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$179 Million Dollar Securities Fraud Scam May 3, 2012

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Central Islip, NY-Four co defendants are charged with securities fraud, that led to a massive Ponzi scheme.  The scheme ended up defrauding investors of $179 million.  In addition, the co-defendant also where able to defraud investors out of insurance policies on their investments to the tune of $865,000+.

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Bank Embezzlement In South Dakota May 3, 2012

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Sioux Falls, SD-Ela Mae Pretty Enemy pleaded guilty of embezeling $1,500.00 from a bank in McLaughlin where she worked in 2010.  The US attorney says she faces up to 30 years in prison and a fine opf up to $250,000.

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Embezzlement From Little League May 3, 2012

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Police have charged Jodi A Lbbotson the former treasurer of the Little Compton Little League with the alleged crime of embezzlement of $10,000+ dollars.  The police are working with an auditor to determine, just how much money Lbbotson allegedly stole.

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woman sentenced to 20 months in embezzlement February 20, 2012

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Iowa woman sentenced to 20 months in embezzlement

Des Moines- An Iowa woman charged with embezzlement of $518,000 has been sentenced to 20 months in prison. Stacey Lynne Gross of Adel was also ordered to pay back the money.

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Suspects in Camden embezzlement case await indictments February 17, 2012

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Suspects in Camden embezzlement case await indictments

Camden. Deleware- James O. Plumley III the former Camden town manager and Smyrna contractor and Mark A. Moore are awaiting indictments from state prosecutors in regard to allegedly embezzling $120,000 form the town of Camden, Del.

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Woman allegedly sent embezzled funds to online love interest February 17, 2012

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Woman allegedly sent embezzled funds to online love interest

Sixty two year old Nancy Walker of Boonboro Maryland has been charged on Thursday with a criminal summons. The defendant allegedly embezzled $137,000 from the Ballenger Creek Meadows Home Owners Association of which she was property manager of and wired at lest some of those funds to an online love interest in South Africa.

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Mercer County Criminal Defense

2 ex-workers charged with embezzling $500,000 from Lakewood company February 19, 2011

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Two former employees of a Lakewood company have been charged by the Ocean County Prosecutor’s Office with stealing funds from their employer.  Arrested Tuesday were Mildred L. Hahn, 62, of Florida Court in Brick, and James R. Distasio, 32, of Halliard Avenue in Beachwood. The two had worked at Mon-Oc Mechanical Inc. Avenue in Lakewood. 
Hahn is accused of embezzling in excess of $500,000 from the company between 2003 and 2009, according to the Ocean County Prosecutor’s office.

Hahn was in charge of the firm’s bookkeeping duties, including processing payroll checks to employees. Employed with the company for 33 years, she also oversaw company bank deposits for all its business accounts and paid all company bills.  The investigation began after company officials filed a theft complaint with Lakewood police.  A complaint against Hahn also charges her with writing unauthorized company checks to herself.

Hahn was arrested at home and charged with theft, computer criminal activity as computers and the computer database were used in the alleged theft and fraudulent use of a stolen credit card.  Distasio was arrested and charged with theft of company funds, according to the complaint warrant.  Distasio, a general foreman at Mon-Oc Mechanical for approximately 12 years, is accused of partnering with Hahn to steal approximately $130,000 of company funds which were diverted to Distasio by company checks made out to him and authorized by Hahn.

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First Defendant Charged with Attempting to Defraud the (TARP) Troubled Asset Relief Program March 15, 2010

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Today, CHARLES J. ANTONUCCI, SR., the former President and Chief Executive Officer of The Park Avenue Bank, was arrested on allegations of self-dealing, bank bribery, embezzlement of bank funds, and fraud, among others. ANTONUCCI also was alleged to have attempted to fraudulently obtain more than $11 million worth of taxpayer rescue funds from the Troubled Asset Relief Program, or TARP. ANTONUCCI is the first defendant ever charged with attempting to defraud TARP. Additionally, ANTONUCCI was alleged to have used The Park Avenue Bank in a scheme to defraud two pastors of a Florida congregation out of more than $100,000 set aside to build a new church.

On the evening of Friday, March 12, 2010, the NYSBD seized The Park Avenue Bank and appointed the FDIC as receiver; FDIC has arranged for the sale of The Park Avenue Bank.

