How Homebuyers Can Stay Safe In 2025
How Homebuyers Can Stay Safe In 2025
Danielle Antosz Wed, December 18, 2024 Moneywise
West Virginia couple loses $255K, life savings in real estate scam — how homebuyers can stay safe in 2025
After months of house-hunting, Raegan Bartlo and her husband finally found their dream home in a small West Virginia community just a few hours from Washington, D.C.
But that dream became a nightmare as a few days before the closing, Bartlo received an email she thought was from her title company. The email provided instructions on how to wire the money for closing. She wired the $255,000 down payment as per the email’s directions, ABC 7 reported.
On closing day, she received another email saying her closing time had been moved. When she called her realtor to ask about the change, she received devastating news. The first email wasn't from her title company — and that $255,000 down payment was now gone.
"At that point, my whole world fell apart because I had already wired all of the down payment money for our house,” Bartlo told ABC 7 News. “And that was about $255,000. And so our nest egg, our savings, everything at that moment was gone."
Wiring fraud is becoming an increasing issue
Bartlo was a victim of real estate wiring fraud. This happens when scammers gain access to the email of a title company, mortgage company or realtor. They can see you're due to send a large payment, so they email you to provide wiring instructions. However, those funds go to the scammer's account.
“I just remember shaking a lot and not being able to think straight. To feel like everything you had saved for to be able to have financial stability was just taken,” Bartlo shared with ABC 7. “And what if I didn't have a house? My mother lives with us. Where was she going to go? What were we going to do?”
It's a story that Tom Cronkright, founder of CertifiED, a company that helps prevent wire fraud, said he hears every day. He started his company in 2015 after he lost $180,000 to a wire fraud scam.
“I see it happen daily, if not multiple times a day," he told ABC 7. "The reality of it is these are some of the most sophisticated bad actors that have invested hundreds of millions of dollars into their own tradecraft.”
According to Cronkright, huge, global crime syndicates and cartels are often behind these scams. They hack into banks, real estate companies and law firms to gain information they can use to impersonate a trusted company or person. With that information in hand, they're able to send realistic-looking emails that consumers often don't question.
“The email, that includes the payment request with wiring instructions, isn’t coming out of the blue, it's tacked on to a thread of emails that they've been having for two, three, four weeks,” said Cronkright. “And now they're just saying, ‘Well, instead of bringing a check tomorrow for closing, we need you to send a wire, and here's why’."
Cronkright estimates losses to wiring fraud are close to $5 billion a year. His company has partnered with federal law enforcement to help educate consumers and businesses about the signs of wire fraud scams. But getting the money back is often unsuccessful. To protect themselves, consumers need to know how to spot the signs of wire fraud.
How to protect yourself from real estate wire fraud
TO READ MORE: https://www.yahoo.com/finance/news/west-virginia-couple-loses-255k-114100120.html