According to the IRS, the Maryland man’s co-conspirator represented to the victims that the co-conspirator’s company, could obtain a loan—often millions of dollars—for the victims. The co-conspirator required that each victim provide a good faith deposit ($15,000 to $250,000) to be held in escrow. The Maryland attorney was the escrow agent. Once the victim wired the good faith deposit to the escrow account, most of that money was transferred to the co-conspirator within days. Source: IRS.gov