- Joined
- Apr 23, 2002
- Professional Status
- Certified General Appraiser
- State
- Oregon
From Jeremy Bagott's newsletter 9/19/25:
"Lanham, a state-licensed real property appraiser based in Parkville, Maryland, had the misfortune of being assigned to appraise the Hopkins professors’ home on behalf of nonbank lender LoanDepot. The lender was also named as a defendant in the professors’ lawsuit, but LoanDepot quietly extricated itself from the lawsuit by paying off the plaintiff what one attorney familiar with the case believes was approximately $400,000. Lanham’s success in getting the case dismissed in summary judgment casts a spotlight on the cowardice of LoanDepot’s settlement with the plaintiff. It left Lanham to defend himself alone.
Mullinix believes about 300 appraisers have been ensnared in similar HUD probes based on frivolous complaints by questionable complainants using nonprofits as surrogates and contract investigators not subject to Title 5 conflict-of-interest constraints. These constraints otherwise apply to all federal employees. The contractors have HUD email addresses and are indistinguishable from federal employees, said Mullinix.
In the yearslong process, Mullinix, who has been a real property appraiser for 35 years, learned that the agency had been violating its own policies in the way it was carrying out its investigation of him.
He believes these investigations are simply designed to intimidate independent state-licensed appraisers, who, he contends, have been caught in a supercharged political atmosphere and are being blamed for simply doing their jobs, which occasionally involves delivering an opinion of value that costs a broker his commission or upsets a borrower. He believes delegitimizing and marginalizing appraisers has been HUD’s aim all along.
Last year, HUD posted notice in the Federal Register it wished to allow convicted felons – white-collar criminals and perjurers – to become “discrimination testers.” You can read the rulemaking here.
Many of the complaints against appraisers, Mullinix said, seem to come in cases where value opinions don’t rise to levels that make transactions work. There are also complaints, like the one against him, that appear to be stage-managed by outside actors."
"Lanham, a state-licensed real property appraiser based in Parkville, Maryland, had the misfortune of being assigned to appraise the Hopkins professors’ home on behalf of nonbank lender LoanDepot. The lender was also named as a defendant in the professors’ lawsuit, but LoanDepot quietly extricated itself from the lawsuit by paying off the plaintiff what one attorney familiar with the case believes was approximately $400,000. Lanham’s success in getting the case dismissed in summary judgment casts a spotlight on the cowardice of LoanDepot’s settlement with the plaintiff. It left Lanham to defend himself alone.
Mullinix believes about 300 appraisers have been ensnared in similar HUD probes based on frivolous complaints by questionable complainants using nonprofits as surrogates and contract investigators not subject to Title 5 conflict-of-interest constraints. These constraints otherwise apply to all federal employees. The contractors have HUD email addresses and are indistinguishable from federal employees, said Mullinix.
In the yearslong process, Mullinix, who has been a real property appraiser for 35 years, learned that the agency had been violating its own policies in the way it was carrying out its investigation of him.
He believes these investigations are simply designed to intimidate independent state-licensed appraisers, who, he contends, have been caught in a supercharged political atmosphere and are being blamed for simply doing their jobs, which occasionally involves delivering an opinion of value that costs a broker his commission or upsets a borrower. He believes delegitimizing and marginalizing appraisers has been HUD’s aim all along.
Last year, HUD posted notice in the Federal Register it wished to allow convicted felons – white-collar criminals and perjurers – to become “discrimination testers.” You can read the rulemaking here.
Many of the complaints against appraisers, Mullinix said, seem to come in cases where value opinions don’t rise to levels that make transactions work. There are also complaints, like the one against him, that appear to be stage-managed by outside actors."