SANTA ANA, CALIF.
A federal judge sentenced two Orange County residents to prison for their roles in bogus modification programs aimed at homeowners, according to officials.
The victims were struggling to pay their mortgages in the wake of the 2008 financial crisis.
Aminullah “David” Sarpas, 37, of Irvine, was sentenced to 144 months in federal prison after being convicted by a jury in April 2019 of 10 counts of conspiracy and mail fraud.
Samuel Paul Bain, 40, of Tustin, was sentenced to five years in prison after pleading guilty in 2016 to conspiracy and mail fraud.
The two defendants who were associated with the Santa Ana-based company U.S. Homeowners Relief and several related businesses participated in a long-running “advance fee” scheme that caused more than 1,600 homeowners to suffer over $3.5 million in losses. Many victims lost their homes in subsequent foreclosure proceedings.
The two men – who were co-owners of U.S. Homeowners Relief, Greenleaf Modify, Waypoint Law Group, and American Lending Review – were sentenced by United States District Judge Cormac J. Carney.
Sarpas and Bain established U.S. Homeowners Relief in late 2008, using it and the subsequent companies to offer programs that falsely offered to help distressed homeowners obtain modifications of their mortgages.
Sarpas and Bain initially marketed the programs themselves, but they also used TV, radio and internet advertisements, as well as a team of telemarketers to entice victims, according to prosecutors.
Homeowners who agreed to participate – based on false claims, including that the companies had a 97 percent success rate in obtaining loan modifications that dramatically reduced monthly mortgage payments – were charged an advance fee ranging between $1,450 and $4,200.
In short, the scheme “compounded these homeowners’ financial woes by inducing them to dig the hole they were in even deeper,” prosecutors wrote in court documents.
There were two other defendants named in a 2014 indictment.
One man was acquitted at trial after a jury in his first trial was unable to reach a unanimous verdict. The fourth defendant – Louis Saggiani, 70, of Huntington Beach, pleaded guilty and is scheduled to be sentenced in October, officials stated.