Planet Money - Title Pirates
Episode Date: November 23, 2024A couple years ago, Gina Leto, a real estate developer, bought a property with her business partner. The process went like it usually did: Lots of paperwork; a virtual closing. Pretty cut-and-dry. Gin...a and her partner started building a house on the property.But $800,000 into the construction process, Gina got a troubling call from her lawyer. There was something wrong. At first, Gina thought the house had burned down. It turned out that the situation was... maybe worse.On today's show: Buying land seems pretty secure, right? There's so much paperwork and verification along the way. But a messy system of how titles are sold, transferred and documented makes a perfect entry point for a new kind of criminal: Title Pirates.Today's episode was hosted by Erika Beras and Jeff Guo. It was produced by Sam Yellowhorse Kesler. It was edited by Liza Yeager. Fact-checking by Sarah McClure. Engineering by Valentina RodrÃguez Sánchez. Planet Money's executive producer is Alex Goldmark.Help support Planet Money and hear our bonus episodes by subscribing to Planet Money+ in Apple Podcasts or at plus.npr.org/planetmoney.Learn more about sponsor message choices: podcastchoices.com/adchoicesNPR Privacy Policy
Transcript
Discussion (0)
This message comes from TELUS Business.
This Black Friday, TELUS Business is helping small businesses get more done and save.
Get the latest technology for your business at exclusive Black Friday prices.
Shop these limited time offers today at telus.com slash business Black Friday.
Conditions apply. TELUS, proud supporter of Canadian business.
This is Planet Money from NPR.
Gina Leto is a real estate developer. She buys properties, builds houses on them, sells them.
And she's pretty hands-off about all the paperwork.
She has her lawyer handle that stuff.
The lawyer comes.
I give him the money.
And he will close.
And he will call me and say, it's closed.
It's yours. So imperson me and say, it's closed, it's yours.
So impersonal.
Yeah, it is.
I've never met any of the sellers of the properties we have bought.
Gina and her business partner have bought eight properties in Connecticut where they
live and then two years ago, she found her ninth.
A realtor came to us and said, there is a piece of land for sale.
It's been in the same family for many years.
Did you go see the property?
So I drove by, but it was just an overgrown lot at the time.
An overgrown lot.
Now, even though she's pretty hands off,
every time Gina buys property, she does her due diligence.
Like, is the land flat?
Are there any wetlands?
She and her partner look at zoning, boundaries,
that kind of thing.
And of course, with this new property,
she checked out the owner.
She wanted to have an idea of who she was doing business with.
It's more out of curiosity than anything,
but obviously if you found out, you know,
the person was, I don't know, a gangster or something,
I don't know if I'd want to buy a property from them. So silly things like that. And when I googled, I found
the name on the documents, the correct address was there. He seemed like a normal man and
everything seemed fine. And that was it.
So they do all the paperwork, use their real estate agent and attorney.
They close the deal the way they always do, totally virtually.
They paid $350,000 and got to work building a very nice house.
What kind of investment are we talking about?
I think we were already over $800,000 or something like that into the house.
Okay, that's a lot of money.
We just had put the windows in, all the mechanicals, meaning electric, plumbing, was all done, and the house was insulated.
Oh, wow. They already had buyers lined up, this nice young couple.
And Gina, as the work was getting done, went on vacation to Turkey,
where she got a phone call from her lawyer.
And by the tone of his voice,
I knew something happened with the house.
And my first fear was I thought the house burned down.
Okay, the house had not burned down.
It was actually something that was maybe worse.
Our lawyer told us that the person
that sold the property to us was not the owner.
This was a fraudulent sale.
The real owner never sold this property
and was unaware that the property was sold.
You know, right away you think, well, how can this happen?
Hello and welcome to Planet Money, I'm Erica Barres.
And I'm Jeff Guo.
Property, how we buy it, how we sell it, seems so secure.
All that money, all that paperwork, all the dotted lines to sign, and so many people checking
to make sure that it is all airtight.
But there's this one part of that system
that is a bit more hodgepodge
than you'd really want it to be.
The way we track who owns a property,
who has a title to it,
and there's a whole new kind of villain
trying to exploit that system.
Today on the show, the wild world of title insurance.
Weird proprietary land ownership maps,
disconnected registry systems,
the tragic loss of historic apple trees,
and title pirates.
