September 4, 2010

Boston U.S. Attorney's Office Files More Charges In Mortgage Fraud Case

Last January, the Boston Globe published a lengthy investigative piece on an apparent mortgage fraud scheme run by several individuals. The story alleged that the ring was led by one Michael David Scott, a Mansfield, Massachusetts real estate developer, who recruited several other co-conspirators to assist him in the bank fraud scheme. At the time of the Globe’s January 2010 story, no one had yet been arrested or charged.

That all changed last week when Scott was indicted by a federal grand jury on 62 counts of wire fraud, bank fraud, and money laundering in connection with this operation. Yesterday, things changed even more in this case, when the Boston U.S. Attorney’s Office charged (separately) a former Bank of America Corp. branch manager and a Virginia-based real estate recruiter with wire fraud in this unfolding federal case. The case alleges that Scott masterminded and led a long-running mortgage fraud scheme to convert at least 50 buildings (usually three-deckers) into about 170 condos in some of the city’s poorest neighborhoods. Some units sold at market prices, but almost none were made habitable. More than 100 of the properties eventually went into foreclosure. Aside from defrauding investors, almost all of those properties ended up being abandoned and blighted, resulting in even further deterioration of the communities they were located in. The case is being prosecuted in U.S. District Court in Boston (federal court,) and not Massachusetts state Superior court, due to the interstate nature of the alleged bank fraud involved. Scott is scheduled to appear before a federal judge Sept. 13, but federal court officials have not yet set an appearance date for Fowler or Samuels.

Arthur Samuels, a former manager at Bank of America’s Fields Corner branch in Dorchester, and Jerrold Fowler, of Norfolk, Virginia, were both charged yesterday in U.S. District Court in Boston with wire fraud (this charge applies because almost all of the electronic and physical transactions occurred over state lines.) Jerrold Fowler was charged for his alleged role as a recruiter for investors — many of them out of state — who participated in the alleged scheme to defraud lenders. Previously, in the indictment handed down last week against Michael David Scott, federal prosecutors said Scott worked with “associates,’’ but at the time the Grand Jury heard the evidence against him, those “associates” were not identified. It seems apparent now that these “associates” were, at the least, Arthur Samuels and Jerrold Fowler. Samuels’s role, inside Bank of America, allegedly involved manufacturing false documents to support the fraudulent loan applications involved. According to an FBI affidavit filed in the case, Scott, Fowler, Samuels, and others in the ring paid people to purchase condominiums, promised the buyers that they didn’t have to invest in the sale, represented that the mortgage payments would be paid for by tenants, and told buyers that they would share in the profits when the properties were eventually resold. The criminal complaint also alleged the group falsely inflated purchase prices, incorrectly said buyers would live in the homes, and falsely claimed inflated investors assets to qualify for the mortgages granted.

As a Boston white collar criminal defense lawyer, I can assure you that Samuel’s and Scott’s legal problems are not limited to the U.S. Attorney’s office only. Aside from these federal criminal charges against them, Samuels and Scott were also sued civilly in the last year by Bank of America in Suffolk Superior Court for their alleged roles in defrauding the lender of $1.5 million, as part of this “inside job.” That civil case is still pending, and Bank of America officials declined to comment on that case.

July 4, 2009

Boston, Massachusetts Crime Boss Heads To Federal Prison

A long-suspected underboss of the reigning New England crime family has reached a criminal defense plea agreement with federal and state criminal law authorities, which will net him a 6-year federal prison sentence.

Federal and state law prosecutors and law enforcement officials announced yesterday that Carmen S. “Cheeseman” DiNunzio, 51, of Boston, has agreed to plead guilty to a variety of federal and state criminal charges, thus avoiding prolonged federal and state trials on those charges. If ending in guilty verdicts, those trials could have netted Dinunzio decades in federal and state prisons. Through this plea agreement, authorities secured the guilty findings they sought, secured prison time for DiNunzio, and sent a message to other crime family members that they too can be pursued.

