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Former federal fugitive sentenced to 11 years in foreclosure scam case

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LOS ANGELES, Calif. — A former Los Angeles resident who was a federal fugitive for a dozen years was sentenced today to 11 years in prison for operating a scam that promised to postpone foreclosure sales for more than 800 distressed homeowners in the Southland and elsewhere.

Glen Alan Ward, 48, pleaded guilty in April in connection with three separate sets of charges in federal courts in Los Angeles and San Francisco, all stemming from his 15-year fraud, according to the Department of Justice.

In addition to the prison term, U.S. District Judge Dale S. Fischer ordered Ward to pay about $60,000 in restitution and to forfeit approximately $100,000 in cash and property previously seized by law enforcement authorities.

Ward became a federal fugitive in 2000 when he failed to appear in court after signing a plea agreement, which arose out of federal charges in Los Angeles related to his early conduct in the scheme, prosecutors said.

Two years later, Ward was indicted on multiple counts of bankruptcy fraud in the Bay Area for allegedly continuing the scheme in and around San Francisco.

In 2012, he was indicted on mail fraud, aggravated identity theft and additional bankruptcy fraud counts in Los Angeles after fleeing to Canada and continuing his fraud from there, according to federal officials.

While in Canada, Ward recruited Frederic Alan Gladle, who was indicted in Los Angeles federal court for bankruptcy fraud and identity theft, according to the Department of Justice. Gladle was later sentenced to five years in custody.

On April 5, 2012, Ward was arrested in Canada by the Royal Canadian Mounted Police and the Waterloo Regional Police Service based on a U.S. provisional arrest warrant. He was extradited to the United States last December to answer all three sets of charges in Los Angeles.

According to the plea agreement, Ward admitted engaging in a fraud scheme that solicited and recruited homeowners whose properties were in danger of imminent foreclosure, promising to delay foreclosure for as long as the homeowners could afford his $700 monthly fee.

Once a homeowner paid the fee, Ward accessed a public bankruptcy database and retrieved the name of an individual debtor who recently filed bankruptcy, according to the plea agreement.  He then directed his clients to execute, notarize and record a grant deed transferring generally a fractional interest in their distressed home into the name of the debtor that Ward provided, the plea agreement states.

After stealing the debtor’s identity, Ward faxed a copy of the bankruptcy petition, the notarized grant deed and a cover letter to the homeowner’s lender or the lender’s representative, directing it to stop the impending foreclosure sale due to the bankruptcy, according to the plea agreement.

Because bankruptcy filings give rise to automatic stays that protect debtors’ properties, the receipt of the bankruptcy petitions and deeds in the debtors’ names forced lenders to cancel foreclosure sales.

The lenders, which included banks that received government funds under the Troubled Asset Relief Program, could not move forward to collect money that as owed to them until getting permission from the bankruptcy courts, thereby repeatedly delaying the lenders’ recovery of their money for months and even years.

In addition, if distressed homeowners wanted to complete a loan modification or short sale, they were left to the mercy of Ward to send them forged deeds, supposedly signed by the debtors, to re-unify their titles as required by most lenders, according to federal prosecutors.

Ward delayed the foreclosure sales of about 800 distressed properties by using at least 414 bankruptcies filed in 26 judicial districts across the country, prosecutors said. During that same period, Ward admitted collecting more than $1.2 million from his clients who paid for his illegal foreclosure-delay services, all of which he has agreed to forfeit, according to court documents.

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