Their Offer Was Accepted. The Only Problem—the House Wasn’t for Sale.
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Their Offer Was Accepted. The Only Problem—the House Wasn’t for Sale.

One real-estate agent almost got scammed, while another broker discovered his client murdered someone in the house he was trying to sell

By AMY GAMERMAN
Tue, Feb 28, 2023 8:49amGrey Clock 4 min
Q: Have you ever found yourself in a real-estate deal with a stone-cold criminal?

Katin Reinhardt, real-estate agent, The Oppenheim Group, Orange County, Calif.

My client was looking for a house in Floral Park. We struck out on a couple, and then one pops up on the market. He sends me the listing and says, “I absolutely love this house.” It’s big, it’s got a pool—everything he wanted. It needs some work, but for $2 million it was pretty darn good.

I contact the agent, from a reputable company, and he says there are no open houses for the weekend. My buyer wants to put in an offer on the house so no one takes it, contingent on inspection, and the agent is like, “Fine. You guys come here, we’ll do the inspection on Monday.”

We drew up an offer and they accepted in four hours. It was an all-cash offer, with a 10-day contingency. I kind of knew something was weird when I got a text from the listing agent saying, “Hey, would you mind wiring the money directly to my seller’s account?”

It was a $2 million house; the deposit on it was about $70,000. I say, “Absolutely not—let’s all get on the phone.”

The seller sounds absolutely normal, like, “Hey, I’ve been burned before when someone has backed out.” We said it had to be a verified escrow account, and the seller says, “OK, that’s fine, I don’t mind.”

On Monday, we get to the house for the 5 p.m. inspection, knock on the door, and some guy comes out in his underwear. No shoes on. I’m like, “Hello, sir, we’re here to do the inspection.”

And he says, “What are you talking about?”

I said, “Didn’t your agent inform you? We’re in escrow with you guys.”

I pull out the contract—it had his name and everything—and he was like, “What in the actual hell? You guys gotta leave. I’ve never listed the house. I just bought it two years ago, and I’m not planning on selling.”

We called the agent, like “What’s the deal, bro? Did you ever go inside the property and verify the seller?”

So what happened was, the scam guy called the broker’s assistant and said, “I’ve worked with you guys before. I’m out of town. I need to sell my house. Let’s put a listing together.”

The agent’s only contact with him had been via email and one or two phone calls. The guy sent pictures from the last time the house was listed, doctored to look brand-new. The agent calls the seller—this scam artist—and can’t get hold of him. No communication. My guy was ready to wire $70,000 to this escrow. Thank God he didn’t.

I had to do a full police report. I went over to the house and apologised. I said, “We had no clue, and my client absolutely loved your place, yada, yada. I know you’re not trying to sell your house but If you ever want to, we got somebody here that would pay cash for it.”

Scott McManaway, broker, The Agency, Denver

I got a call, this couple wanted to sell their house. I went over there and met with the husband; the wife was out of town. We toured the house, had some good conversations and he said, “OK, you’re the guy for the job, let’s do it.”

One of his caveats was, no sign in the yard. He was like, “My neighbors hate me and I hate my neighbors. I don’t want them to know my business.”

We get it on the market, get the ball rolling, get it under contract fairly quickly. The buyers are going through inspections, when the title company calls me and says, “Scott, we have a problem—there’s a bond lien on the property.”

I call my client, and he goes, “Oh [expletive], they put a bond on the house.” And then, as simple as you and I are talking now, he goes, “I’m out on bond for murder. I didn’t realize they put that on my house.”

It turns out he had killed a guy in the house. Later, I googled the address of the property, and it had been all over the news. I tried to keep my composure. I said, “All right, we can get through this. We’ve got to figure out what the bond is worth. Do we have court dates we have to worry about?”

Then, unbeknown to me, he takes a plea deal and gets locked up right away. It turns out his wife, who was somehow involved in this, had fled the state. She got arrested and was brought back to Colorado. So both of my clients—the husband and the wife—end up in jail at the same time during our transaction.

They got shifted around to different correctional facilities. There was delay after delay. I finally had to let the buyers know what was going on, like, “Crazy scenario! Both my clients are in jail, but I promise we are going to get this closed.”

Two different jails, two completely different processes. I called in some favours from attorneys. I’m able to get the wife’s side of the paperwork signed, but I had to wait till the husband got to his final spot, if you will. I brought a mobile notary with me to the prison. We did the whole walk-into-prison, empty-your-pockets, walk-through-the-X-ray-machine.

We go into the visitation room and two minutes later, this big metal door buzzes open and in comes my client, big smile on his face. He says, “Hey Scott! You got it done!” Comes over, gives me a big bear hug. We signed the closing docs and he stood up and hugged me
again and said, “When I get out of prison, I’m going to reach out to you. I want to do real estate.”

—Edited from interviews



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Sydney Mansion Aims to Be the First Australian Home to Sell for More Than A$200 Million

The harbourfront estate has views of the Sydney Opera House and can entertain up to 500 guests

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Thu, May 2, 2024 2 min

A Sydney waterfront mansion that has just hit the market could set a countrywide price record as the first home to sell for A$200 million (US$129.77 million).

Located in the affluent suburb of Point Piper, the sprawling home sits on a lot that’s equivalent to “four normal housing blocks” and features 98 meters (321.5 feet) of water frontage along the harbor, according to an announcement on Wednesday from Ken Jacobs, director of Australia Pacific of Forbes Global Properties, who has the listing in association with real estate agent Brad Pillinger.

“The estate is Australia’s most iconic residence and ranks amongst the best in the world, combining both privacy and space, exuding elegance and comfort, while featuring gun-barrel views of the Sydney Opera House and the Harbour Bridge,” Jacobs said in a statement.

The residence is expected to sell for A$200 million or more, Pillinger added. “There is no comparable property in Australia.”

The home, named Wingadal, as it’s located on Wingadal Place, was built for Aussie Home Loans founder John Symond, who purchased the property in 1999. It took eight years to complete the mansion, which was designed by architect Alec Tzannes, according to the listing agency.

“Wingadal is a highlight of my career in residential design and architecture,” Tzannes said. “The timeless design on the Point Piper peninsula offers a unique appreciation of Sydney Harbour from a variety of angles, rotating around an axis that lines up perfectly with the Sydney Harbour Bridge.”

The colossal home has enough internal space to entertain up to 500 people, and underground parking provides space for 20 cars, plus eight more can fit inside the garage.

The four-level home has four bedrooms as well as a two-bedroom apartment. There’s also a 2,500-bottle wine cellar, a home theater that seats 22, two commercial kitchens and a swimming pool.

“Wingadal has been a special home for my family over the past two decades, and now I’m looking forward to spending more time traveling overseas,” Symond said in a statement. “While being an exceptional family home, we have also enjoyed hosting many important events for charities and other worthwhile causes.”

This is not the first time Symond has tried to sell his waterfront estate. In 2016, he listed the home in hopes of selling it for at least A$100 million, which would’ve been a price record for the country at that time Mansion Global reported . The current benchmark was set in 2022, when a baronial-style estate, also in Point Piper, sold for A$130 million, according to The Sydney Morning Herald .

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