Naleighna Kai's Literary Cafe Magazine January 2018 New Year, New You | Page 43

I Won’t go to Jail for You When we think of people serving time, the last thing that comes to mind are people who did a little “creative accounting” with our taxes, or maybe someone gave you the hook up on the paperwork to help a loan application pass through all the hoops that banks send buyers through these days. We don’t think of the bootleg man coming through with CDs and Movies that have been pirated and is basically stealing from the artist. No, we think of guns, drugs, assaults and things of that nature. Recently, it came to my attention that an attorney I once worked with is serving nearly five years in Club Fed for being caught up in a mortgage scam. I did some research to find out what happened in the case. The attorney, I’ll call her Wendy for this article’s purpose, did the closings for a few questionable real estate deals. Now mind you, when I knew Wendy she was into corporate, labor and employment, and entertainment law. None of what her field of interest encompassed had anything to do with residential deals. So, after reading pages of transcripts, listening to the recordings of the hearings, I found that Tiffany, the woman who handled the paperwork for the banks, underwriters, appraisals and such; brought Wendy in for the closings, then decided to turn the tables on Wendy by testifying against her. From the behind the scenes maneuvering, Tiffany, not Wendy, was the one who ended up with a house that was $723,000 and change. She also was the only one to benefit in other ways. When that woman sang to the Federal government, she let loose with the whole opera. Tiffany cut a deal to save her own ass without going about it the proper way. She effectively blindsided Wendy and Wendy’s attorney. The bad part is—the judge Naleighna Kai completely let it slide. A mortgage broker was a smaller fish to fry than a lawyer who had spent years in college, then law school and who once worked at a major firm. The legal system was sending Wendy a message. Unfortunately, Wendy’s attorney pissed off the judge a few times and that certainly didn’t bode well. The dissension between the judge and the attorney was one of the major factors in a failed appeal along with that “deal” that Tiffany cut to thrown Wendy under the bus, then back up and roll over her a second time. Now, through it all, Wendy never “snitched” and told Tiffany’s part in things and I’m certain she soon became aware at some point that Tiffany wasn’t on the up and up. In the beginning, either Wendy didn’t know anything, or she was more loyal than she should have been given the fact that it didn’t take much for Tiffany to serve her up like day-old bread. The end result? Wendy, a lawyer who had been introduced to the residential real estate field by Tiffany, found herself disbarred with no way of paying off debts and massive student loans for a profession she dreamed of since a little girl. Then she found herself in a women’s prison, away from her sons and her husband. She will miss their formative and teen years. Tiffany, the mastermind of the scheme to defraud four separate homeowners, walked out of the courtroom and back to her family. Wendy, however, received 4.9 years. In another case, a Chicago woman who owned several businesses, one of which provided tax services is also behind bars. “Raine” is serving about five years in Club Fed. She did a little creative accounting with people’s taxes to get them more of a refund than the IRS felt they were entitled. She didn’t see a dime of that extra NKLC Magazine | 43