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Defendant Sentenced In Freedom Financial Mortgage Fraud Case

Thursday, August 14 2008 03:16

Nelson Miller, the former owner and operator of Freedom Financial Mortgage Company and Absolute Abstract and Title Company, was sentenced to 12 months and one day in federal prison as a result of his role in a large-scale mortgage fraud scheme. Miller's prison term stems from his January 28 th convictions by a jury of conspiracy to commit wire fraud and 15 counts of wire fraud. As part of sentencing, Chief United States District Judge J. Leon Holmes ordered Miller to pay a $40,000 fine and a $1,600 special assessment.

As previously eported by Mortgage Fraud Blog, and ccording to testimony and evidence presented at trial, Miller, through Freedom Financial, which was a mortgage brokerage company, and Absolute Abstract, submitted and instructed others to submit false loan application documents to various financial institutions. The false information concerned appraisals, title status, and creditworthiness of buyers. Miller did so in order to induce the lenders to make loans they otherwise would not have made, or would have made under different terms, had they been furnished truthful loan application documents. In addition, Miller's ownership of Absolute Abstract and of a separate document preparation business utilized in connection with the loans was not disclosed to the borrowers and lenders. Through his ownership of the various companies involved in the transactions, Miller was able to ensure that the fraudulent representations went undetected and that his companies received inflated fees and costs.

Jane W. Duke, United States Attorney for the Eastern District of Arkansas, stated, “Mortgage fraud continues to be an escalating problem in the United States. It is virtually impossible to open the newspaper without seeing at least one article related to a specific mortgage fraud or to the resulting economic consequences of mortgage fraud.” She added, “Fraudulent practices like the ones committed by Mr. Miller and his associates have a negative ripple effect throughout our economy. Our office and the Federal Bureau of Investigation are committing all available resources towards stemming this tide.”

Miller is the ninth and final defendant to be convicted in connection with the mortgage fraud committed through Freedom Financial and Absolute Abstract. “This concludes our prosecutions related to Freedom Financial,” stated Duke. “The agents and prosecutors are to be commended for their unfaltering pursuit of each and every individual responsible for these crimes.”

6 comments

  • Comment Link pam Sunday, March 07 2010 21:22 posted by pam

    My mother was given a Reverse Mtg loan with financial freedom. She moved out and a family member was able to refinance another reverse mortage without her living there. Her house was then rented out and she was living in an apartment. I have both leases. They gave the family member an additional $60,000 and he took off with it all. My mother was left in a motel with no food or money and had to go into Adult Services which took over conservatorship. It's been a rough financially as the all types of people have taken her money. I'm looking forward to contacting Financial Freedom and they need to be accountable for all this destruction they have caused from this loan and the expensive costs they charge leaving little equity.

  • Comment Link Raymond Lipptt Saturday, February 13 2010 15:28 posted by Raymond Lipptt

    I am charged PMI insurance by Colonial Savings when we had over 20% down on our loan wit the land used as collateral. We were told there would not be a PMI payment at closing because there was over 20 % down. Now they are charging me PMI be changing the calculation. They are dividing the apprised value into the loan value, and this would show us as not quite 20%. My argument is the land was mine until closing, and was not part of the calculation until I signed it over. In other words .20 times $120,000 is $24,000l.
    The land is worth more than that, and the bank that drew up the mortgage said we would sign a waver to eliminate PMI.
    Naturally they have lost tract of the waver. This should not matter considering 20 % of the loan was met at closing.
    This company is so poor that I have been trying to talk to them for two months, and just get hung up on, or they just do not respond to the certified letters I have sent them. They also have been charging over the 1/6 amount set by FDIC, and have my last years tax payment and this year’s insurance.
    I have given up, and have gone with Quicken Loans, and will have to take then to court to recover my losses.

  • Comment Link Cheryl in Delaware Thursday, July 23 2009 08:41 posted by Cheryl in Delaware

    Freedom Financial is a big ripoff outfit along with a scam outfit- my mother used them for some home improvements. She passed away last October; did not have my sister or me as associates on the loan, and now Freedom Financial is threatening forclosure on us. The house was left to me and my sister.

  • Comment Link dan Monday, August 25 2008 06:46 posted by dan

    i have no sympathy for the banks. They just ignored the truth when business was flowing in. Business was great and only because of stated income loans, 80% 1st to avoid pmi, yet they gave them a simultaneous 2nd mtg (made for no equity in home from beginning and minimum if any down payment. They knowingly ignored what they knew were fraudulent loans and loans that would be foreclosures. Now thay the industry is in turmoil, they are quick to blame everyone but themselves. No excuse for fraud at any level, but banks are not so innocent either. Banks created an environment that bred fraud by creating bogus loans programs and now claim foul. Lets hold banks accountable too!

  • Comment Link Janet McVey Friday, August 22 2008 11:49 posted by Janet McVey

    Mr. Miller should also be ordered to pay the real estate appraisers that Financial Freedom owes money. Financial Freedom owes me $700. NO ONE at Financial Freedom would speak with me. THe homeowners paid FF for the reports, and they kept the money.

  • Comment Link VA Refinance Monday, August 18 2008 14:13 posted by VA Refinance

    Rachel, htanks again for the post. my wife actuall was looking over your site this past weekend and saw this post and I used to be with New Freedom and it grabed here attention, glad it was not my old company. but even if it was we have no roon for the people defrauding us and the country.

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Rachel Dollar Rachel Dollar, the editor of Mortgage Fraud Blog is an attorney and Certified Mortgage Banker who handles litigation for lending institutions and secondary market investors.
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