Saturday, November 22, 2008

Education

Five Charged With $690,000 in Student Loan Fraud

The indictment raises concern that there could be significant abuse in the private loan sector

Posted June 25, 2008

A ring of five Seattle-area women has been charged with taking out more than $690,000 in fraudulent private student loans, raising concerns by some federal officials that the kinds of abuses that have hammered the subprime mortgage sector may also be lurking in the student lender field.

In an indictment filed in early June in Seattle's federal district court, prosecutors allege that beginning in 2005, Kathy L. Hardy, 59, of Renton, Wash., her two daughters, ages 35 and 20, and two 36-year-old associates filed more than 70 applications for private student loans, often using other people's names or Social Security numbers.

According to the indictment, the vast majority of the women's applications were unsuccessful. But it charges that at least 24 fraudulent loan applications were approved. In a search warrant recently made public, investigators allege that the lenders sent checks—some for more than $40,000—to the women's addresses.

Although made to students, private educational loans are simply standard business transactions, little different from, say, auto loans. Banks typically charge comparatively high interest rates but try to make the applications quick and easy. In contrast, to obtain low-cost federally guaranteed Stafford or Perkins education loans, the federal government requires that students fill out the extensive Free Application for Federal Student Aid, and it requires schools to certify much of that information. The federal government caps the amount it will loan to an undergraduate, typically at a few thousand dollars a year. In addition, federal loan payments are usually made directly to a college and aren't sent to a student's home address.

Investigators and prosecutors say the women took advantage of private lenders' eagerness to make big, higher-interest loans. They also believe the defendants took advantage of a wrinkle that makes fraud in student loans harder to catch than, for example, mortgage fraud. Many lenders allow students to defer payments for as long as they are in school, which can easily mean four or five years. That means borrowers with no intention of paying don't attract lenders' or identity theft victims' attention by defaulting quickly. Finally, the investigators believe the women were able to keep taking out loans for two years despite a trickle of complaints from identity theft victims in part because of the Federal Bureau of Investigation's shift in focus to terrorism, which has slowed prosecution of some other types of cases.

While the credit crunch and some reform proposals may make things tougher for future fraudsters, federal officials say the details of this case raise worries that "there are more cases like this out there." Joseph Velling, the Seattle-based special agent in the Social Security Administration's Office of the Inspector General, who spearheaded the investigation, said lenders approved loans based on applications that should have raised warning flags. "What I found surprising was that these checks were mailed to people living at addresses that hadn't been verified well enough. . . . Banks can check Social Security numbers and names" to make sure they match, for example, he noted.

Some of the fraudulent techniques alleged in the indictment and search warrant appeared to be sophisticated. Velling said, for example, that the defendants used Social Security numbers of people who have the same name or a similar name as the defendants. And the search warrant alleges that the women sometimes provided copies of doctored driver's licenses.

But the search warrant also charges that many loan checks were sent to the same addresses. And it says that in some of the applications, the applicants' names did not match Social Security numbers. Velling added that in at least one case, the Social Security number of a dead person was used.

He said the lenders' investigators became aware of the possible fraud but had trouble persuading federal agencies to take an official interest: "These companies are sitting on more fraud, but they can't get anybody to work them."

Velling said he happened to be working the Seattle FBI office on another case last fall when a call came in from a victim complaining that someone improperly had taken out a student loan in her name. The FBI asked Velling to lead the investigation. By teaming up with other federal and local investigators, as well as the fraud investigators employed by lenders, he says he found many other loan checks that went to the same home addresses or to people with similar-sounding names. "The applications were all done on the Internet. I don't know of one case where there was a face-to-face meeting," Velling added.

Reader Comments

i AM A VICTIM

Graduated in 1984 paid off my school loan in 1988. Retained courses after my loan was paid off, this is the only way you can retain any courses back at the same school, is if you have paid off the loan. i paid the school Delta school of business.

Now 2008 the us dept of education wants me to pay for a school loan that was paid back in 1988. i was told from one guy in the us dept of education that this is how the gov't runs. they wait 25-30 years to go back and collect for loans. because the gov't knows that you don't have proof of payment 25-30 years ago. and the gov't knows the banks no longer hold own to canceled checks.

so the us dept of education purposely steals from graduate students from 25-30 years ago.

The school i attended was Delta School Of Business. DON'T NOT GET A GOV'T STUDENT LOAN!!!!!!!!!!

I also have been a victim

In 1983 I took out a $2500.00 student loan from Sallie Mae to become a dental assistant. I was promised a low repayment plan, job placement, and high wages. I was 18 and fell for it. Anyway I graduated straight A's there were no high wages or assistance with job placement. I became a dental assistant I was making minimum wage which at that time I believe was $3.75 and hour. I admit fell behind in my payments.

My Dad received a lump sum payment before he died and paid my student loan in full in January 1985.

On 9/19/08 (yes, 25 years later)I received a notice of garnishment from my employer for 25% of my disposable income. As the collection agency who now has the loan states this was never paid. I have no proof of payment.

Therefore due to the criminal lending practices of Sallie Mae I am going to be forced to pay a debt (now over $8,000.00) I do not owe. I called the Better Business Bureau and the Federal Trade Commission they stated this agency Goldsmith & Hull is known for doing this. The last one they received a complaint for was from a person who's student loan was 30 years old.

I suggest anyone who pays off a student loan get the proof of payment tattoed on your body or they will contact you in 20-30 years and say it is still owed. I am disgusted my country allows this industry to do this to its citizens.

I was never even notified this loan was owed they did not serve me or mail me a notice. I have worked and lived in the same community for 25 years with a listed phone number.

I believe this is how they make their money. Thank God my original loan was for $2500.00 can you imagine if it was 10,000.00 I would owe $40,000.00.

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