'Breathtaking': Fake mortgage broker case reveals widespread problems - Action News
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British ColumbiaIn Depth

'Breathtaking': Fake mortgage broker case reveals widespread problems

British Columbia is used to stunning cases of greed and deception when it comes to real estate. But allegations against a fake mortgage broker suggest a much more insidious phenomenon. A network of licensed professionals and customers willing to bend the rules to help unlock a half billion dollars.

Mortgage cases expose widespread network of licensed individuals and customers willing to bend rules

B.C.'s acting registrar of mortgage brokers has issued a cease and desist order against Jay Kanth Chaudhary, pictured, for allegedly acting as a 'shadow broker' on more than half a billion dollars worth of questionable files. (Belluxe Photography)

In a real estate market saturated withstories aboutmoney laundering, offshore conniving andevenmurder-related property depreciation it's easy for allegations against one unlicensed mortgage broker toget lost in the fray.

After all, British Columbia is used to stunning examples of greed and deception.

But the activity outlined in last week'scease and desist order against Jay Kanth Chaudhary is something different entirely.

Not just because Chaudhary is accused of using fake financial documents to dupelenders into giving out half a billion dollars worth of loans. But because an entire network of licensed professionals are being investigated for helping.

And because hundreds of customers were allegedly willing to turn a blind eye if it helped them get a mortgage.

"I guess to me what's remarkable is the widespread apparent there's no word for it really other than 'corruption' of licensed people," says Ron Usher, a professor of property law at Simon Fraser University.

"To me, that's a bit breathtaking."

'Tune-upto somehow fit new lending rules'

The case is by far the biggest allegation of so-called "shadow brokering" that B.C.'s Financial Institutions Commission has investigated to date.

But it's by no means the only one in which investigators claim to have peeled back the layers of financing deals to reveal an unregistered puppet masterpulling strings to get loans for people who wouldn't otherwise qualify.

The consumers alleged to have used the services of a shadow broker appear desperate to get into the tight B.C. housing market. (Jonathan Hayward/The Canadian Press)

According to acting registrar of mortgage brokers Chris Carter, Chaudhary collected $6 million in fees from nearly 900 clients in the decade since his licence as a registered mortgage broker lapsed in 2008.

Carter says as many as 20 mortgage brokers and real estate licensees are currently under investigation for their ties to Chaudhary.

The case bears a striking similarity to the allegations against Vinita Devi Lal, an unlicensed mortgage broker facing a hearing for allegedlyfeeding altered tax documents through three licensed brokers to help secure loans for clients.

Usher, who is general counsel for B.C.'s Society of Notaries Public,says both cases are revealing for what they show about the desperation of people to get into the housing market.

And who is and is not able to get money without a little document doctoring.

"I suspect the bulk of this is going to be fraud for shelter," he says. "People who don't quite qualify in our tight market, who just need a ''tune-up' to somehow fit new lending rules."

Fish filleter, hairdresser, janitor

Usher notes that Blueshore Financial, the credit union that blew the whistle on Chaudhary, says none of the loans in question have resulted in loss or delinquency.

These are customers who are able to make the payments on a mortgage they're just not willing to tell the Canada Revenue Agency where most of their money comes from.

A man is shown mopping a floor.
One of the people who allegedly used Vinita Lal's services to obtain a mortgage was a janitor making around $10,000 of declared income a year. (Shutterstock)

The FICOM documents related to Lal included a self-employed fish filleterwith an annual salary of $30,000, a self-employed hairdresser making $13,451 a year and a janitor earning $10,881.

All were allegedly able to qualify for mortgages with the help of phony tax documents.

In the Chaudhary case, investigators interviewed a woman and her father whoseapplication for a mortgage was declined after it was submitted by a licensed broker accused of working extensively with Chaudhary.

The woman's husband was unemployed and on disability.

And yet, numerous applications filled with false or doctored documents were allegedly filed on their behalf in the hopes of securing financing.

So who is to blame?

It's not the first time regulators have investigated Chaudhary. His licence was suspended for nearly four months in 2008 after an investigation into a string of almost identical allegations.

In that case, FICOM staff received an email from a senior investigator at TD Canada Trust "advising that he had received information from an unidentified source who stated that Chaudhary was committing fraud by paying bank employees secret cash in exchange for deals."

Both sets of allegations against Vinita Lal and Jay Kanth Chaudhary involve altered taxation documents. (CBC)

So who is to blame?

The would-be homeowners who don't ask why one fixer can secure a deal for them where no one else could?

The licensed brokers or real estate agents who deliver challenging customers to so-called shadow brokers if it will help secure a deal?

Bank employees who allegedly take tips for business?

'A whole lot more conversations'

And what are the consequences?

The maximum fine for shadow-brokering appears to be $50,000. One of the brokers who assisted Lal was banned for 10 years and the other two still face hearings.

Chaudharycould not be reached for comment and a call to his wife went unanswered. He has a right to appeal the cease and desist order. He is not facing any criminal charges.

FICOM says itworks with other authorities, and Vancouver policeofficers accompanied investigators when they obtained an order to enter Chaudhary'shome in February.

But Usher suspects the investigation won't go beyond the regulator.

"Partly, it falls like many of these kinds of cases into the too hard pile, the low priority pile," he says.

"And so, there are just a whole lot more conversations we need to have."

At least until the next real estate story comes along.