Fraudsters scammed family out of NYC brownstone with forged docs they used to impersonate heirs: DA
A sprawling conspiracy to strip a grieving Harlem family of their brownstone has netted charges against 18 individuals and three companies, Manhattan District Attorney Alvin Bragg announced Thursday — a case prosecutors say unraveled only after years of persistent investigative work into one of the borough’s most brazen property fraud schemes.
The defendants allegedly forged documents, impersonated heirs, and engineered a fraudulent sale of a West 131st Street brownstone to pocket $1.636 million in mortgage and construction loan proceeds. The property had belonged to a woman who died in 2018, leaving her husband, two children and a grandchild as legal heirs.
According to prosecutors, the scheme required a veritable assembly line of fraud.
Co-conspirators allegedly fabricated fake IDs and birth certificates, which other defendants then used to impersonate the family at a real closing, where attorneys, brokers and title agents reportedly stood by — fully aware that the sellers had no legitimate authority to transfer the deed.
“This was a scam through and through,” Bragg said at a press conference Thursday.
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