Local home buyer loses $31,000 in mortgage closing scam – WANE
FORT WAYNE, Ind. (WANE) – The housing market in the Summit City is booming but buyers should beware. Home buyers are being scammed out of the money they thought was going towards a down payment.
At least two people have been targeted to the tune of tens-of-thousands of dollars.
The scams use what’s called mortgage wire fraud; largest and fastest growing scam affecting homeowners in the United States according to an expert NewsChannel 15 spoke with.
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It works this way. Hackers who have gained access to certain accounts at financial institutions or realty companies watch for pending home purchases. They then pose as the realtor or lender and instruct the home buyer to wire the down payment to a fraudulent account.
“It’s not really the realtor that is communicating with the consumer, it’s the fraudster,” said Margaret Sklenar, co-owner of Metropolitan Title Company. “The real wire instructions are not being sent to the consumer. Instead, the fraudster is sending wire instructions. The money is going into an account in the U.S. and immediately it’s transferred off shore.”
Steve Kiermaier knows firsthand about the scam. Kiermaier, and his fiance at the time, began house-hunting in March 2017. The two found their dream home in June and were prepared to put a $31,000 down payment on it.
“I have been saving that money since college.” said Kiermaier, who was a first-time home buyer. “I wanted to put 20 percent down on my house and be ahead of the game.”
By law, consumers are required to wire down payments of more than $10,000 to the title company.if it is more than $10,000 dollars. Sklenar said the Indiana Good Funds Law was implemented to protect the titling company from receiving bad checks at closing.
Kiermaier said his realtor advised him via text message that he would soon receive wiring instructions for his down payment. He confirmed that the text was legitimate.
He thenreceived an e-mail from what appeared to be his realtor’s e-mail address later that day, so thinking it was legit, Kiermaier followed the instructions.
A week later, he learned the title company never received the funds.
“Your heart drops,” he said. “It is just something I’ll never forget unfortunately. It has just put me, my family, and my wife through a miserable last 8 months.”
Tisha Howell had a similar experience at around the same time. She was preparing to close on her first home when she received an e-mail from her loan agent with instructions on how to wire the $14,000 down payment in July 2017. It was legitimate.
However, the email she got a short time later was not.
“The email appeared to come from her,” said Howell. “She copied my realtor and said, ‘We just want to make sure you got the right wiring instructions.”
Howell said the fraudulent e-mail had the same title company listed and the same bank. The only difference was the bank account number.
“I go to my bank and I wire the money,” she said. “Only to go to my closing the next day to discover that I was a victim of fraud.”
She went to her bank to try to recall the wire, but it was too late.
“I was devastated honestly. I didn’t want to go through the home buying process again. Based on my faith and what I believe in, I was like, ‘you know what? I’m going to have to let God work this out.’”
Sklenar said it is rare that victims of this wire fraud scam get their money back.
Kiermaier said he had to come up with $6,000 to close on the home. He still hopes to be able to retrieve the original $31,000 down payment.
“I pray about it every day that we get our money back,” he said “I just hope something will break through and we will get our money back somehow, someway.”
Howell is one of the lucky ones. In December, she received a phone call from her bank after the bank she wired her money notified an agent that they had her down payment. She said it is unclear how they retrieved it, but she received the $14,000 down payment in full.
“Nobody thought I was going to get my money back but by the grace of God I did,” she said.
Howell said she will begin looking for another home in the spring. She said she hopes those who work in the real estate and mortgage industry will do a better job of educating consumers.
“I never talked to my loan officer about it,” she said. “When I talked to my realtor he was upset and said, ‘I’ve honestly never heard of anything like this.’ I just thought, them being in the business, they would have taken better precaution to protect their clients.”
Sklenar said the Indiana Association of Realtors has included information about mortgage wire fraud in the state purchase agreement. She said realtors and lenders are also encouraged to discuss the risk with home buyers.
“The first thing we do when we get an order is ask for the buyer’s contact information because we want to get to that buyer at the beginning of the process,” she said. “That
way, if they were to have a problem or if the realtor’s email was compromised, we at least have had communication with them at the onset of the transaction to help prevent that fraud.”
Despite the risk of wire fraud Sklenar said wiring money is still the best way to send a down payment.
“You’re going to find fraud in almost any type of transaction involving money,” she said. “The wire is still the safest way to get the money to the settlement agent and get the money for the transaction on time.”
She does suggest that consumers pay close attention to who sent the e-mail, beware if a lender or realtor is asking for a deposit too far in advance, and always contact the title company directly to confirm the wire information before sending a wire.