Skip to main content

Connecticut Man Pleads Guilty to Role in Mortgage Fraud of FHA Loans

Oct 05, 2010

David B. Fein, United States Attorney for the District of Connecticut, has announced that Kenneth Perkins of Groton, Conn. has pled guilty before Chief United States District Judge Alvin W. Thompson in Hartford to one count of conspiracy to commit wire fraud stemming from his participation in a mortgage fraud scheme. According to court documents and statements made in court, Perkins was a participant in a conspiracy to obtain residential real estate loans, including loans insured by the Federal Housing Administration (FHA), through the use of sham sales contracts, false loan applications and fraudulent property appraisals. As part of the scheme, individuals are alleged to have entered into sales contracts with straw purchasers to sell homes for a price higher than the actual price that the sellers would receive. Participants in the conspiracy submitted false documentation in connection with loan applications that were submitted, including fraudulent appraisals of the properties being purchased in order to justify the inflated sales price and the loan amount being sought to fund each purchase. In pleading guilty, Perkins admitted that he agreed to serve as a buyer in approximately eight residential property sales that closed between about March 2007 and September 2007. Perkins admitted that the sales prices on the sales contracts and closing documents were fraudulently inflated, and that they were typically supported by a fraudulent appraisal, in order to secure a loan at an amount higher than the price actually agreed to by the seller. All but one of these properties are in Connecticut. Perkins also admitted that false information was provided on his loan applications to the lenders in order to secure the loans needed to fund the property purchases. The false information included information about his income, his assets and liabilities, his intention to occupy the home as his primary residence, and his ownership interest in property in the prior three years. PERKINS received as much as $20,000 each time he agreed to act as a buyer. Perkins also assisted the conspiracy by helping to obtain residential real estate loans in the names of other straw buyers. This assistance included creating false documentation in support of loan applications, including false employment records, false wage records and false bank records. It also included utilizing a bank account into which some of the fraudulent proceeds were funneled, and working with an appraiser to generate fraudulent appraisals that would be sent to lenders in support of loan applications. In total, Perkins’ fraudulent conduct caused a loss of approximately $1.5 million to lending institutions. Judge Thompson has scheduled sentencing for Dec. 20, 2011, at which time Perkins faces a maximum term of imprisonment of five years and a fine of up to $250,000. For more information, visit http://newhaven.fbi.gov.
About the author
Published
Oct 05, 2010
President Trump ‘Giving Very Serious Consideration’ To Re-Privatizing Fannie And Freddie

President indicates the time ‘would seem to be right,’ says he’ll make a decision ‘in the near future’

James Brody, Esq. Now Owner Of New, National Compliance, Litigation Law Firm

JW Brody | Compliance & Litigation to serve IMBs, mortgage brokers, depositories, credit unions, and fintechs

May 19, 2025
DOJ Opens Criminal Investigation Into NY AG Letitia James Over Mortgage Fraud Claims

Investigation follows April referral by FHFA Director Bill Pulte; potential charges include wire, mail, and bank fraud

May 09, 2025
Federal Layoffs Help Drive Record 25% Surge In D.C. Housing Inventory

Cuts at mortgage, housing-related agencies help spur government employee exodus from the nation’s capital

May 07, 2025
Undocumented, But Not Unmortgageable

As immigration enforcement intensifies, lenders must decide if ITIN mortgages are too risky — or too valuable to ignore

Freddie Mac’s Net Income Up By $28M To $2.8B For Q1 2025

GSE sees chance to ‘strip away unnecessary bureaucracy and eliminate non-essential activities’ to drive tech investments, lower origination costs

May 01, 2025