Mortgage fraudster on the lam after scamming $16 million from lenders

Convicted in June for the same scam that earned his partner a 14-year prison term, a Texas mortgage fraudster decided not to show up for sentencing

Mortgage fraudster on the lam after scamming $16 million from lenders
Here’s a bright idea: When convicting someone of a $16 million mortgage-fraud scheme that could land him a decade and change in prison, maybe don’t let him just wander around free until the sentencing.

That’s the lesson being learned by the federal court charged with sentencing Oscar Ortiz, a Texas man who pleaded guilty in June of last year to conspiring to commit bank, mail and wire fraud. He was scheduled to appear for sentencing last week, but was nowhere to be found when the hearing convened. A federal grand jury promptly returned an indictment against Ortiz for failure to appear, and he’s now considered a fugitive, according to the US Attorney’s Office for the Southern District of Texas.

According to prosecutors, Ortiz and a co-conspirator, Houston realtor Seung Min (Suzy) Santillan, operated a mortgage-fraud scheme in which they recruited straw buyers to purchase properties in the Houston area. Loans were obtained using these straw buyers, and lenders were given “materially false information” to induce them to make the loans. The loans ultimately defaulted when Ortiz and Santillan failed to make mortgage payments.

Ortiz and Santillan made use of several business entities to execute the scam. They told the straw buyers that the homes would be in their name for a short time while modifications were made to the properties, and then be resold. Instead, once the loans were funded, a large portion of the proceeds would go to one of Ortiz’s and Santillan’s businesses. That happened even when one property was purchased for the second time with a different straw buyer. Ortiz and Santillan were able to pocket a large portion of the loan proceeds because they inflated the value of the properties with sham appraisals, prosecutors said.

Santillan pleaded guilty to the conspiracy in September. She was sentenced to 14 years in federal prison and ordered to pay $5,299,500 in restitution.


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