Fraud Charges Filed Against Michigan Judge

Started by Captain Courageous, Jan 26, 2013, 03:09 PM

previous topic - next topic
Go Down

Captain Courageous



Diane Hathaway, Michigan Supreme Court Justice, Charged With Fraud

DETROIT -- Federal prosecutors have filed a fraud charge against Michigan Supreme Court Justice Diane Hathaway, just a few days before she leaves the state's highest court in a scandal involving the sale of a Detroit-area home and suspicious steps taken to conceal property in Florida.

The charge was filed Friday as a criminal "information," which means it was negotiated and that a guilty plea is expected in federal court. Defense attorney Steve Fishman declined to comment Saturday.

Hathaway is resigning Monday, months after a series of questionable real estate transactions first were revealed by a Detroit TV station. Hathaway and her husband, Michael Kingsley, deeded a Florida home to Kingsley's daughter while trying to negotiate a short sale on a house they couldn't afford in Grosse Pointe Park.

In a short sale, a bank agrees to a sale that wipes out any remaining mortgage, a significant benefit for any borrower. The 2011 deal went through and erased the couple's $600,000 debt in Michigan. Five months later, in 2012, the debt-free Windermere, Fla., home worth more than $600,000 went back in their names for $10.

http://4closurefraud.org/2013/01/21/michigan-supreme-court-justice-diane-hathaway-charged-with-criminal-bank-fraud/


Captain Courageous

I'm getting the impression that at least some women are getting important political positions in order to benefit their husbands' ambitions.

neoteny

I'm getting the impression that at least some women are getting important political positions in order to benefit their husbands' ambitions.


Behind every great woman there's a great man?

It seems to me that this is just a plain case of greed: the couple decided that they'll try to avoid losing their second home because of the bad (and I assume mutual) decision on purchasing their Grosse Pointe Park home.

What is fascinating that she would risk her (very likely well-paying) position as a judge in order to pull the stunt, what with her being a public figure and as such being subject to more than usual scrutiny.
The spreading of information about the [quantum] system through the [classical] environment is ultimately responsible for the emergence of "objective reality." 

Wojciech Hubert Zurek: Decoherence, einselection, and the quantum origins of the classical

BRIAN

And yet Nancy Pelosi hasn't been investigated and indicted for stealing in the form of steering big contractors to her husbands business. I guess it's how much power you hold at what level of government that is the key to "Getting away with it."
You may sleep soundly at night because rough men stand ready to visit violence upon those who seek to harm you.

neoteny

Disgraced ex-Mich. judge gets prison for fraud
ED WHITE | Associated Press


Declaring herself "broken" and "disgraced," former Michigan Supreme Court Justice Diane Hathaway tearfully took responsibility for fraud Tuesday before a judge sentenced her to a year and a day in prison for concealing assets while she was pleading with a bank for a sale on her underwater home.

Defense attorney Steve Fishman said the devastation of losing a prestigious job seemed to be enough punishment for Hathaway, who vaulted to statewide prominence through an extraordinary Supreme Court election in 2008. But U.S. District Judge John Corbett O'Meara rejected community service and instead chose prison.

Crying and reading from a statement, Hathaway, 59, blamed her crime on "personal issues" but added: "That is no excuse."

"I stand before you a broken person," she told the judge. "I am ashamed, embarrassed, humiliated and disgraced."

The 2011 sale of Hathaway's Grosse Pointe Park home, near Detroit, erased the balance of her mortgage, $664,000. Prosecutors said she claimed hardship while still possessing more than $1 million in assets, including a debt-free home in Windermere, Fla.

In short sales, banks let distressed owners sell properties for less than what's owed on them, providing a significant benefit to borrowers who can't afford to keep paying the mortgage but want to avoid foreclosure.

Hathaway and husband Michael Kingsley put the Florida home in a relative's name while dealing with ING Bank on the Michigan house, then got the property back in their names in 2012. Before the sale, she also tapped more than $350,000 in cash to buy two homes that were placed in the names of stepchildren, according to the government.

Prosecutors recommended a prison sentence of a year to 18 months, while Hathaway asked for probation and community service. The fraud charge wasn't related to her work at the Supreme Court, but authorities said her expertise in real estate and law was a factor in the scheme.

"We do not ask you to sentence Diane Hathaway based on who she is," said Assistant U.S. Attorney Dan Lemisch, noting her successful career as a judge and prosecutor. "We ask you to sentence Diane Hathaway based on what she did."

The 366-day sentence will allow Hathaway to get time off for good behavior, meaning her actual time in custody likely will be nine to 10 months. The judge didn't elaborate on why he chose that punishment, saying only, "I have thought a great deal about this."

U.S. Attorney Barbara McQuade hailed the result.

"Homeowners who play by the rules should know that those who don't will be held accountable, no matter who they are," she said.

In his remarks to the judge, Fishman made arguments that are common in white-collar crimes involving high-profile people, including public humiliation and the loss of a professional livelihood. He said Hathaway had lost her $165,000-a-year job, as well as her law and real estate licenses, and endured deep shame. Hathaway insisted that friends and family stay away from the courthouse Tuesday.

Hathaway's name and reputation have a "permanent stain," Fishman said. "Is that enough? I say it's enough."

He filed documents to show that ING would have approved the short sale even without Hathaway's scheme. Although she had escaped from a $664,000 mortgage balance, Hathaway only will be required to pay $90,000 as restitution because the bank greatly marked down the value of the loan under weak market conditions in the Detroit area.

Fishman said Hathaway would immediately submit a check for that amount. He described her as "petrified" of going to prison.

Hathaway declined to comment outside court, but a woman heckled her as she got into a car with her husband.

In February, Gov. Rick Snyder appointed David Viviano to replace Hathaway on the Supreme Court, extending the Republican majority to 5-2.

Hathaway joined the court after upsetting Republican Chief Justice Cliff Taylor in the 2008 election. She benefited from a controversial TV ad that accused Taylor of sleeping on the bench. Democrats then controlled the court for two years before GOP victories in 2010 put Republicans back in charge.

----

Check out the last two paras for an exceedingly convoluted way of saying that she was elected to the state Supreme Court as a Democrat (but managed to squeeze three mention of Republicans into it).
The spreading of information about the [quantum] system through the [classical] environment is ultimately responsible for the emergence of "objective reality." 

Wojciech Hubert Zurek: Decoherence, einselection, and the quantum origins of the classical

CaptDMO

Quote
Hathaway's name and reputation have a "permanent stain," Fishman said. "Is that enough? I say it's enough."

Um, no.
I say "public" folks, "administering" the law, convicted of criminal offense,  be jailed.
And folks offered "special protection" (...more equal than others) as they are held to a higher standard, and paychecks (...to which they have become accustomed), be considered entitled to "special" RICO sentencing "standards".

Just maybe the FEAR of swift and appropriate consequence for behavior deemed criminal would deter such "public" professionals from um...behavior deemed criminal.

At the very least, MAYBE the nice folks entrusted to vote (or decree) how behavior they deem (for whatever reason) undesireable  shall be punished, will have "Be Careful What You Ask For..." tattooed, in reverse, on their foreheads, that they might be reminded every time they admire themselve upon self reflection.   

BRIAN

I would say Capt was on the rigt track. When the Romans caught an official in the midst of corruption they cast him from the Tarpian Rock into the Tiber River. He was sewn into a bag with a serpent a badger and a rooster so that he would be torn to shreds by the animals before he drowned. We don't have to be that extreme, I would say rope, tree, politician; some assembly required.
You may sleep soundly at night because rough men stand ready to visit violence upon those who seek to harm you.

Go Up