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United States Attorney David E. Nahmias
Northern District of Georgia
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
10/10/08
http://www.usdoj.gov/usao/gan/ |
CONTACT: Patrick Crosby
(404)581-6016
FAX (404)581-6160 |
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FORMER
GEORGIA REAL ESTATE AGENT SENTENCED
TO 14 YEARS IN FEDERAL PRISON FOR MORTGAGE FRAUD
ATLANTA
- Joseph Sterling Jetton, 61, of Woodstock, Ga., was sentenced today to
14 years in federal prison to be followed by five years of supervised
release and ordered to pay $11,194,300 in restitution on charges of conspiracy,
bank fraud, wire fraud and money laundering related to a multi-million
dollar mortgage fraud scheme. Jetton was convicted by a jury on Nov. 26,
2007, after a three week trial, and was sentenced today by U.S. District
Judge Beverly B. Martin.
According
to U.S. Attorney David E. Nahmias and the information presented in court,
Jetton orchestrated a mortgage fraud scheme that involved millions of
dollars in fraudulently inflated mortgage loans being provided to unqualified
straw borrowers from late 2004 through early 2006. The straw borrowers
were paid through shell companies as much as $600,000 per property from
the fraudulently obtained loan proceeds. Jetton wrote sales contracts
that failed to disclose that the sales prices of the residences had been
inflated and that hundreds of thousands of dollars out of the loan proceeds
were going to the buyers and others. Jetton personally derived more than
a $1 million in commissions from the mortgage fraud scheme.
"This defendant was a licensed real estate agent. Using his specialized
knowledge of real estate and residential mortgage financing, he orchestrated
a mortgage fraud scheme that has caused millions of dollars in losses
to lenders and untold damage to neighborhoods," said U.S. Attorney
Nahmias. "Nearly a dozen people have been sentenced to federal prison
for their involvement in this defendant's scheme. The long prison sentence
handed down today accounts for his leadership role in the scheme and the
misuse of his position as a real estate agent to commit the fraud. We
will continue to work with federal, state and local law enforcement agencies
to vigorously investigate and prosecute mortgage fraud schemes, especially
those perpetrated by professionals in the real estate industry."
Eleven
other defendants have already been sentenced to prison terms in related
cases, with sentences ranging from eight months to more than ten years
in federal prison. Raymond Joseph Costanzo Jr., 63, of Clayton, Ga. --
a closing attorney in the scheme -- was sentenced to three years and five
months in federal prison. A loan broker in the scheme, Olympia D. Ammons,
31, of St. Louis, Mo., was sentenced to five years and three months in
prison to be followed by four years of supervised release, and was ordered
to pay $7,549,044 in restitution.
Assistant
U.S. Attorneys Gale McKenzie, William L. McKinnon Jr. and Douglas Gilfillan
prosecuted the case. This case was investigated by Special Agents of the
FBI.
For
further information please contact U.S. Attorney David E. Nahmias or Executive
Assistant U.S. Attorney Charysse L. Alexander through Public Affairs Officer
Patrick Crosby with the U.S. Attorney's Office at (404) 581-6016.
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