This web page can be viewed better with javascript enabled.
www.fincen.gov header image

To download Adobe Acrobat Reader, download PowerPoint Viewer or download Excel Viewer, please visit Accessibility page.

To view or print PDF content, download the free Adobe Acrobat Reader.

Download PDF Version PDF     Print this page Print


FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
March 16, 2009
CONTACT: Bill Grassano
703-905-3770

FinCEN Report Shows Connection With
Mortgage Fraud and Other Financial Crime

VIENNA, Va. - The Financial Crimes Enforcement Network (FinCEN) today released a new report that shows subjects reported for suspected mortgage loan fraud may also be involved in other financial crimes such as check fraud, money laundering, stock manipulation, structuring to avoid currency transaction reporting requirements and others. From depository institution Suspicious Activity Reports (SARs), FinCEN identified approximately 156,000 mortgage fraud subjects, and found that 2,360 were reported for suspicious activity in 3,680 of the other SAR types.

"This study analyzes the possible interrelationship of illicit activity occurring across different financial sectors. Criminal actors may attempt to exploit any vulnerability to commit fraud and launder money through a range of financial institutions," said FinCEN Director James H. Freis, Jr. "The interconnected nature of suspicious activity across multiple financial sectors covered by FinCEN's Bank Secrecy Act regulations underscores the immense value of combining insights from the different sectors for the purpose of detecting and thwarting criminal activity."

The report released today reveals the activities of people reported in depository institution SARs for mortgage fraud between July 2003 and June 2008, by evaluating three other types of SARs: those filed by money services businesses (SAR-MSB), by securities brokers and dealers or insurance companies (SAR-SF), and by casinos and card clubs (SAR-C). The study, entitled Mortgage Loan Fraud Connections with Other Financial Crime, is FinCEN's fourth mortgage loan fraud study released since November 2006.

Among the findings:

In 2009, FinCEN is conducting additional analyses to examine the relationship between mortgage loan fraud and other financial fraud, and will further explore reported activities, locations, and subjects.

Director Freis released the new study during remarks at the Mortgage Bankers Association's National Mortgage Fraud Conference at which he also announced a new section of the agency's Web site at www.fincen.gov specifically focused on FinCEN's analysis in the mortgage loan fraud area.

******************************************************************************

The Office of the Special Inspector General for the Troubled Asset Relief Program (“SIGTARP”) was created by the Emergency Economic Stabilization Act of 2008 and has the duty, among other things, to conduct, supervise and coordinate audits and investigations of the purchase, management and sale of assets under the TARP. SIGTARP’s mission is to advance the goal of economic stability through transparency, coordinated oversight and robust enforcement, thereby being a voice for, and protecting the interests of, those who fund the TARP programs – i.e., the American taxpayers. The Special Inspector General, Neil M. Barofsky, was confirmed by the Senate on December 8, 2008, and sworn into office on December 15, 2008.