Everything you’ve heard of, from redlining to slavery, pales in comparison to what they’re doing now with deed theft. They’re often targeting people facing financial troubles or elderly homeowners who have built up a lot of equity in their homes.
“There’s an unquantifiable, terrible cost to the community,” McAfee says, adding that deed theft is causing not only the loss of homes, and the equity along with it, but also spurring higher rates of homelessness in underserved areas.
Indeed, in places like Detroit, Houston, Philadelphia and beyond, more media reports are emerging of this phenomenon, as are cases of authorities pursuing perpetrators of deed theft.
In the Houston area, for example, officials prosecuted and convicted two men in separate, high-profile cases: A 54-year man was sentenced to 40 years in prison for selling property he didn’t own to unsuspecting buyers, according to Harris County District Attorney Kim Ogg. Then another man — a repeat offender — was slapped with a 10-year sentence for a real estate scam that preyed upon older adults. Both sentencings occurred in 2022.
“Everything you’ve heard of, from redlining to slavery, pales in comparison to what they’re doing now with deed theft,” McAfee adds. “They’re often targeting people facing financial troubles or elderly homeowners who have built up a lot of equity in their homes.”
For Salvanita and Moses Foster, Bedford-Stuyvesant, New York, residents who just lost their home of 20 years to alleged deed theft, the results are heartbreaking. Recently, the couple could only stand by and watch as authorities threw their possessions in the trash and changed the locks to their home. “My stuff is gone, all my documents, all the important things, my furniture, everything is gone,” Salvanita said, according to Brooklyn real estate website Brownstoner.
Deed theft has become particularly prevalent in Black and brown communities nationwide, says Dr. Blakely’s representative, Mac McAfee.
Deed theft has gotten so bad that in November 2022, the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development Office of Inspector General put out an OIG Fraud Bulletin warning consumers about the issue.
How Deed Theft Happens and What to Do
Deed theft occurs in various ways.
Sometimes perpetrators illegally take over — and get cash and loans for — properties that are vacant homes and, in some cases, places where someone has just died.
In other instances, deed theft occurs when a fraudster illegally rents out a property that they don’t own. Tenants are duped into paying rent or thinking that they are living under a rent-to-own lease. But the scam artist is really just collecting money, all while the unsuspecting victim has no idea about the con.
Another type of deed theft happens when a person at risk of foreclosure is tricked into signing over their property as part of a foreclosure rescue scam.
In December 2022, a federal jury in Cincinnati convicted two men of running a massive, years-long foreclosure rescue scheme that defrauded at least 780 homeowners nationwide. The victims were all financially distressed people who were behind on their mortgages and wanted to save their homes. They were lured by promises that the two men would negotiate with their mortgage lenders. But that never happened.