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Indianapolis Man Sentenced to 30 Months'
Imprisonment in Mortgage Fraud Scheme
INDIANAPOLIS—Jerry J. Jaquess, Indianapolis, age 67, was sentenced to 30 months in prison
late yesterday by Chief Judge David F. Hamilton for his participation in a large mortgage fraud
scheme in the Indianapolis area, announced Timothy M. Morrison, United States Attorney for the
Southern District of Indiana. Jaquess plead guilty to one count of wire fraud and one count of
money laundering. Today’s sentencing follows a lengthy investigation conducted by Special
Agents of the Internal Revenue Service - Criminal Investigation Division and investigators for
the United States Attorney’s Office, with assistance by the Federal Bureau of Investigation.
Eight other individuals have been charged in the schemes and those cases are currently pending
before Judge Hamilton. The investigation is continuing as to other individuals who were
involved in the mortgage fraud schemes.
Jaquess owned and operated Homevestors LLC, a company involved in the development
and construction of new real estate properties, as well as the purchase and sale of existing
residential real estate properties. As part of the mortgage fraud schemes, Jaquess and other
individuals entered into contracts to purchase 186 duplexes in the Windsor Village
neighborhood, located near Arlington Avenue and 21st Street, on the east side of Indianapolis.
These properties were all owned by one person, thru various land trusts. Jaquess and others
negotiated with this individual to purchase all of the duplexes at a price of $50,000.00 each (the
last group of these properties actually sold for $60,000.00).
Jaquess used his company Homevestors to negotiate the purchase and sale of the first 11
Windsor Village properties. On each of the properties, Jaquess entered into a land contract (and
other documents) immediately preceding the closing, showing that Homevestors LLC was
purchasing the property from the owner for $50,000.00. He also entered into agreements to sell
the properties to investors for $120,000.00 each. In early February 2005, prior to the first
purchase agreements ever being finalized, Jaquess, or individuals associated with him, caused
three of the Windsor Village properties to be listed on the Metropolitan Indianapolis Board of
Realtors Multiple Listing Service (MLS) showing a list price of $120,000.00. Jaquess did not
own the properties at the time they were listed and did not even enter into land contracts to
purchase these properties (for $50,000.00 each) until mid-March 2005. These properties were
the first three Windsor Village properties closed (on March 17, 2005). A few days after these
properties closed, Jaquess and his associates caused these three sales (at $120,000.00 apiece) to
be placed on the MLS. This allowed Jaquess and other individuals involved in the scheme to
show these three properties as comparables on appraisals to be prepared for all of the remaining
Windsor Village properties, thus making it appear that each of those properties were worth
$120,000.00. Jaquess attended the closings as the seller of the properties, and generally also took
the buyer (investor) down payment check to the closings. Jaquess signed the loan closing
documents on behalf of Homevestors LLC, including the false HUD-1 Settlement Statements,
showing that the investors were providing the down payments, which he knew to be untrue.
After the closing, Jaquess received checks to Homevestors LLC for the amount of the fraudulent
loan proceeds (generally more than $70,000.00 per property). Jaquess then caused Homevestors
LLC to issue checks disbursing the fraudulent loan proceeds. Included in these checks were
payments totaling approximately $42,000.00 payable to Jaquess personally, or a family member
of his, as well as checks to repay the individuals “fronting” the down payment (plus $1,000.00 -
$3,000.00 fee) and checks to pay the investors $4,000.00 for each property purchased.
According to Assistant U. S. Attorney Susan Heckard Dowd, who prosecuted the case for
the government, Judge Hamilton ordered Jaquess to serve three years on supervised release
following his 30 months of incarceration and also ordered him to pay $824,614.33 in restitution
to Homecomings Financial and Argent Mortgage Company.
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