This message comes from WISE, the app for doing things in other currencies. Send, spend, or receive money internationally and always get the real-time mid-market exchange
rate with no hidden fees.
Download the WISE app today or visit wise.com, T's and C's apply.
Support for NPR comes from Amazon Music. Prime members have access
to a catalog of news podcasts. Add free breaking news without the breaks. Available by downloading
the Amazon Music app or visiting amazon.com slash add free.
Adrian Ma here. Pessimism about the U.S. economy helped Donald Trump win a second term. The
thing though is that when you look at America relative to other developed advanced
economies, America has done remarkably well.
In our recent Planet Money bonus episode, an extended cut of my chat with Simon Rabinovich
on why the U.S. economy is still the envy of the world.
To listen, sign up for NPR Plus at plus.npr.org.
So Gina Leto had paid $350,000 for a piece of land.
Then she spent nearly a million dollars constructing a brand new house on that piece of land.
And now she had gotten a phone call that the person she had bought that lot from was not
actually the owner.
She and her business partner had to stop construction of the house.
Technically, they were trespassing. I was very nervous. I was scared. I had a very
sick feeling in my stomach. I just kept saying, so what what happens now? And
we're just gonna pause Gina's story here because we need to tell you a story
about the same parcel of land from another perspective. Now, this other story is about a guy named Daniel Kenigsberg.
Nowadays, he's a super successful doctor,
but way back in 1953, he was just a baby.
And in those post-World War II suburban boom years,
his dad built a house in a Connecticut suburb
where Daniel and his brothers grew up.
We were all kind of running in and out of each other's houses
across the lawns, the dogs were running free. We were all kind of running in and out of each other's houses, across the lawns, the
dogs were running free, we were playing baseball on the street and so forth.
Very idyllic.
It was very idyllic, that's really what it was like.
Daniel's dad also bought a half acre lot next door to their home.
It was full of grasses and critters and some straggler trees from when this new suburb
had once been a fruit orchard.
There was an apple tree on this land which still had, you know, was still producing apples and
we had our tree fort in this apple tree. So they had a tree fort but that's pretty
much all they ever did with that lot. Daniel grew up in this lovely house with this huge
yard next door and that apple tree.
Eventually, he moved to New York, started to practice as a doctor,
and then around 15 years ago, after his parents and brothers had died,
he inherited the family home.
Eventually, he sold the home, but he kept the vacant lot next door,
paid taxes on it, and he regularly fielded offers.
A couple times a year, somebody would call me up about this land,
usually wanting to buy it.
And what did you say?
No.
You know, sometimes I would ask how much,
but if I'd wanted to sell the land,
I would have put the land on the market.
Even though the property was 25 miles from where Daniel lived
on Long Island, it was a tie to his hometown and an asset he figured he'd leave to his kids.
Plus, by then he says, the lot was like this mini forest.
A whole ecosystem had grown.
It just looked like this patch of woods in the middle of a neighborhood.
And then, one day, two years ago, he was on the phone with a childhood friend.
In the course of this phone call, he said, by the way,
I noticed that they're building a house
next to your old house, finally, after all these years.
A house on Daniel's lot.
And I said, well, that's pretty crazy
because I own that land and I never sold it to anybody.
Daniel had to go see for himself.
I just took a five o'clock ferry or whatever it was
to connect. Oh, that very day?
Oh, yeah, that very day. Oh, okay.
Yeah, so I just hopped on the ferry and drove through the old neighborhood and saw this
house.
So there was a house there?
There was a house that was almost completely built and the land that it was on, which the
last time I'd seen it had been a dense forest was completely like scorched earth. That dense forest Daniel described that was now scorched earth, that's the property Gina Lido had
purchased. The quote unquote overgrown lot. Gina and Daniel may have different ways of describing
the property, but they were both flummoxed. There was just so many questions that just couldn't even
be answered at that point.
How could this happen?
That's my land.
How did we get to this reality?
Yeah, how did this happen?
How did Gina seemingly buy a property
that Daniel seemingly still owned?
To answer some of Gina and Daniel's questions,
I called Stuart Stark.
He goes by...
Stu, Stuart, whatever you want, it's fine.
Stu teaches at Cardozo Law School.
His specialty is property and land use.
Our first question was, before poor Gina
with her half-finished house bought that property,
couldn't she have just looked at some kind of big map of the United States
to see who owns what?
