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Press Release

Final Defendant In Foreclosure Rescue Fraud Scheme Sentenced

For Immediate Release
U.S. Attorney's Office, Eastern District of Pennsylvania

PHILADELPHIA - John Bariana, 41, of Mullica Hill, NJ, was sentenced today to 18 months in prison for his role in a massive mortgage fraud scheme that resulted in at least 35 fraudulent mortgage loans worth more than $10 million. Bariana pleaded guilty on August 26, 2010 to 12 counts. In addition to the prison term, U.S. District Court Judge Mary McLaughlin ordered a $7,500 fine, a $1,200 special assessment, and forfeiture of $400,000 joint and several with co-defendants Edward and Jacqueline McCusker.  The McCuskers were sentenced on March 6, 2014.  Edward McCusker was sentenced to five years in prison, his wife Jacqueline was sentenced to one year of home confinement followed by three years of probation.

The McCuskers operated Axxium Mortgage, Inc. with Bariana. Co-defendants Jeffrey A. Bennett and Stephen G. Doherty, owners of the Doylestown law firm Bennett & Doherty, P.C., were also involved in the scheme and pleaded guilty.

The defendants targeted financially distressed homeowners facing foreclosure, falsely promised them help in saving their homes, engaged in real estate transactions with straw purchasers, and obtained dozens of fraudulent mortgages. The defendants took whatever equity the homeowner had left, funneled it through shell corporations they controlled, used some of it to pay the new mortgages, and put the rest of the equity into their own bank accounts.

The defendants promised financially distressed homeowners that they would find an “investor” who would help them save their home. The defendants would then either purchase the home themselves or arrange for a straw purchaser to obtain a fraudulent mortgage and then transfer of the title of the homeowner?s residence to the straw purchaser. The McCuskers, along with Bariana, obtained the fraudulent mortgages by submitting false documents to mortgage lenders and making false claims about the purchasers’ finances. The defendants also concealed from the lender the fact that the homeowner was going to continue to reside in the home and that the mortgage payments were going to continue to be made, in part, by the distressed homeowner and funneled through the straw purchaser. Bariana and Jacqueline McCusker each acted as straw purchasers for ten homes. The defendants also recruited at least seven other persons to act as straw owners in order to obtain additional fraudulent mortgages.


Doherty solicited and referred distressed homeowners to Edward McCusker, and used fraudulent bankruptcy filings for some of the distressed homeowners to delay foreclosure until McCusker had obtained an investor and a mortgage. Bennett handled the closings for the real estate transfers, falsifying the settlement statements and manipulating the information provided to the lender in order to hide the nature of the scheme until after the loan was funded.

Doherty was sentenced to one year and one day in prison and ordered to forfeit $202,644.33; Bennett was sentenced to 18 months in prison, a $7,500 fine, a $400 special assessment and forfeiture joint and several with Doherty. A federal jury convicted the McCuskers on June 22, 2011 of conspiracy to commit mail and wire fraud, conspiracy to commit money laundering, wire fraud and mail fraud. In addition to their prison terms, the McCuskers were ordered to forfeit $400,000; Edward McCusker was ordered to pay a fine of $12,500, a special assessment of $1,000, and was ordered to complete three years of supervised release; Jacqueline McCusker was ordered to pay a special assessment of $900.

This case was investigated by the Federal Bureau of Investigation and the Pennsylvania Department of Banking. It is being prosecuted by Assistant United States Attorney Nancy Rue.

UNITED STATES ATTORNEY'S OFFICE, EASTERN DISTRICTof PENNSYLVANIA
Suite 1250, 615 Chestnut Street, Philadelphia, PA 19106
PATTY HARTMAN, Media Contact, 215-861-8525

Updated December 15, 2014