Your Web News in One Place

Help Webnuz

Referal links:

Sign up for GreenGeeks web hosting
January 28, 2019 05:25 pm PST

Grifter steals dead peoples' houses in gentrifying Philadelphia by forging deed transfers, then flipping them

At least six empty houses owned by the estates of Philadelphians ended up in the hands of William Ernest Johnson III, a violent felon currently on parole; the houses were then sold on to developers who renovated and flipped them.

The houses were stolen by providing Philadelphia's city deeds office with forged deed transfers, either bearing the stamps of notaries who say they were tricked, or forged notary stamps (either from nonexistent notaries, or from notaries who say the stamps were forged -- including the wife of a former state senator).

Pennsylvania does not require that notaries capture a thumbprint when notarizing a document.

There have been other waves of house thefts in the past, but those were sophisticated identity-theft crimes that involved merging multiple data-sets from online breaches to impersonate the house's owner and secure a duplicate deed. However, in this case, it seems that a combination of poor checking at the Philadelphia city deeds office and lax standards for Pennsylvania notaries meant that even a dumdum could simply rip off houses wholesale.

Johnson denies being that dumdum. However, at least one of the flipped houses was laundered through his wife, who was convincingly angry and surprised when the Philadelphia Inquirer asked her about it, implying that she'd been scammed by him. Then Johnson called the reporter and said, "I wanted to know if I could offer you something. What is it going to take for you not to mention my wifes name?"

The stolen houses had been owned by longtime residents who died without clear estates, or whose distant relations had not moved quickly to sell them on. Read the rest


Original Link: http://feeds.boingboing.net/~r/boingboing/iBag/~3/8AQYHcJHFeA/william-ernest-johnson-iii.html

Share this article:    Share on Facebook
View Full Article