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Book Closes on Elaborate Mortgage Fraud Scheme
Mortgage fraudster Matthew Cox wrote an unpublished manuscript that Assistant U.S. Attorney Gale McKenzie described as a "blueprint" of his schemes. The only thing missing, she said, was the final chapter. "We wrote it, not him," she said of federal law enforcement agents who sought Cox for more than two years. On Tuesday, Cox pleaded guilty to multiple counts of mortgage fraud and identity theft -- crimes that could garner him a 54-year prison sentence, a $2 million fine and millions in restitution.Wealthy Donor Taps Trey Cox for Fight Against Georgetown University Law Center
"Georgetown needs to make this right," writes Scott K. Ginsburg' lawyer Trey Cox (pictured) in an email.Law Week Explores Theme Of 'Equality For All'
South Florida voluntary bar associations and others are coordinating Law Week events based on the theme "Realizing the Dream: Equality for All."Novel's Success Might Warrant Leaving the Law
D.C. lawyer and spy novelist Allan Topol must be sitting by the phone waiting for a call from Hollywood.Book Closes on Elaborate Fraud Scheme
Before Matthew Cox enlisted Rebecca Hauck in a mortgage fraud scheme they would eventually run in four states, including Georgia, he took her to see the film, Catch Me If You Can.Judge Awards Attorneys Fees for Discrimination Claim Settled at EEOC
Even if they settle their cases before going to court, workers who claim discrimination can seek awards of attorney fees after cashing their settlement checks, a federal judge in Pennsylvania ruled. Senior U.S. District Judge Raymond J. Broderick found that if a settlement agreement does not explicitly mention attorneys fees, the plaintiff has the right to seek a court award.Thieves Steal Homes With Stroke of Pen
R. Robin [email protected] Feb. 21, 2000, Betty M. Seely's Holly Street house was stolen. The theft was frightening in its simplicity. Someone signed the names of the 73-year-old librarian and her son to a deed of sale for their rental house at 1238 Holly St. N.W. in Atlanta, had the signatures notarized and filed the fraudulent deed at the Fulton County Courthouse.Book closes on elaborate mortgage fraud scheme
BEFORE MATTHEW COX enlisted Rebecca Hauck in a mortgage fraud scheme they would eventually run in four states, including Georgia, he took her to see the film, "Catch Me If You Can." Cox told Hauck that his "operation" resembled that of the movie's protagonist-real-life con artist Frank Abagnale Jr.State AI Legislation Is on the Move in 2024
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