Episode #409 from 1:29:41

Fake ID's

I still think it's rough but those same houses are going for three and 400,000. So I'm buying houses. I got to get qualified borrowers. I do all the renovations. It's a nightmare. Looking back, it's like, "Well, then you got to bite the bullet. It's just what you have to do." I didn't want to do that. I didn't want to do it. Whether it was laziness or, I don't know, I just thought, "I'm good at this. I'm going to run. I'm just going to start running a scam. I'm going to figure out how to drive the prices up, buy the houses for 50, record them at 200,000, and then have these synthetic identities, buy all the properties, refinance them, pull out the cash, make six months' worth of payments, let them all go into foreclosure." And that really, really started working well, very well. I had one time where I had a guy, it was James Red, the synthetic identity was James Red and he had bought two or three houses, and there was somebody at the office who was friends of somebody who knew the title company where we were closing the loans, and he called her, her name was Mary, and said, "Mary, this guy, James Red, like Cox is doing something shady. James Red doesn't even exist." She goes and looks at her last couple files and she realizes, of course obviously, this guy never showed up. She remembers Cox picked up the files, and he's saying he doesn't exist. So she freaks out. She calls the mortgage broker. Mortgage broker calls me, mortgage broker calls me up and says, "Listen, Mary said she's not closing the next loan unless James Red shows up." And I went, "Wow, that's a tough one."

Why this moment matters

I still think it's rough but those same houses are going for three and 400,000. So I'm buying houses. I got to get qualified borrowers. I do all the renovations. It's a nightmare. Looking back, it's like, "Well, then you got to bite the bullet. It's just what you have to do." I didn't want to do that. I didn't want to do it. Whether it was laziness or, I don't know, I just thought, "I'm good at this. I'm going to run. I'm just going to start running a scam. I'm going to figure out how to drive the prices up, buy the houses for 50, record them at 200,000, and then have these synthetic identities, buy all the properties, refinance them, pull out the cash, make six months' worth of payments, let them all go into foreclosure." And that really, really started working well, very well. I had one time where I had a guy, it was James Red, the synthetic identity was James Red and he had bought two or three houses, and there was somebody at the office who was friends of somebody who knew the title company where we were closing the loans, and he called her, her name was Mary, and said, "Mary, this guy, James Red, like Cox is doing something shady. James Red doesn't even exist." She goes and looks at her last couple files and she realizes, of course obviously, this guy never showed up. She remembers Cox picked up the files, and he's saying he doesn't exist. So she freaks out. She calls the mortgage broker. Mortgage broker calls me, mortgage broker calls me up and says, "Listen, Mary said she's not closing the next loan unless James Red shows up." And I went, "Wow, that's a tough one."

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Fake ID's chapter timestamp | Matthew Cox: FBI Most Wanted Con Man - $55 Million in Bank Fraud | EpisodeIndex