The answer to that is no.
We in the, in the United States don't have a system where you can go up and
look at an official owner of a particular property.
Instead, we just have a registry recording system in which anytime
there's a transfer, the transfer is recorded.
So instead of a national master list that says,
this plot of land is owned by Jeff,
that plot of land is owned by Erica, and so on and so on,
all the records that actually exist
are just records of real estate transactions.
That plot A was sold in 1984 to someone named Judy,
and before that, it was sold in 1970 to Darlene and Bob,
who inherited it from Harry,
and before that it was sold to someone else.
You get the idea.
Every township or borough or county
might have their own registry of those types of transactions.
But those registries are not any certification of ownership.
There is just an ability to look at deeds
to particular parcels of land.
In fact, that's what a deed really is.
Having a deed to a piece of land
doesn't prove that you own it.
It just proves that you got the land
from somebody else at some point in time.
And all towns and counties keep track
of these transactions differently.
In one town, you physically go to a building and look through a big stack of papers.
Somewhere else, you might be able to search the records online on your phone.
And all those different systems of registering land transactions,
they're not really communicating with each other.
There's no cohesive system.
And, you know, technically, a regular person could piece together all this information
themselves.
Like, can any of us do it?
It's not as easy as it sounds.
It's not as if you look up your parcel of land and see who owns it.
What you have to do is look to see, all right, when did my seller acquire title?
From whom?
Did that person acquire title from somebody else? Maybe
there was a death and you'd have to look at probate records. You have to make sure
that there are no outstanding mortgages. And that's a lot of searching. It's a
lot of work for an ordinary person to do. And all this stuff is really high stakes.
Like, if there's a partial owner to the property, that person may come knocking
on your door and they're going to have rights.
Or if a seller actually took a loan out on that property they sold you and then never
paid it off, that bank is going to come find you.
Or the lot you purchased for your community garden actually has years of unpaid taxes
on it.
Oops.
That's on you now.
So, essentially, in the United States, the only way to know who really owns what is to
piece together a bunch of receipts.
And all of those receipts are held in different places that are organizing them differently.
And if you don't have complete information about the property you're buying, there can
be huge consequences.
This seems like a little bit of a, for lack of a better word, a janky system,
what you just described.
Well, it is to some extent,
but it's a system that we've had for a couple of hundred years.
This is a very American problem,
a bunch of decentralized systems that are kind of messy,
and it creates a bunch of risk
for anyone trying to buy a property.
But there's also a very American fix for this problem,
a market solution, title insurance.
Title insurance.
It's called insurance, but it operates more like a warranty.
It's a fee you pay to a company when you close on a property.
They're supposed to guarantee that the title
to the property you just bought is clean,
meaning there aren't unpaid taxes or loans on it,
and that you're buying it from the 100% real owner.
If you've ever bought a house, it is most likely
that you also bought a title insurance policy.
Lenders require them.
And these companies, there are only like four of them
in the whole country, have these separately maintained,
comprehensive, highly efficient, proprietary records of land ownership
called title plants, their own system.
And when someone buys title insurance on a property,
the company looks in those records,
which maybe takes them like a couple hours
since they already have the information on hand.
So once they've compiled those super secret records, title insurance is a very
good business. They've done all the work, right? Right, right. They've done. There's no more to do.
Exactly. So anything they can get out of the homeowner is basically gravy.
And what they can get out of the homeowner is significant, up to 2% of the cost of a property
for a couple hours of work.
But homeowners pay it because it's often required
and because that fee, it's just one more closing cost
in the midst of a huge purchase
with a ton of paperwork and all kinds of fees.
So people stomach it.
And it's in the company's best interest to do a good job
because if something goes wrong, they are on the hook. So, people stomach it. And it's in the company's best interest to do a good job.
Because if something goes wrong, they are on the hook.
When Gina Leto and her business partner purchased that overgrown lot in Connecticut, they paid
for title insurance.
And when she learned that it had been a fraudulent sale, her lawyer had the answer.
Our lawyer was extremely good at keeping my husband and I calm and said, you know,
we're going to find a solution. Don't worry. And at the end of the day, you have title insurance.
Gina and her partner had $350,000 of title insurance on the property. So her lawyer told her
no matter what, she would get back that $350,000.
