Real estate investor pleads guilty to bid rigging at public real estate foreclosure auctions
Kenneth A. Swanger pleaded guilty to bid rigging and mail fraud at public real estate foreclosure auctions held in San Joaquin County, California. Swanger, a former real estate investor, conspired with other real estate speculators to obtain real estate at below-market prices. The DOJ alleges that illicit profit was shared after the first public auction, at a “second, private auction, at which each participating conspirator would bid the amount above the public auction price he or she was willing to pay. The conspirator who bid the highest amount at the end of the private auction won the property. The difference between the price at the public auction and that at the second auction was the group’s illicit profit.”
Featured News
Lawmakers Seek GAO Review of State and Federal AI Regulations
Feb 19, 2026 by
CPI
UK Flags Editorial Content Concerns in Getty-Shutterstock Merger
Feb 19, 2026 by
CPI
DOJ Examines Warner Bros. Sale as Theater Chains Voice Concerns
Feb 19, 2026 by
CPI
Australia Court Fines Mobil A$16 Million Over Misleading Fuel Claims
Feb 19, 2026 by
CPI
UK to Fine Tech Firms That Fail to Remove Nonconsensual Intimate Images Within 48 Hours
Feb 19, 2026 by
CPI
Antitrust Mix by CPI
Antitrust Chronicle® – Hub-&-Spoke Conspiracies
Jan 26, 2026 by
CPI
A Data Analytics Company as the Hub in a Hub-and-Spoke Cartel
Jan 26, 2026 by
Joseph Harrington
Hub and Spoke Cartels
Jan 26, 2026 by
Patrick Van Cayseele
Hub-and-Spoke Collusion or Vertical Exclusion? Identifying the Rim in Hub-and-Spoke Conspiracies
Jan 26, 2026 by
Rosa Abrantes-Metz, Pedro Gonzaga, Laura Ildefonso & Albert Metz
The Algorithmic Middleman in a Hub-and-Spoke Conspiracy: Divergent Court Decisions and the Expanding Patchwork of State and Local Regulations
Jan 26, 2026 by
Bradley C. Weber