New York – Brooklyn Attorney Convicted of Mortgage Fraud

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    New York – The bogus world of a Brooklyn, N.Y., attorney who built a profitable business on title insurance while earning high fees on real estate closings came crashing down on Friday as a federal jury convicted him in a subprime mortgage scam.

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    Alexander M. Kaplan, 34, of Lerner & Kaplan, sat stoically at the defense table while a jury of 10 women and two men pronounced him guilty on all 18 counts in an indictment charging him with conspiracy and bank, mail and wire fraud.

    Kaplan, who testified in his own defense, is scheduled to be sentenced May 1 by Southern District Judge Richard Holwell.

    The verdict was a victory for Assistant U.S. Attorneys Avi Weitzman and Jonathan New, who persuaded the jury that Kaplan played a pivotal role in a wide-ranging conspiracy that ripped off lenders of millions of dollars.

    Kaplan’s role, they proved, was to keep lenders in the dark by representing the bank, the buyer and the seller in transactions where mortgage brokers, particularly lead actor Alexander Lipkin, would use the identities of innocent straw buyers to obtain huge loans on properties. Sometimes, they would flip the properties within weeks using even more phony documents.

    Weitzman told the jury during summations in the two-week trial that Kaplan was “a liar and fraudster,” who “engaged in a massive fraud that was perpetrated by all these people.

    “He did so by telling lies to banks over and over again. He lied about who the real purchasers were and he lied about the amount of money he disbursed from the loan proceeds,” Weitzman said. “His lies were all intended to protect his criminal partners and to make sure the real estate transactions looked legitimate.”

    Kaplan was one of 27 people indicted in the conspiracy. All of the other defendants except one have pleaded guilty, including Lipkin who admitted to guilt in two schemes in June 2008. He has yet to be sentenced.

    The first was part of a foreclosure “rescue scheme” whereby Lipkin induced distressed homeowners to transfer the deeds in their homes to straw buyers who would supposedly “save” their homes and promise to return the deed to the homeowners.

    In the end, Lipkin and his cohorts, using the straw buyers, would take out millions of dollars in loans on the property. They would then default on those loans, leaving both the banks and the straw buyers damaged.

    The second scheme concerned subprime mortgages. Lipkin and others submitted applications for millions of dollars to lenders using fraudulent documents, a scheme that cost the lenders more than $4.5 million.

    Kaplan, the prosecutors said, was one of several dirty lawyers who helped facilitate these plots, including the signature scam in the indictment: the purchase of a block of apartments at 243 West 98th Street in Manhattan where Lipkin and several others, including Kaplan, never disclosed to the bank that the units were occupied and under rent control. Some tenants were paying as little as $393 a month.

    Kaplan made between $850 to $1,100 in fees per closing and much more in title fees, Weitzman said, and he made “tens of thousands” in fees on the West 98th Street deal.

    AN UPHILL BATTLE

    Defense lawyer Diarmuid White of White & White in Manhattan, was faced with an uphill battle. It did not help when his client took the witness stand and was unable to remember key details, claimed paralegals handled a good deal of the work, and conceded he did not file income taxes in 2006 and then blamed his accountant.

    White’s strategy was to portray Kaplan as an ambitious young attorney who was trying to build a “mill” and who let things get away from him through sloppy business practices and mismanagement.

    “No question he did not act as diligently as he should have,” White told the jury during opening statements, asking why Kaplan “would risk everything — his law career, his business, everything, to willingly participate in such a conspiracy?”

    Kaplan, admitted to the bar in 1999 after graduating from New York Law School, started with a small firm practicing immigration, matrimonial and real estate law. After working for another real estate firm in Brooklyn, he and partner Garry Lerner, who is his cousin, started their own practice focusing on real estate.

    Kaplan got his foot in the door by becoming the closing agent for one bank. He soon became the agent for another six banks and, at the peak of his practice, did closings for as many as 60 banks.

    By 2004, he was doing as many as 10 closings a day, employing teams of paralegals to handle most of the transactions.

    In the same building as Lerner & Kaplan on E. 12th Street in Brooklyn, Kaplan built a thriving 10-employee title company, Executive Settlement Services.

    “Why send this out? Why not have a title company that I control and all the fees that it generates?” White said to the jury during opening arguments. “Now that’s good business, but it’s not so good for a lawyer because there is a potential conflict of interest.”

    There were ethical lapses, he said, and Kaplan “spread himself too thin” because “he couldn’t possibly oversee every transaction.”

