at the central bank's headquarters.
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