According to the Complaint unsealed today in Manhattan federal court:

The Park Avenue Bank

The Park Avenue Bank was a federally insured bank headquartered at 460 Park Avenue, New York, New York, with retail branches in Manhattan and Brooklyn. The bank’s clients consisted primarily of small businesses, for whom the bank made loans, extended lines of credit, and maintained depository accounts. As of the end of 2009, the bank had approximately $500 million on deposit, and over $520 million in assets. ANTONUCCI served as President and Chief Executive Officer (“CEO”) of The Park Avenue Bank from June 2004 to October 2009, and also served on its Board of Directors.

The Park Avenue Bank was federally-insured and regulated by the FDIC. Also, as a bank chartered under the laws of New York State, The Park Avenue Bank was regulated by the NYSBD. The bank was required to make certain regular disclosures to these regulators demonstrating that it was financially sound and that it had adequate capital.

FDIC and NYSBD regulations require banks such as The Park Avenue Bank to maintain certain levels of capital, as a percentage of the bank’s total assets. Banks that do not maintain appropriate levels of capital are subject to various restrictions on their activities, and may be required by regulators to raise additional capital. Banks which do not meet minimum capital requirements can be closed by the NYSBD or the FDIC.

The Park Avenue Bank was also an applicant to the Capital Purchase Program of the Troubled Asset Relief Program (“TARP”). The purpose of TARP was to provide funds to stabilize and strengthen the nation’s financial system by increasing the capital base of viable institutions, enabling them to increase the flow of financing to U.S. businesses and consumers. TARP funds were made available to qualifying banks; one of the critical elements of the TARP qualification process was the capital position of the applicant bank.

Self-Dealing, Bank Bribery, And Embezzlement

The Complaint alleges that ANTONUCCI engaged in numerous instances of self-dealing while President and CEO of The Park Avenue Bank, including authorizing extensions of credit and overdrafts to customers with whom he had financial relationships; authorizing extensions of overdraft credit to a customer in exchange for the use of the customer’s private plane; and causing the bank to make improvements on, lease, and pay expenses for properties owned by ANTONUCCI.

The Easy Wealth Line Of Credit

ANTONUCCI used a company he owned, Easy Wealth Group, Ltd. (“Easy Wealth”), to fraudulently obtain funds from The Park Avenue Bank. ANTONUCCI could not authorize the extension of credit by The Park Avenue Bank to his own company without violating the bank’s rules against self-dealing. Accordingly, to mask his interest in Easy Wealth, in early 2006, ANTONUCCI approached an associate and offered to make him president of Easy Wealth (the “Easy Wealth president”), with the understanding that his first order of business would be to apply for a line of credit from The Park Avenue Bank.

The Easy Wealth president applied for a line of credit from The Park Avenue Bank in the amount of $300,000. ANTONUCCI personally approved the line of credit and later increased it to $400,000. ANTONUCCI even assisted the Easy Wealth president in preparing the line of credit application documents. The application as submitted contained numerous misrepresentations, including false statements concerning the Easy Wealth president’s personal assets and a fabricated business plan that contained false information about Easy Wealth’s financial condition and earnings.

After the Easy Wealth president had drawn down the line of credit, ANTONUCCI approached him and demanded that he pay $70,000 to ANTONUCCI in the form of interest-free loans. ANTONUCCI only repaid $50,000 of the money. Easy Wealth ultimately defaulted on the fraudulently-obtained line of credit, causing a loss to The Park Avenue Bank of $400,000.

The Oxygen Overdrafts

ANTONUCCI also approved approximately $8.5 million worth of overdrafts at The Park Avenue Bank to companies (the “Oxygen-related entities”) controlled by a co-conspirator (“CC-1”), who was a close associate of ANTONUCCI’s. Through the Oxygen-related entities, CC-1 brought numerous deposit accounts to The Park Avenue Bank, and submitted, or caused to be submitted, applications for numerous loans from the bank.

On more than ten occasions in 2008 and 2009, ANTONUCCI used CC-1’s private plane to fly for free to, among other places, Florida, Panama, Arizona (so that ANTONUCCI could attend the Super Bowl), and Augusta, Georgia (so that ANTONUCCI could attend the Masters golf tournament). All the while, ANTONUCCI approved over $8 million in overdrafts for the Oxygen-related entities’ various accounts at The Park Avenue Bank. On one occasion in 2009, when a check issued by an Oxygen-related entity bounced, CC-1 communicated to ANTONUCCI that he would not be allowed to use CC-1’s private plane.

