Flipping Fraud in Florida

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‘FLIP THAT HOUSE’ FRAUD COST BILLIONS

SUSPICIOUS FLIPS

MIAMI-DADE: Bought for $315,000 in September 2005; sold for $479,000 two months later. Sold again for $552,000 in March 2006. Buyer defaulted a year later.

HILLSBOROUGH: Bought for $120,000 in October 2007, then sold again less than three months later for $200,000. A year later, the loan went into default.

PINELLAS: Bought for $80,000 in April 2007 and sold three months later for $235,000. The loan went into default 15 months later.

SARASOTA: One unit sold for $300,000 in January 2007 and flipped the same day for $742,000. Buyer defaulted within two years.

HERALDTRIBUNE.COM

A HERALD-TRIBUNE INVESTIGATION: IT IS ONE OF THE LARGEST WHITE-COLLAR CRIME SPREES IN FLORIDA HISTORY — $10 BILLION IN SUSPICIOUS PROPERTY FLIPS THAT HELPED TURN THE REAL ESTATE BOOM INTO THE WORST FINANCIAL CRISIS SINCE THE GREAT DEPRESSION. By MICHAEL BRAGA, CHRIS DAVIS and MATTHEW DOIG, Staff Writers

INSIDE

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MANATEE: Bought for $1.25 million in December 2004 and flipped the next day for $1.65 million. Buyer defaulted within three years’ time.

MANATEE: Bought for $146,000 in November 2001 and sold the same day for $328,000.

MIAMI-DADE: Bought for $155,000 in July 2005 and sold the same day for $300,000. Less than five months later, the loan went into default.

raudulent property flipping ran rampant during this decade’s housing boom, with $10 bil- ■ Hot spots for suspicious property flips. 8A lion in suspicious deals in Florida alone, a Herald-Tribune investigation has found. ■ How the Herald-Tribune The deals — many of them inflated sales among friends, family and business associates identified suspicious flips. 9A — drove up property values and tax bills during the boom, fed bank bailouts and failures af■ Flipping schemes: a field ter the boom, and fueled the foreclosure wave that has gutted property values. guide. 9A Unscrupulous property flippers would buy houses or condos, then drive up the price in ■ How flipping fraud hurts homeowners. 9A a few days or weeks by selling it to someone they knew. Buyers used the inflated price to get bank ONLINE: Starting loans for more than the property was worth, leaving money for flippers to split as profit. tomorrow, a who’s who guide to flipping in Despite their role in one of Florida’s largest white-collar crime sprees, the vast majority of unscrupu- Sarasota and Manatee lous real estate flippers will never be prosecuted. Most Florida law enforcement agencies have done lit- counties. Plus an interactive map providing tle to investigate property flip fraud. The FBI has been left to chase far more cases than it can handle. details on each of the But evidence of illegal deals is available in the public records filed when a property changes hands. 50,000 suspicious Florida flips. Heraldtribune.com/ The Herald-Tribune spent a year gathering and reviewing nearly 19 million Florida real estate flipping. transactions for red flags that can help identify flipping fraud. Using public records, including land TOMORROW: More than 30 groups of flippers deeds and mortgage filings, it found that: operated in Sarasota and ■ Since 2000, more than 50,000 Florida properties flipped under circumstances that fraud investi- Manatee counties. gators identify as suspicious — where homes, vacant land or commercial properties were bought TUESDAY: One Sarasota real estate agent and resold in 90 days or less and increased in value by at least 30 percent. Even during the hottest orchestrated $100 million in questionable deals. days of the housing boom, average home prices increased at half that rate. More than a dozen fraud WEDNESDAY: Law experts interviewed by the Herald-Tribune said such large price increases within 90 days are an indi- enforcement ignored flipping fraud as it was cator of fraud. happening — and may not , ■ In June 2005, when flipping hit its peak, more than 2 percent of punish it now. THURSDAY: Who made all Florida real estate sales fit the criteria for potential fraud. flipping fraud possible? ■ Many of the questionable flip deals were orchestrated by real 2,000 Bankers. estate professionals. A close review of several thousand flips in NEXT SUNDAY: How to prevent mortgage fraud. Sarasota and Manatee counties showed that 40 percent of the flippers were industry insiders — real estate agents, mortgage 1,500 brokers and attorneys. Florida’s suspicious property flips ■ Lenders facilitated fraud by approving mortAs the real estate market boomed in Florida, 1,000 suspicious property flips followed suit. gages on suspicious transactions. In deal after The number of suspicious flips peaked in June 2005, when overall sales volume also reached its high mark.

See FRAUD on 8A

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STAFF GRAPHIC / JENNIFER F. A. BORRESEN

SOURCES: Property appraisers’ offices, 57 of 67 counties, Analysis by the Herald-Tribune

INSIDE FLORIDA

STATE’S CREDIT SOLID Florida seems to be weathering the recession better than most states, but some foresee a day of financial reckoning. 1B Arts ...................1E Classified .........1F Lottery .............2A Movie Log .......6B

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OUR 84TH YEAR NUMBER 283 6 SECTIONS

In law to thwart drug seekers, a critical hole? 15-DAY WINDOW: Critics fear

measure gives too much time to go ‘doctor shopping’ By ZAC ANDERSON and JOHN DAVIS zac.anderson@heraldtribune.com Billy Courtright got prescriptions for 250 addictive painkillers from doctors in Venice and North Port within a

matter of days last month. His wife, Linda, got dozens more. Her teenage son, Nick Block, ingested some of those pills before he died of a drug overdose in a North Port motel room, according to federal investigators. When police found his body, his mother was lying on a bed, unconscious from an overdose, in the same room. A new state law is supposed to prevent such “doctor shopping” for prescription pain pills, which

have become the state’s leading drug killer, but the law has a big loophole: Pharmacists have 15 days to enter prescriptions into a new electronic database. Billy Courtright, Block’s stepfather, reportedly obtained two prescriptions from different doctors 14 days apart, leading some experts to cite the case as evidence that legislative compromises crippled the law. Other states require much fast-

er reporting to prevent people from visiting multiple doctors for prescriptions. “This is a very important case of a child that might have been saved,” said Dr. Rafael Miguel, a pain expert with the University of South Florida who lobbied for the new law but opposed the 15-day window. When the new database comes online next year, doctors are supSee DRUGS on 13A

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