However, we had a house on that land.
A nearly million dollar house.
And while the land clearly belonged
to the man who owned the property,
who did not sell the property,
who did the house belong to?
And how did the land get sold if Apple Tree Daniel didn't sell it?
That's after the break.
Arguments happen, and our body's automatic response to conflict doesn't always help.
We may start to feel anxious or angry, making it even more difficult for us to see eye to
eye.
Over time, that becomes contempt.
And contempt is a very destructive interpersonal process.
Hear how science can help us reframe and make the most of our conversations on the Shortwave
podcast from NPR.
This week on our podcast, Here and Now, Anytime, have you had a frustrating conversation about
politics with someone you disagree with lately?
Most Americans have, according to a Pew survey from before the election.
So I'm going to guess that number has only gone up.
We're kicking off a series on finding common ground called conversations across
the divide. Listen now on Here and Now Anytime wherever you get your podcasts.
How much can one person change in four years? The answer comes down to who he puts in charge.
Trump's Terms is a podcast where you can follow NPR's coverage of the people who will shape Donald Trump's
first 100 days in office and what their goals are.
We will track his cabinet picks, his political team,
his top military leaders to understand who they are,
what they believe, and how they'll govern.
Listen to Trump's Terms from NPR.
So, to tell you what actually happened,
we're gonna tell you a third side of this story.
The story of the person who actually sold the land.
Some months before all of this went down, Anthony Manelli, a lawyer in Connecticut who
does real estate transactions, got a phone call.
I got a referral from a real estate agent.
Hey, can you represent this guy?
He's selling some property that he inherited,
and by the way, he's an expatriate.
Ooh, an expat.
Anthony actually does hundreds of real estate transactions a year,
and he regularly works with overseas clients.
I mean, do you just do a Google search on your clients or anything?
Usually we don't, but that is now one of the practices that we teach now, including me.
So Anthony starts talking to his new client, a guy who calls himself Daniel, Daniel Kenningsburg,
but who apparently lives in South Africa.
You talked to him over the phone, actually?
Yes, I talked to him over the phone.
Yeah, there was the country code was South African country code. He says they had all the typical
conversations. He got a scanned copy of Daniel's passport emailed back and forth with him. Daniel
filled out all the paperwork Anthony asked for. Was there anything that seemed like suspicious or
different or whatever? It didn't really raise a hair.
And before the closing,
the title insurance company did its thing.
And so what'd they find?
They found that a gentleman by the name of Daniel Kenningsburg
owned this piece of property, and that is what we expected.
And so you closed?
And we closed.
Gina and her partner gave Anthony a bank check and he wired the total cost for the land to
a Wells Fargo bank account.
Anthony took his fee and he moved on with his life.
Several months later, I had received a call from another local attorney who said,
hey, remember that closing you did?
Kinda. Well, it was not real. It was a fraudulent situation and the person who was selling
the property wasn't who they claimed to be and the real owner had his land
stolen basically. And I said, wow. This guy Anthony had been talking to all along,
as you might have guessed, was not our Daniel.
He wasn't Apple Tree Daniel.
This guy was a fake Daniel.
Who found this unattended piece of land
and looked up who owned it?
That passport Anthony had scanned?
Fake.
The email, danielkennigsbergatyahoo.com,
made up the DocuSign signature, it wasn't really Daniel.
This fake Daniel is what we now call a title pirate.
Someone who by fraudulent means steals a title to someone else's land.
And this kind of theft is increasingly common.
The FBI says they've seen more than 1,000 of these cases all over the country in the past few years.
As more real estate transactions happen online.
Someone owns a piece of land that they're not keeping close tabs on,
someone else impersonates them,
and no one involved in the sale even notices.
Did I miss things that caused this bad situation to happen?
Um, did you?
Um, that's a good question.
Because at the end of the day, based on the facts,
the answer has to be yes,
because it happened, right?
There are all kinds of things Anthony could have done.
He could have video-rarified that Daniel was Daniel.
He could have caught a typo in the fake passport.
He could have made reference calls on his client.
But he didn't, and neither did the realtor who made the listing.
They kind of left all that responsibility to the title insurance company, the one that
Gina paid $1,398 to check the title.
But was fake Daniel their responsibility?