The Fishkill Leases

ANTONUCCI also arranged for The Park Avenue Bank to improve, lease, and pay expenses for properties he personally owned. More specifically, over a period of years, ANTONUCCI had The Park Avenue Bank spend more than $1 million to improve, lease, and pay expenses for three properties in which he had an ownership interest: 1042 Main Street, 2 Broad Street, and 48 Jackson Street, all in Fishkill, New York. ANTONUCCI arranged for the bank to make these payments even though it had no legitimate need for two of the three properties.

Fraud Against The NYSBD, FDIC, And TARP

In addition to the corrupt conduct outlined above, ANTONUCCI is also charged with using his position at The Park Avenue Bank to defraud bank regulators by arranging a round-trip transaction designed to deceive the NYSBD and FDIC into believing that ANTONUCCI himself had invested approximately $6.5 million in the bank in an effort to improve its capital position. In truth and in fact, however, ANTONUCCI had fraudulently borrowed from the bank itself the funds that he purportedly invested. More specifically, at ANTONUCCI’s direction, The Park Avenue Bank “loaned” funds totaling $6.5 million to entities with which ANTONUCCI had relationships; those entities transferred the $6.5 million to accounts controlled by ANTONUCCI; and ANTONUCCI then re-deposited the $6.5 million into the bank—claiming he was investing his personal funds in order to recapitalize the bank—in exchange for 308,349 shares of common stock, which represented a 52 percent controlling interest in The Park Avenue Bank’s holding company.

In 2009, when the FDIC began investigating the source of the purported $6.5 million capital infusion, ANTONUCCI lied to FDIC regulators about the true nature of the transaction. ANTONUCCI also provided regulators with documents purporting to reflect that he obtained the $6.5 million from sales of stock, but those sales were actually sham deals designed to disguise the fact that the true source of the funds was The Park Avenue Bank itself.

ANTONUCCI also used the $6.5 million round-trip transaction to support an application for taxpayer rescue funds through TARP. Once again, the bank’s capital position was fraudulently misrepresented on its TARP application. Then, in telephone calls to FDIC regulators reviewing the bank’s TARP application, ANTONUCCI, in an effort to obtain more than $11 million in TARP funds, again falsely represented that he had made a substantial, personal capital contribution to The Park Avenue Bank.

ANTONUCCI also lied to the public about the true nature of the round-trip transaction. In a Park Avenue Bank press release issued February 13, 2009, ANTONUCCI was quoted as stating: “With this new round of capitalization from management, our application for additional capital from the Federal government’s economic stabilization programs [i.e., the TARP] as well as our formal agreement with the regulators to assure stability, service, and liquidity, The Park Avenue Bank is now well positioned to grow strongly in the coming months.”

When ANTONUCCI was advised by the FDIC that it would not recommend approval of The Park Avenue Bank’s TARP application, he withdrew the application voluntarily. During a subsequent interview, ANTONUCCI was quoted as claiming that the bank withdrew its TARP application because of “issues” with the TARP, and the desire to avoid “market perception” that “bad bank[s]” take TARP money. ANTONUCCI also stated: “[I]n conjunction with withdrawing the application, we are also putting additional capital in. The capital is coming primarily from myself and other members of my board. It is the insiders that are investing capital into the bank, so the message to the depositors is that at this point, I don’t need TARP money, I don’t necessarily want TARP money, we are a strong bank, and management is committed to putting capital in as it is needed.”

The Counterfeit Certificate Of Deposit

To conceal the $6.5 million round-trip transaction, ANTONUCCI created a counterfeit Certificate of Deposit (“CD”), in the amount of $2.3 million, purportedly issued by The Park Avenue Bank. More specifically, at ANTONUCCI’s direction, a portion of the $6.5 million borrowed from the Bank was first funneled through accounts associated with U.S. Insurance Group (“USIG”). USIG filed for bankruptcy in April 2009, and at the time listed on its balance sheets a $2.3 million loan from The Park Avenue Bank, which was, in truth and in fact, simply a portion of the $6.5 million round-trip transaction executed by ANTONUCCI to defraud bank regulators and the TARP.

