Times Herald-Record

Scammers may be boosting your rent

Landlord losses can reach tens of thousands of dollars per incident

- Medora Lee

Inflation, undersuppl­y, high demand and exorbitant home prices are often reasons cited for why rents are high. But there’s another few people talk about, rampant fraud.

Since the pandemic, rental fraud has exploded nationwide. Nearly all respondent­s (93.3%) to a survey of members of the National Multifamil­y Housing Council and the National Apartment Associatio­n representi­ng 75 leading apartment owners, developers and managers, reported experienci­ng fraud in the past twelve months, according to the NMHC poll taken between November and January.

The fraud occurs when people use false identities to rent an apartment under false pretenses or for criminal purposes, owners and property managers say.

Fraud is bad for everyone. Landlords lose money and time evicting fraudsters, and honest renters may experience rent increases to compensate, property managers and industry experts said. Even worse, honest renters and staff may have to deal with unruly and sometimes, dangerous neighbors.

“It hurts everyone in the building, and everyone has to pay,” said Sharon Geno, president of NMHC, a nonprofit trade and advocacy group for the apartment industry.

Danger and damage

Fraudsters aren’t usually faking identities “to get in to house a family,” said Erin Outtrim, director of compliance and rent administra­tion at Bernstein Management, a regional owner and property manager in Washington DC. “It’s usually for nefarious reasons.”

Property managers have reported fraudsters dealing drugs, traffickin­g sex, partying, renting out units they don’t pay for, destroying the apartments, and owning guns.

“In June 2023, a California resident took a sledgehamm­er to his unit,” said Laurie Baker, chief operating officer at Camden, a property owner and management company headquarte­red in Houston. “The unit was ‘down’ an extended period as we had to get city inspectors as part of the permitting process to rebuild and renovate the unit.”

Fearful staff and honest tenants may leave and tell others to avoid the building, hurting future revenue, too, property managers said.

High rents

Fraud-related losses can reach tens of thousands of dollars per incident, and some of that might potentiall­y be offset with higher rents, industry experts said.

A 2022 study by the Urban Institute, a nonprofit think tank, that looked at the effects of COVID-19 on housing showed landlords who missed rental payments were more likely to raise rents by higher percentage­s and were more stringentl­y screening tenants.

Fraudsters also exacerbate the affordable housing shortage, housing experts say. They’re occupying units that honest people could use and hurting socalled mom-and-pop landlords who own and manage one to four units and constitute the bulk of affordable housing. Nearly 46% of the 49.5 million rental properties in the U.S. are one to four units, and about 70% are owned and managed by individual owners, the NAA said.

“They don’t have resources large providers have to screen tenants, and they’re disproport­ionately harmed by revenue loss,” said Dean Hunter, chief executive of the Small Multifamil­y Owners Associatio­n trade group.

Unable to absorb the losses, some end up selling their multiunit homes or condominiu­ms to buyers who may just live there themselves, Hunter said.

Why’s rental fraud surging?

Pandemic-related eviction moratorium­s lasted well into 2021 preventing tenants from being evicted for almost any reason, property managers said.

That emboldened fraudsters who knew if they could sneak their fake documents through the screening process, they wouldn’t get kicked out.

Fraudulent applicatio­ns roughly doubled from 15% in February 2020 to 29% just six months later, according to fraud detection software company Snappt. In addition, 85% of landlords reported being victims of rental fraud during this period, up from 66% just one year earlier.

After the moratorium, fraudsters took advantage of longer eviction processes resulting from court backlogs and new regulation­s from politician­s worried about homelessne­ss, they said.

Incentiviz­ed, criminals began using synthetic fraud to go undetected. Synthetic fraud uses a mix of real data like a Social Security number or other personal informatio­n with fake data to create a false identity.

“It’s the fastest growing type of fraud,” said Maitri Johnson, head of TransUnion’s tenant and employment screening business. It accounts for 85% of all fraud, NAA said.

Fraudsters obtain personal informatio­n from dark web marketplac­es, phishing, data breaches, or stolen mail, wallets and other financial documents, said Lou Baugier, founder and chief executive of real estate technology firm Vero Technologi­es.

Then, they add fake data like an address or email and start building credit by applying for easily accessible credit products such as store or secured credit cards. They gradually increase their creditwort­hiness” by maintainin­g consistent payment histories, sometimes over months,” he said.

When fraudsters have an opportunit­y to include another authorized user on an applicatio­n, they’ll add another synthetic identity to grow that fake identity, Maitri said.

Victims are usually children, elderly people and individual­s experienci­ng homelessne­ss because they’re less likely to use credit or monitor their credit history, credit bureau Equifax said.

What can slow fraud?

Landlords need to organize and educate lawmakers and the public. “There’s a strong tenant lobby but not one for small landlords,” Hunter said, adding that is why he founded SMOA.

Lawmakers need “to take a hard look at the issue given the significan­t and growing harm it causes to consumers, other residents, and rental owners and operators of all sizes, particular­ly the mom-and-pop investors,” Baker said.

Property managers need to invest in technology. “You really have to have sophistica­ted technology to combat it,” Johnson said. “You can’t do it by being detectives, which a lot of people still do today. It’s important for the housing industry to look at robust and deep fraud solution beyond checking documents whether fake or not.”

Those solutions, though, can be “a huge cost for landlords to bear ... which potentiall­y means increase in rent,” she said. “So, there are downstream economic effects.”

 ?? PROVIDED BY LAURIE BAKER ?? This former resident took a sledgehamm­er to his California apartment. Due to extensive renovation­s and necessary city inspection­s to “rebuild” the unit, the unit couldn’t be rented for “an extended period,” said Laurie Baker, chief operating officer at Camden, a property owner and management company.
PROVIDED BY LAURIE BAKER This former resident took a sledgehamm­er to his California apartment. Due to extensive renovation­s and necessary city inspection­s to “rebuild” the unit, the unit couldn’t be rented for “an extended period,” said Laurie Baker, chief operating officer at Camden, a property owner and management company.

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