    In his summation, White did not mince words, saying Lerner & Kaplan was “run poorly, not well supervised, not managed properly.”

    “There was too much emphasis on growing the business,” he said. “The practice was a mess.”

    White said that Lipkin, “the ringleader,” lied to everyone along the way, the banks, the straw buyers, the other defendants and Kaplan, whom he played for a dummy.

    “He was a fool, a total fool,” White said. “He was ripe for Lipkin to manipulate and that’s what happened. He was duped.”

    But Weitzman and New convinced the jury that it was impossible for Kaplan to sign off on one document after another on the closings, particularly the West 98th Street property, without knowing, or at least consciously avoiding, the truth.

    Weitzman compared Kaplan to the three monkeys who hear no evil, see no evil and speak no evil.

    “Essentially, Kaplan’s defense is ‘I didn’t see nothing. I didn’t hear nothing,'” he said.

    Kaplan faces a potential sentence of upwards of 30 years and a fine of $1 million, but is expected to receive much less under the U.S. Sentencing Guidelines.


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    11 Comments
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    Anonymous
    Anonymous
    15 years ago

    may god help him

    Anonymous
    Anonymous
    15 years ago

    Well, I guess that’s one lawyer who’s lost his license & probably his freedom as well. For what? Greed, I suppose. Shame.

    Anonymous
    Anonymous
    15 years ago

    And another reason why the prices of homes are so crazy in Brooklyn.

    From the banks, mortgages, loan officers and every middle man that gets involved with the purchase of home, they are all ganovim.

    Shame on these people for making the 98% of people who are ethical in what they do and making them look bad.

    Greed????
    Greed????
    15 years ago

    “Well, I guess that’s one lawyer who’s lost his license & probably his freedom as well. For what? Greed, I suppose. Shame.”

    Greed???? This is fraud. You mean he should have stolen a little not a lot? Shame. I am sure you just rushed to post and did not realize the connotation of your discription. I hope…

    Anonymous
    Anonymous
    15 years ago

    and this how it affected the rest of us. the landlords seeing that real estate was selling they raised the prices of their properties and they also raised the rent.then these scammers would tell prospective buyers that they can get them into a house for less than rent and maybe get them some cash at closing [sub prime deal]then they would shmir the appraiser to overassess the property to max out the mortgage potential.the property would move and then this cycle would start all over again.five years later these mrtgages reset the interest rates go up and all the buyers are stuck with properties they should have never bought.now people start to default on the loans banks have a deficit then depositors make a run on the banks due to lack of confidence .banks start to close ,stocks sold by banks reflecting these sub prime notes crash for lack of value,then the stock market crashes people lose their jobs the economy grinds to a halt and then recession depression .and thats the rest of the story

    Anonymous
    Anonymous
    15 years ago

    Rent as little as 393 per month.

    That’s sick.

    The landlord is paying out of his pocket at least 900 to have this tenant (it costs about 1200 to keep an apt at break even in manhattan).

    No wonder they could do a ripoff – no one in their right mind would purchase a sinkhole.

    lifnienhem vlo
    lifnienhem vlo
    15 years ago

    I guess this is just another case where a yid is having another yid put behind bars. I know everything, one yid should not prosocute another. It’s against Halacha, no matter what the crime he committed, it makes no difference and was never allowed in the past. When we are strong from inside no one can break us. Those who committed the crime should give judgement for hashem and his Beis Din, not for a jury that cant think straight when they see another yid.

    Anonymous
    Anonymous
    15 years ago

    The most dangerous and bizarre belief that Orthodox Jews and Jews in general have is this idea that a Jews should look the other way when another Jew destroys other people’s lives by stealing their capital or worse. There is nothing worse and dangerous than such religious fanaticism which allows people of the same clan to continue causing damage to society. Taliban and Islamists are enough for this world; please do not corrupt Jewish values of justice, honesty, and integrity through excuses such as “Halacha says.” Everyone should respect the common law and justice system in the host countries that they live in.

    Great respect to the Jewish DA who convicted Kaplan for Felony crimes. I only hope and pray that majority of Jews do not follow a Taliban mentality that a Jew should never go “against Halacha” to convict another Jew. Last I checked, the Torah is not a pathway to life for Jews to excuse and escape justice from the societies that they live in, or in Kaplan’s case a society that he robbed for egoistic, hedonistic, and materialistic pursuits.

    Maybe in prison, Kaplan will come closer to Hashem and ask him to forgive him for all the people that he was busy robbing on Shabbat.