To ensure that the sham nature of the round-trip transaction was not discovered, ANTONUCCI and his co-conspirators engaged in a series of transactions designed to repay the outstanding $2.3 million USIG loan using the funds of another bank depositor, General Employment Enterprise, Inc. (“GEE”). As part of these transactions, and to hide them from GEE’s auditors, ANTONUCCI caused the creation of a 90-day CD at The Park Avenue Bank which purported to represent a $2.3 million investment by GEE. In truth and in fact, however, there was no CD, and the $2.3 million was simply wire transferred from GEE’s account into an account controlled by ANTONUCCI. ANTONUCCI in turn used the money to pay off the outstanding USIG loan. Later, when GEE’s auditors requested a certification from The Park Avenue Bank that the CD existed, ANTONUCCI fraudulently signed such a certification, even though he knew that no CD in fact existed.

The Florida Investment Fraud Scheme

ANTONUCCI also is charged with a scheme to defraud the pastors of the Calvary Springs Chapel in Coral Springs, Florida, who were interested in obtaining investment income for the construction of a new church. ANTONUCCI’s co-conspirator (“CC- 4”) promised the pastors that if they invested $103,940 in the purchase of a bond, CC-4 would borrow up to four times that amount in foreign markets, and pay the pastors back the maturity value of the bond—$604,848—within two to three weeks.

CC-4 instructed the pastors to pay the $103,940 investment to an account at The Park Avenue Bank held in the name of Park Avenue Insurance. That account was in fact owned by ANTONUCCI. After a series of misrepresentations by ANTONUCCI and CC-4, the pastors never received the promised $604,848 return, or the return of their initial investment. Instead, ANTONUCCI and CC-4 simply divided the pastors’ $103,940 investment between themselves.

At approximately 5:00 PM on Friday, March 12, 2010, the NYSBD seized the offices, branches, and assets of The Park Avenue Bank. The FDIC was appointed receiver and will be administering the assets of the bank so as to protect the interests of the depositors. The FDIC has arranged for the sale of The Park Avenue Bank.

Former CFO of Houston Engineering Firm Charged with Embezzling Millions of Dollars March 9, 2010

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A federal grand jury has returned an indictment charging Christopher McCullough, 47, with interstate transportation of stolen property in connection with his alleged embezzlement of more than $3 million, United States Attorney José Angel Moreno announced today. McCullough, currently of Frederic, Colo., and formerly of Houston, allegedly committed the offense while serving as the Chief Financial Officer (CFO) of LJA Engineering (LJA).

Agents with the FBI arrested McCullough this morning in Colorado and he is expected to make his initial appearance before a U.S. Magistrate Judge in Denver this afternoon. According to the indictment, McCullough served as the CFO of Houston-based LJA and was a member of the LJA’s board of directors. Using the access he had as CFO to LJA bank accounts, McCullough allegedly engaged in more than 200 transactions totaling more than $3.5 million in which he converted LJA funds to his personal use. The indictment alleges he embezzled these funds by withdrawing cash, writing checks drawn on the LJA accounts to pay his personal expenses and purchasing cashier’s checks with the LJA funds which he used to pay personal expenses. The indictment identifies some of those personal expenses McCullough paid with the embezzled funds as his personal taxes owed to the Internal Revenue Service, stock purchases, the purchase of real estate in Houston and Colorado and expenses related to the construction, landscaping and interior decorating of a home in Estes Park, Colo.

The indictment also alleges that a few weeks after resigning from LJA, McCullough entered the LJA office around 11:00 p.m. and removed a number of boxes believed to contain financial records.

The indictment charges seven counts alleging that McCullough transported the embezzled cashier’s check from Texas to Colorado where he used the checks to pay for the construction, landscaping and interior decorating of the home he was building in Estes Park.

Former Village Clerk Charged with Embezzlement February 13, 2010

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Shea Howard of North Freedom, Wisconsin, has been charged with embezzlement via an Information filed in U.S. District Court in Madison. The Government alleges that Howard, while employed as the Village Clerk for the Village of Rock Springs, Wis., embezzled approximately $9,250 of funds.  No other information was released.