A former mortgage broker has been sentenced to eight months’ imprisonment and automatically disqualified from managing corporations for five years after pleading guilty to loan fraud.
Jia Ge, a former NSW broker and director of deregistered company Dollars R Us, has been convicted of “giving misleading information” in five home loan applications.
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Mr Ge had previously pleaded guilty to suggesting that some of his clients were employed by one of his companies, even though they were not.
In late December, Downing Centre Local Court sentenced the former broker to eight months’ imprisonment for giving misleading information in five home loan applications.
It added, however, that he could be released on condition he gave a security of $500 and was of good behaviour for a period of two years.
As a consequence of the conviction, Mr Ge has been automatically disqualified from managing corporations for five years.
He had already ceased working as a mortgage broker.
Background to the case
According to an ASIC investigation, between 16 February 2017 and 17 May 2017, four customers engaged Dollars R Us to help them secure loans to purchase properties.
Mr Ge assisted the customers to prepare and lodge home loan applications that were submitted to two National Australia Bank Ltd lending entities.
In the home loan applications, Mr Ge was found to have falsely stated who the applicants were employed by and receiving salaries from.
ASIC had said that Mr Ge had operated a system whereby each of the applicants paid money to Australian Realty (now deregistered), of which he was sole director, which he would then transfer back to the applicants to give the false appearance that they were employed and earning a salary from the company.
ASIC outlined that of the loans submitted, two loans totalling $784,000 were approved and Mr Ge received a commission of $8,612.36 for them.
The remaining applications were either withdrawn or refused.
Mr Ge pleaded guilty to five counts of contravening the National Credit Act at Downing Centre Local court on 10 November.
At the time of the conduct, the maximum penalty for a breach of section 160D(2) of the National Credit Act was imprisonment for two years.
[Related: Former broker pleads guilty to loan fraud]
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