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Maryland mortgage broker sentenced to three-year prison term

May 21, 2010

U.S. District Judge Benson Everett Legg has sentenced David Wehrs Sr. of Annapolis, Md. to three years in prison followed by three years of supervised release, with the first year to be served on home detention with electronic monitoring, for wire fraud in connection with a scheme to defraud investors and financial institutions. Judge Legg also entered an order that Wehrs pay $2,365,128 in restitution and to forfeit any assets derived from the scheme. Any forfeited assets will be applied to the restitution amount. The sentence was announced by United States Attorney for the District of Maryland Rod J. Rosenstein and Special Agent in Charge Richard A. McFeely of the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI). According to his plea agreement, Wehrs owned Maryland Title and Escrow Company Inc., located in Annapolis, Md., and operated a home remodeling company called Show-Me. From 2007 to October 2009, Wehrs induced individuals to invest money through Maryland Title into a purported FDIC-insured money market fund that Wehrs “guaranteed” would pay monthly interest payments of 10.85 percent. Instead of depositing the money into an “American Funds Fixed Rate Money Market” as promised, Wehrs deposited investor funds into one of two bank accounts he controlled in the name of his title company. Wehrs wire transferred a large portion of these investor funds to a brokerage account in the name of his title company, then used the money to “day trade.” Day trading is the rapid buying and selling of securities throughout the day in the hope that the stocks will continue climbing or falling in value for the seconds to minutes that they are owned, allowing a person to lock in quick profits. During the scheme, Wehrs conducted millions of dollars of stock trades per month. From early 2008 until mid-2009, Wehrs lost approximately $1 million. In addition to day trading, Wehrs used some of the investor funds to: pay “monthly interest” and “redemptions” to other investors; pay expenses of his other businesses, including Show-Me; make escrow payments for his title company; buy real estate and personal property; and pay other personal expenses. Wehrs admitted that in June 2009, when he had no money left in his personal bank accounts or day trading accounts to pay interest due to investors, he used $630,611 earmarked to pay lending institutions for mortgage payoffs from his escrow account at Maryland Title to pay investors, causing that amount of loss to the title insurance company for Maryland Title. He also used $100,000 from the Maryland Title escrow account that was earmarked as earnest money for the purchase of an individual’s home to pay interest to investors, causing a loss of $100,000 to the homebuyer. The total loss as a result of Wehrs’ scheme is $2,365,128 to investors and the title insurance company. Rosenstein and McFeely gave special thanks to the Securities & Exchange Commission (SEC) and the Maryland Insurance Administration for their work in the investigation and prosecution of this case. For more information, visit http://baltimore.fbi.gov.
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May 21, 2010
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