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The Claims Corner: Wire Fraud and Property Theft Claims, and the Insurance Responses

We do love our Realtors, and they are a vibrant and important part of the transfer of property from one party to another. However, a pattern arises in the outlines below, that many of these fraudulent situations are the result of the realtors being involved in the financial part of the transactions.

The additional risk comes from non-secure communications, sending wire instructions and sensitive information outside of a secure portal or secure share site. Also from not verifying that the person selling a property is the actual, physical person that owns the property.

When there is no recovery of funds by the FBI, Banks or insurance payments, the situation still needs to be solved. This usually happens by splitting the loss between the title agency, lenders, underwriters and other involved parties, personally.

For these examples, when we use the term “recovered” that means that the funds were pulled back by the bank and/or the FBI.

Most of the E&O policies on the market specifically exclude theft or loss of funds and have done so for decades. The intent of and E&O policy is to cover Errors or Omissions in the title work, not including money. There are a few E&O policies that have started offering an endorsement, for a fee, to cover low limits of stollen funds, and this sometimes includes transfers of stollen property. Most of these E&O endorsements require verification and documentation of the financial information.

The Cyber policy is intended to cover the agency for a breach of their system, ransomware and extortion. The Cyber policy was not intended to cover loss of funds outside of a breach, and MOST cyber policies will cover the “insured funds” not “funds of others” such as an escrow account. A cyber policy is a very important coverage to have for the sake of your business, but not to be relied of for escrow funds. Some cyber will cover escrow funds, but ALL cyber policies require verification and documentation of all financial information, prior to the wire being sent.

The Crime/Fidelity policy can offer very broad coverage, depending on what parts are purchased. This policy is designed to cover money, but of course there are conditions to each line of coverage, most of which will require verification and documentation of the wire instructions.

There is a new crime policy on the market, that can offer up to $1MM in loss of funds, the deductible is $200k, and the premiums start around $20,000, annually. The coverage is broad and valuable, but clearly has the drawbacks of cost and deductible.

Additional known incidents:
$80k January 2021 – not recovered
$250k August 2021 – not recovered
$2.2MM, October 2021 – recovered most of it.
$258k February 2022 – not recovered
$2.2MM March 2022 – recovered
$70k August 2022 – not recovered
$2MM, August 2022 – recovered
$350k August 2022 – $250k insurance covered
$95k September 2022 – not recovered
$227k October 2022 – not recovered
$300k, $250k and $400k one title agency November 2022
$387 same title agency as above. (recovered $137k)
$1.5MM – Bank allows crook to wire 55 wires out of title agent accounts. (recovered 1.3MM) This is bank fault, but a very big bank and they did not accept responsibility.


Michele Blanco
Michele has been working to support the Title and Real Estate Industry for almost 30 years, and has become a specialist in the area of insurance and bonds for this industry. She attends and supports industry specific seminars and education events, so as to keep abreast of changes, so that she can provide the information and answers to the industry. She supports and stays up to date with Best Practices and how they affect the title agent. Michele lives with her family of three, her daughter just graduated from the University of Maryland and is starting her career in Science. Michele loves to compost and create soil, what worms can do with old food, cardboard and other household wastes is amazing. An active member of the VLTA, MLTA, and DCLTA.

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