Trio Charged in Home Loan Scam, Including Financial Elder Abuse


. By Gordon Gibb

Three men have been arrested on various charges, including financial elder abuse, following investigation into a bait-and-switch home loan scheme.

Joseph Nguyen, 37, of Woodland Hills, and Matthew Bourgo, 27, of Thousand Oaks, California—former employees of ALG Capital Inc—as well as Sean McConville, 30, president and co-owner of the brokerage, were arrested on June 9 and held in custody in lieu of nearly $30 million. McConville was arrested in Austin, Texas and will be extradited to Los Angeles for prosecution, according to the 6/10/10 edition of the Los Angeles Daily News.

According to an investigation by the state Attorney General's Office, the brokerage entered into home equity loans with borrowers and promised low interest rates, minimal fees and other attractive terms to refinance homes. However, it is alleged that the brokerage undertook to negotiate different terms with lenders without the knowledge of homeowners, who had signed agreements in good faith.

Key pages were allegedly removed after documents were signed, only to be replaced with pages reflecting the terms to which the lenders actually agreed. Signatures of the homeowners were forged onto the updated pages.

It is reported that while ALG collected just under $1 million in undisclosed fees, their alleged efforts locked a collection of homeowners into about $30 million in loans at terms to which they did not agree.

The Daily News reports that many homeowners were forced to come out of retirement, tap into retirement savings or pay significant prepayment penalties. In one case, those payments amounted to $21,000.

Many homeowners were forced to sell their homes.

An investigation was launched into the activities of ALG Capital in 2008 after the Office of the Attorney General received more than 70 complaints about the firm. ALG operates in Calabasas and Mission Hills, California.


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