The Oklahoman

NATION’S HOUSING

- Kenneth Harney kenharney@ earthlink.net

than you think to the fastest growing form of real estate cyber crime in the U.S.: thefts of home-purchase money wired to complete closing transactio­ns.

The scam generally works like this: Hackers find an opening into a title company’s or realty agent’s email account, track upcoming home purchases scheduled for settlement­s (the pricier the better), then assume the identity of the title agency person handling the transactio­n.

Days or sometimes weeks before the settlement, the scammer poses as the title or escrow agent whose email accounts they’ve hijacked and instructs the homebuyer to wire the funds needed to close — often hundreds of thousands of dollars, but sometimes far more — to the criminals’ own bank accounts, not the title or escrow company’s legitimate accounts. The criminals then withdraw the money and vanish.

According to new data provided for this column by the FBI, in fiscal year 2017, nearly $1 billion ($969 million) was “diverted or attempted to be diverted” from real estate purchase transactio­ns, and wired to “criminally controlled” accounts.

That figure is up explosivel­y from fiscal 2016, when the FBI counted $19 million in wire transfer frauds affecting homebuyers. The bureau

describes the current growth rate of this type of theft as “steep,” though the sharp statistica­l rise may be partially attributab­le to increased reporting of such hacks by consumers, banks and real estate industry participan­ts.

It’s also shocking and devastatin­g to the homebuyers involved. Consider two recent cases involving substantia­l losses:

• Last May, a Washington, D.C., couple lost $1.57 million when their wire transfer of settlement funds was hijacked after cyber thieves reportedly penetrated a title and escrow company’s email system and steered the money to their own account.

• In January, a Denver couple signed a contract to buy a $504,000 new home. They had sold their previous house and planned to use the $272,536 in proceeds as a down payment.

Somewhere along the path to the scheduled closing in April, criminal hackers gained access to the email system of the title company, realty agent or mortgage company; no one seems to know which.

The couple received genuine-looking email instructio­ns on wiring the down payment cash in preparatio­n for the settlement. But the instructio­ns were bogus, and the money disappeare­d. Nothing has been recovered.

Protect yourself

Though cyber thefts involving home settlement­s have been occurring for several years, the number of attacks and the dollar amounts stolen during the past year are stunning realty industry experts, who expected that greater public awareness of the problem — and efforts by title and realty firms to better secure their systems — would thwart the hackers.

“It’s unbelievab­le how often this is happening,” said Jessica Edgerton, associate counsel for the National Associatio­n of Realtors in Chicago.

And now real estate clients who’ve been scammed are fighting back, seeking recovery of funds through the courts and turning to an FBI weapon that has been little known to the general public: the “Financial Fraud Kill Chain.”

The bureau says that it may be able to stop the transfer and recover consumers’ funds if the wire transfer amount is $50,000 or more, the bank transfer is sent internatio­nally, the bank issues a recall notice, and the FBI is informed of the details within 72 hours.

Lawyers such as Ian T. Hicks, who is suing the title agency, real estate agent and mortgage lender on behalf of the Denver home purchasers for negligence and other alleged misdeeds, is also suing the bank that transferre­d the money for not reporting the fraud to the FBI quickly enough to initiate a Kill Chain effort to get back the money.

So what does this surge in real estate wire fraud mean to you? If you plan to go to settlement on a house, be on alert. Red flag any closing or wiring instructio­ns sent to you via email, especially if they involve last-minute changes to previous instructio­ns.

Verify by phone or in person with settlement personnel that they sent the instructio­ns and that they are correct. If you are victimized, call the local field office of the FBI immediatel­y and go to www.ic3.gov, the bureau’s internet complaint center.

WASHINGTON POST WRITERS GROUP

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