RALEIGH -- (June 7) -- Attorney General
Roy Cooper (
www.ncdoj.com)
won a court order this week to stop a real estate venture
that sold overpriced lots in the North Carolina mountains
by promising consumers they could make a profit without
having to invest any of their own money.
The defendants’ complicated investment scheme used
inflated appraisals and phony second mortgages as down
payments to entice consumers to borrow millions of dollars
to purchase property in the Village of Penland development
in Mitchell County.
“These developers squandered more than $100 million
in financing, leaving consumers stuck with property that
isn’t worth what they owe on it,” said Cooper.
“We’re putting a stop to this scheme before
any more consumers get caught up in it.”
Wake County Superior Court Judge Michael Morgan on Wednesday
ordered a group of developers behind the
Village of Penland project in Mitchell County to stop
using misrepresentations to encourage consumers to take
out loans to purchase lots. Cooper is also asking the
court to permanently stop the developers’ deceptive
practices and to order them to pay refunds to consumers
to satisfy consumers’ loans on properties sold by
the developers.
Developers involved in the Village of Penland project
and named in Cooper’s complaint include Peerless
Real
Estate Services, Village of Penland, MFSL Landholdings,
Communities of Penland, COP Land Holdings, PG Capital
Holdings, and West Side Development, all of Spruce Pine.
Also named as defendants are the following individuals
connected with these companies: Frank Amelung, Richard
Amelung and Michael Yeomans of Florida; J. Kevin Foster
of Georgia; and Anthony Porter and Neil O’Rourke
of North Carolina. A. Greg Anderson, a licensed appraiser
in North Carolina, is also named as a defendant.
Cooper asked the court to appoint a receiver to take
control of these companies. On Wednesday, Judge Morgan
appointed Joseph W. Grier III of Grier, Furr & Crisp
in Charlotte as receiver.
According to Cooper’s complaint, around 2002 the
defendants purchased at least 1,200 acres of land in Mitchell
County and subdivided it into more than 2,000 lots to
create the Village of Penland development. The developers
set up the companies listed above and have since received
more than $100 million in loan proceeds by marketing the
lots to consumer investors. The developers have failed
to complete any part of the project and instead used the
money to fund other failed projects in South Carolina
and St. Thomas and to pay for trips such as a cruise of
the Greek isles and a ski trip to Switzerland.
As alleged in the complaint, the defendants sold most
lots in the development for $125,000 based on inflated
appraisals by Anderson even though the lots had tax values
of $20,000 or less. Many of the lots could not realistically
be used to build homes because none of the lots included
water and sewer systems, and many were too small to support
a septic tank or a well.
Cooper alleges that the defendants promised consumers
that they would profit from the Village of Penland without
ever having to invest any of their own money. The developers
used several different schemes to entice consumers to
use their credit to purchase lots. In one scenario cited
in Cooper’s complaint, the developers told consumers
to apply for credit to buy ten lots for a total of $1.25
million and promised to buy back the lots at the same
price within three years. Consumers were told that these
ten lots would then be developed and that they would receive
$100,000 when each home sold. In other cases, developers
asked consumers to buy 20 lots for $2.5 million. The developers
promised to buy the lots back in two years and deed consumers
an additional 20 lots plus a house, which the companies
said they would then rent from the consumer for $280,000
a year as a model home.
Cooper alleges that consumers who agreed to invest in
the Village of Penland were told by the developers to
fill out four or five loan applications. Without most
consumers’ knowledge, the defendants sent all of
the loan applications to different lenders at the same
time so that the lenders were unaware that the consumers
were taking out multiple loans. The developers provided
illusory second mortgages to cover the down payments on
these loans through a company related to one of the defendants.
These second mortgages were not shown on required closing
statements that instead showed deposits of earnest money
which the consumers did not make.
On May 30, 2007, defendant Anthony Porter notified some
of these consumers that the developers would not be able
to make the monthly mortgage payments as promised, leaving
consumers stuck with large debts and no way to sell their
lots for enough money to cover the loans.
According to Cooper’s complaint, the defendants
also failed to register the project with the US Department
of
Housing and Urban Development, which requires developers
to provide a disclosure statement outlining how housing
developments will be completed and how services such as
water and sewer systems will be provided. This same law,
the Interstate Land Sales Full Disclosure Act, also provides
protections for consumers by giving them a period of time
to cancel their purchase in the development.
“Do your homework carefully when investing in real
estate,” Cooper cautioned consumers. “Watch
out for offers that promise high profits with little or
no investment.”
SOURCE: NC Department of Justice