With respect to the federal charges, DiNunzio pled guilty to charges of conspiring to bribe a state official in connection with a proposed sale of materials to a project related to the Massachusetts Central Artery Tunnel Project, otherwise known as the "Big Dig," and for providing a $10,000 down payment on the illegal payoff. On the state charges, DiNunzio will also plead guilty in a separate hearing in Essex County Superior Court on July 8, 2009, to state charges of extortion, promoting an illegal gambling operation, and conspiring to violate state gaming laws in connection with his role in the ongoing mob-related extortion of local bookmakers. Authorities brought no charges involving violent crime, such as murder, assault and battery, or drug trafficking. These are common charges involving organized crime, along with extortion and money laundering.

Under the terms of the joint plea agreement, DiNunzio’s six-year prison terms for both the federal and state offenses will be served concurrently, not consecutively. By pleading guilty, DiNunzio admitted that in 2006 he and two other men conspired to bribe a state official to obtain a lucrative contract to provide 300,000 cubic yards of "loam" (i.e., dirt and clay) to the Massachusetts Highway Department for use on the Big Dig. He also admitted that, in addition to agreeing to take part in the bribery scheme, he provided $10,000 cash, intended as a down payment on a larger payoff, for a person he believed was a Massachusetts Highway Department inspector capable of ensuring that the group would obtain the lucrative loam contract. The inspector was, in fact, an undercover agent. The plea agreement also reflects that in 2001 he extorted $500 per month from a North End bookmaker in exchange for allowing a gaming/numbers office to operate; managed and financed a gaming organization with several offices and numerous agents in the North Shore area that took bets on the outcome of professional and college sporting events; and conspired with others to operate a gaming enterprise.

Acting United States Attorney Michael Loucks said, "Carmen DiNunzio believed that public officials in Massachusetts could be bought; that is precisely what he was trying to do, and what he admitted to today. The only thing DiNunzio´s bribe of $10,000 will buy him is six years in federal prison."

All in all, not a bad deal for DiNunzio, or for federal and state prosecutors. As a Massachusetts criminal defense attorney, I can assure you that, if found guilty on even a few of the several charges brought against him, DiNunzio would have gone away for a lot longer than six years. DiNunzio is known as “The Cheeseman”, owing to the fact that he’s operated a cheese shop in Boston’s North End for years (allegedly a front for his criminal enterprises.) Looks like The Cheeseman is going to age some in one of our finer federal shops. Let's hope this cheese softens, not hardens, over time.

December 27, 2008

Bernard Madoff's Ponzi Scheme Devastates Several Massachusetts Charities

Unfortunately, the alleged Ponzi scheme reportedly orchestrated by Bernard L. Madoff continues to cause ripple effects locally in Massachusetts. Aside from wealthy individual investors, many institutional clients have suffered as result of this scheme, including several charitable organizations. While some organizations have suffered substantial financial losses but appear able to absorb the damage without folding, some have suffered a fatal blow. One such charitable organization is the Picower Foundation of Palm Beach, Florida, run by Jeffry and Barbara Picower, well-known philanthropists. This charitable foundation has been one of the largest philanthropic organizations in the United States, with assets at one point reaching a half a billion dollars. The foundation invested a great deal of its money with Bernard Maddoff, and suffered devastating losses as this scheme collapsed. Barbara Picower, the foundation’s president, announced earlier this week that the foundation has ceased all grant-making activity, and will close its doors. The effect in the Massachusetts medical community will be felt painfully: The Picower Foundation had donated heavily to the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, to fund brain research, and to Harvard Medical School, for diabetes research. Now, that funding, and the important medical results that flow from research in these areas, will cease. Madoff was arrested by federal authorities earlier this month, on December 11, and charged with orchestrating and running a Ponzi scheme – which essentially pays one set of investors with money from another set. In addition to the Picower Foundation, the Boston family of Carl and Ruth Shapiro, which has funded tens of millions of dollars in medical research in Boston, reportedly lost over $145 million, and the Robert L. Lappin Charitable Foundation in Salem, Massachusetts, was also forced to cease operations last week.