New NYC Office To Prevent Deed Theft, Protect Homeowners From Predatory Property Thieves

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Mamdani Launches Deed Theft Prevention Office With Appointment of Activist Attorney

The new position comes as deed theft burst into the spotlight with the arrest of Councilmember Chi Ossé while protesting a Bed-Stuy eviction.

Following is a quote from Christie Peale, Executive Director of the Center for NYC Neighborhoods:

“Deed theft is one of the most predatory forms of housing fraud in New York City. It often targets Black, Brown, and older homeowners in rapidly gentrifying neighborhoods with rising real estate values. We commend Mayor Mamdani for creating a dedicated Office of Deed Theft Prevention and selecting Peter White to lead it. Our experience with Peter as a dedicated homeowner advocate and partner gives us confidence that he will bring deep expertise, strong relationships, and a clear understanding of how these harmful scams destabilize neighborhoods by stripping individuals and families of wealth they’ve built over generations. This citywide effort has the potential to improve prevention, strengthen anti-fraud partnerships, and help protect homeowners before it is too late.”

—Christie Peale, CEO and Executive Director, the Center for NYC Neighborhoods

Mayor Zohran Mamdani on Friday established the Office of Deed Theft Prevention and named a longtime homeowner assistance lawyer as its director.

Peter White, an attorney who has worked on deed theft litigation, foreclosures, bankruptcy, and landlord-tenant disputes, will helm the new office. He most recently worked as a supervising attorney at Access Justice Brooklyn, a nonprofit that provides pro bono legal services to low-income residents.

“The establishment of this office and the work going forward is an act of empathy for people,” White said. “I see it as a direct correlation and an extension of the work that I’ve previously done. I’m excited to get this going.”

Deed theft — often made through forged documents, short sales, and foreclosure rescue scams — can strip families of generational wealth, ripping away what can be their most valuable asset.

“The theft of a home is the theft of a family’s future,” Mamdani said in a statement. “Deed theft preys on the New Yorkers who can least afford it. Today, we are bringing the full force of city government to bear to stop it – to protect homeowners, defend generational wealth, and make clear that this city will not tolerate the exploitation of our communities.”

 

 

The Wednesday arrest of Councilmember Chi Ossé (D-Brooklyn), as he attempted to prevent the eviction of a grandmother from a Bedford-Stuyvesant brownstone, thrust deed theft in New York City into the national spotlight.

The Brooklyn resident, Carmella Charrington, as well local activists who have rallied to her cause, has said that her eviction is the result of deed theft. Public records point to a more complicated story, one involving an older relative in a conservatorship in Georgia and competing claims about the sale of the home.

The state Attorney General’s office said it had determined the situation was not deed theft, but rather a property dispute.

Either way, Ossé said he expected the new Office of Deed Theft Prevention to be able to provide clarity, even in murky cases like Charrington’s.

“Having a dedicated office that is creating awareness and educating people will help them figure out if they’re dealing with deed theft or not, or point them in the right direction to seek help even if they’re not dealing with deed theft,” Ossé told THE CITY.

Councilmember Chi Ossé speaks at The Brooklyn Bank in Bed-Stuy about the newly-created Office of Deed Theft Prevention, April 24, 2026.
Councilmember Chi Ossé speaks at The Brooklyn Bank in Bed-Stuy about the newly-created Office of Deed Theft Prevention, April 24, 2026. Credit: Ben Fractenberg/THE CITY

Ossé’s district, which includes Bed-Stuy and Crown Heights, is one of several historically Black areas around the city with rising property values where deed theft and other predatory real estate speculation run rampant.

“It’s patently unfair,” White said of what he described as economic and racial targeting that can drive families of color out of the city. “I want to help stop it.”

White said his office will be a place people can turn to even if they aren’t sure what’s going on with their property so that he can do a “deep dive on their individual case” to ascertain what’s happening — and then take action from there.


The Office of Deed Theft Prevention will be housed within the Department of Finance, working closely with other agencies like the Department of Housing Preservation and Development, the Department of Consumer and Worker Protection, and the Commission on Human Rights.

The office will advance a three-pronged strategy for addressing deed theft: catching it early, educating homeowners about the risks, and getting people’s homes back, according to White.

It’s uncertain whether or not the office will actually be able to enforce current laws, White said, but it will coordinate with the Attorney General’s office and district attorneys to get them to take on cases. He will also attempt to bring in pro bono attorneys to help homeowners.

As a candidate, Mamdani promised to create an Office of Deed Theft Prevention to “protect homeowners from scam artists” and fund it to the tune of $10 million.

The mayor’s preliminary budget allocates $500,000 to the office in the current fiscal year and $1 million for the years after.

It is unclear how many dedicated staff the office will have other than White. Mamdani’s executive order creating the office also names a position for a deed theft prevention advocate.

 

Banner Image: Identity thief. Image Credit – Bermix Studio


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