At least 3 B.C. homes listed for sale without homeowners' knowledge amid surge in title fraud in Ontario - Action News
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British Columbia

At least 3 B.C. homes listed for sale without homeowners' knowledge amid surge in title fraud in Ontario

There have been at least three cases of attempted title fraud in B.C. since 2019 two of which resulted in successful sales where fraudsters purporting to be the homeowners attempted to sell properties they did not own.

Homeowners encouraged to set up Google alert in case house is listed for sale

Detached homes are pictured in Vancouver, British Columbia on Wednesday, September 22, 2021.
Detached homes are pictured in Vancouver in September 2021. Cases of title fraud have been on the rise in Ontario. In B.C., at least three attempted cases have been confirmed since 2019, two of which resulted in successful sales. (Ben Nelms/CBC)

There have been at least three cases of attempted title fraud in B.C. since 2019,according to the province's land titleauthority.

Title fraud is a complex real estate crime inwhich fraudsters purporting to be homeowners attemptto sell properties they donot own.

The Land Title and Survey Authorityof British Columbia (LTSA) confirmedone home was allegedly fraudulently sold in 2019, followed by another in 2020. In 2021, a third attempt was thwarted before the transaction was finalized.

Bothsuccessful sales occurred in Richmond, justsouth ofVancouver,and the cases are currently before the courts.

The LTSA, which conducts between 800,000 to one million real estate transactions per year, says land title fraud is considered "rare" in B.C.

But arecentCBC News investigation revealed this type of crime appears to be on the rise in Ontario, where at least 30 homes in the Greater Toronto Area (GTA) have either been sold or mortgaged without the owners' knowledge since 2019.

Stand-ins pose as tenants, homeowners

The frauds are undertaken by a handful of organized crime groups, whichlookthrough publicly available property records to identifyhomes, usually without a mortgage, as a target.From there, the groups use stolen IDs and hire "stand-ins" to pose as tenants to gain access to the home, and impersonate homeowners to sell it.

The sale tends to happen relatively quickly, with the fake ownersaccepting the first reasonable offer they receive.In rarer cases, the fraudsters take out a mortgage on the home before making off with the cash.

Headshot of a man on an Ontario drivers licence.
Fraudulent identification plays a crucial role in title fraud. This fraudulent driver's license was used by a man who gained access to two Toronto properties targeted for title transfer fraud. (CBC)

LTSA confirmedthe two sales in B.C.relied on a near-identical scheme, with forged documents playing a crucial role in the properties' sale from under the legitimate owner.

"In both cases, the property managers responsible for renting the homes took instructions from the fraudster from different phone numbers and email addresses than those authorized by the owners, and shared documents that enabled the fraudster to better impersonate the owners," read a statement from the Land Title Authority.

"Both properties were listed for sale by Realtors who accepted a scanned copy of a forged passport to verify the identity of the supposed owner.In one case, an unsuspecting legal professional retained by the fraudster impersonating the registered owner also relied on a copy of the forged passport to verify the identity of the client, and assisted the fraudster in transferring the title to the property."

Calls for more stringent identification verification

Richmond RCMP confirmed itsEconomic Crime Unit, a specialized section within the Organized Crime Unit, took over one of the investigations in March 2020 after the home was sold without the owner's permission in late 2019.

The victim was out of Canada at the time of the sale, and two suspects were identified and later arrested.

Doug Harris, a professor at the University of British Columbia'sAllard School of Law, said while the current principal safeguard against title fraud isforlegal professionals to check identification, the title registry system works to protect the transaction, rather than the individual.

A facade of the Richmond RCMP station.
Richmond RCMP confirmed its Economic Crime Unit took conduct of one of the investigations in March 2020, after one home was sold without the owners' permission. (Ben Nelms/CBC)

"It seems counterintuitive that someone who owns a house all of a sudden ends up dispossessed of that house because somebody else, an innocent buyer, has made a transaction with a rogue. But that's what the system protects it protects that transaction," he said.

"It's one of the risks in a system where apolicy decision has been made to make it simpler to transfer interest in land."

The increase in cases in Ontario have resulted in calls for more stringent verification of identification.

Over the past year, CBC News has reported on numerous allegations of fake identifications and other documents being used to rent homes and take out fraudulent mortgages, but these attempted home thefts appear to represent an escalation in real estate fraud in Canada.

String of similar crimes in 2008

Ron Usher, general counsel at the Society of NotariesPublic of British Columbia, helped stop a similarseries of crimes in B.C.in 2008, after an organized group fraudulently sold fivehomes. In those cases, both the buyers and sellers were in on the fraudand were targetinghomes owned by single men whose mortgage had been paid off.

Usher notified police after spotting a number of "red flags" in an ongoing transaction, and police eventually conducted a sting operation to arrest the perpetrators.

Usher says alarm bells for buyers, real estate agents and lawyers include: sellers seeming unfamiliar with the property, brand new documentation, and inconsistencies indata.

For example, in one case in Toronto, theperson impersonating a homeowner mispelled his nametwicesigning documents adetailreal estate agents missed.

Usher saysfake identification has grown increasingly easy to accessand difficult to spot. In one recent case in B.C., an attempted fraudster managed to acquirea real B.C. driver's license in the name of the true owner.

Rows and rows of single-family homes are seen in this aerial shot of Vancouver.
An aerial view of East Vancouver homes is pictured in July 2018. Alarm bells for homebuyers, real estate agents and lawyers include: sellers seeming unfamiliar with the property, brand new documentation, and inconsistencies in data. (Gian-Paolo Mendoza/CBC)

"It takes real professional training to look for those red flags. It's an arms race. Everyone in the game has been trying to up their standards," he said, adding the crimes are relatively complex to pull off, and organized criminals are likely to repeat the crime as many times as they can untilcaught.

"There's so many touch points. There's a whole flow of cash. There's documented trail of money. You've got to see people, you've got to answers questions about things."

Usher sayshomeowners can protect themselves by setting up a Google alert for their property in case it is listed, and, most notably, signing up for title insurance, which will cover legal fees in the case of fraud though the title insurance industry warnsit isn't currently set up to deal with title fraudon the scale currently being experienced in Ontario.

Usher said most cases will not result in people actually losing their property but victims of this type of fraud can face an arduous and expensive legal process to prove they are the rightful owner, or did nottake out a mortgage themselves.

"All of us can relate to what a devastating thing it would be, basically finding out you have a very substantial legal problem," he said, adding that realtors, notary publics, lawyers and government should work together to improve practices around verifying identification.

"Everybody's got stars in their eyes about real estate. Everybody's got something they're getting out of it and those things can always blind you to red flags."

With files from Arrthy Thayaparan