Tag: property theft

  • Deed Theft Should Not Exist

    Deed Theft Should Not Exist

    What Does It Take to Safeguard a Title? If you hold the deed, you can’t be evicted, right? True — except if your deed is pulled out from under you by a nasty actor. It shouldn’t happen, but it does. Just ask Dada, a homeowner in Oklahoma City. Someone recorded a quitclaim on Dada’s deed,…

  • Register of Deeds Blasts Crooks Who Steal Homes Out From Under Owners’ Funerals

    Register of Deeds Blasts Crooks Who Steal Homes Out From Under Owners’ Funerals

    The Register of Deeds of Shelby County, Tennessee recently took to a live television newscast to warn the public about scammers scouring funeral listings and obituaries. They’re looking for dead people whose homes they can steal. They forge deeds. They record bogus title transfers. Once they have control over their ill-gotten homes, criminals sell them,…

  • Ahoy There, Matey! Look Out for the Title Pirates

    Ahoy There, Matey! Look Out for the Title Pirates

    We all know about porch pirates… but look out for title pirates. They’ll take your whole porch. Title piracy is deed fraud. It happens when someone uses a deed to deliberately take over someone else’s real estate. It’s an unusual crime, but according to the National Association of REALTORS® (which cites FBI figures), it’s been…

  • Guilty Pleas in Long Island: Heirs Recover Their Stolen Deeds

    Guilty Pleas in Long Island: Heirs Recover Their Stolen Deeds

    Two New Yorkers — and one is a former lawyer and a licensed notary — have pleaded guilty to deed fraud charges in New York. The charges involve first-degree scheming to defraud, and additional counts related to forging and filing false documents to take deceased people’s titles in Nassau and Queens. A company run by…

  • Texas Warranty Deed Forgery Plot Thickens

    Texas Warranty Deed Forgery Plot Thickens

    More Houston-area deed fraud victims are speaking out. The alleged perpetrator has already been charged with a first-degree felony of forgery, fraudulent document execution, and theft greater than $300,000, in connection with warranty deeds worth some $15 million. He would forge property owners’ signatures. Then he’d go buy their properties at a deep discount. Investigators…