We called the title insurance company and they said no, they were looking for defects
in the title insurance company and they said no they were looking for defects in the title
Identity fraud that wasn't something they were scanning for so when they searched there weren't any problems with the title itself
I mean, I've asked myself the question a million times could I have done anything
to
See that this did not happen
And could you have?
Without overstepping my lot, my, you know, my role and stepping on toes of, you know,
the professionals involved, I don't really think so.
The title system is clearly messy. And wherever there is mess and a lot at stake,
that creates opportunities for fraudsters.
The title insurance company is the professional entity
assuming the risk of our tacked together
receipt by receipt property record system.
And the entire real estate industry,
from the listing agents, the real estate lawyers,
to the banks running transactions,
to the people recording those transactions
in county offices, relies on these private title insurers
which serve as a de facto centralized registry
to catch any and all problems.
And there's actually an economics concept here.
It's the idea of moral hazard.
Basically,
if you're buying title insurance, then you get to be lazy, right? The nitty-gritty research on the
title, that's not on you. You maybe don't need to worry so much about why a random South African
dude is selling you a patch of land in Connecticut, because title insurance will take care of all of
that. Now, in lots of other insurance markets, moral hazard, it's bad.
You don't want people with auto insurance to take more risks on the road
just because insurance will cover the cost of their accidents.
But in the world of real estate, you could say the system works better.
It's more profitable, more efficient if buyers aren't so worried about risk.
Then they can just focus on buying the house more profitable, more efficient, if buyers aren't so worried about risk.
Then they can just focus on buying the house and not have to sit around doing detective work.
But flagging problems before they happen is only part of the responsibility of a title
insurance company. The other part is when something goes wrong, they pay out.
They absorb the cost of the risk.
And side note, something you should really know about title insurance is that almost
never happens.
Title insurance only pays out about 3% of all the money they bring in from title insurance
policies because it's rare for things to go wrong.
Compare that to, say, car insurance.
They pay out 70% of what they bring in. Or
health insurance. That's like 80%.
But in the case of the overgrown lot slash apple tree forest, it's one of the rare times
things did go wrong. And the title insurance company did pay, as did a few other responsible
parties. Here's how it all played out. Did you sue anybody or did anybody sue you?
Yes, both.
Pretty much everyone involved ended up suing everyone else.
In this case, every single party,
Gina, Daniel, Anthony, was a victim.
They were all defrauded.
The case ended up in federal court.
Real Daniel, who has never even been to South Africa,
wanted one thing.
My starting position was you could really make everything
go back to the time when this had never happened.
You could tear down the house, and you could replant the land,
and you could pay me for my expenses and I would be restored to where
I was before this ever happened.
Is that what you actually wanted?
Yeah, that's what I was willing to accept.
It's not like somebody lost an arm and you can't put their arm back on.
I mean, this could be remedied.
Obviously that would not be a great situation for Gina,
to have that million-dollar house get torn down.
Her idea was to figure out a way to keep the land.
We thought initially that we would be paid out $350,000
and that we would have to use that money to try to figure out
how to maybe buy the property from the owner,
but it was a complicated situation.
In the end, all parties ended up settling.
As part of the settlement, Daniel, the real Daniel,
ended up selling the land to Gina and her partner.
They couldn't tell me for how much,
but I looked it up for $965,000.
Did you then end up buying the property twice?
Yeah. Yes, theoretically, yes, we did because we did have, we had to go through closing statements
again. And if you're thinking, man, these people, they all seem so kind and so gracious about this whole thing.
That too was part of the settlement.
None of them can disparage each other.
These days, when Gina buys property from someone,
she's doing a little bit more than just a cursory Google search.
Obviously, I'm a crazy loon now.
Every time, you know, we did buy a property while this was going on. And,
you know, but the builder knew the person, but it was a family estate. So I was asking a million
questions. I wanted to make sure everyone that was involved had signed. So, you know, everyone was
sort of taking deep breaths with me because I think I was irritating everyone. Real Daniel, he has made his peace with all of this. And as for fake Daniel, he still
has his money. And he's still out there.
Today's episode was produced by Sam Yellow Horse Kessler. It was edited by Liza Yeager
and fact-checked by Sarah McClure.
Engineering by Valentina Rodriguez Sanchez.
Planet Money's executive producer is Alex Goldmark.
I'm Jeff Guo.
I'm Erica Barris.
This is NPR.
Thanks for listening.