Maseratis and manicures: How fraudsters spent your pandemic money
Valesky Barosy was an up-and-coming entrepreneur, having immigrated from
When the pandemic hit, he saw a ticket to even faster wealth by helping others steal from COVID-19 business loan programs. He took up to 30% as his cut that prosecutors said he spent on flashy clothes, fancy watches and a fast car — a Lamborghini Huracan Evo.
Barosy, convicted at trial last month for the scam, is far from the only one.
For thousands of unscrupulous people, the government’s pandemic assistance programs were the equivalent of winning scratch-off lottery tickets.
Indeed, that was how
Upon getting the money, Tubbs treated herself to a two-day online shopping spree at Apple,
Shaneesha White, who stole nearly
Luxury car dealers seem to have been particular favorites for fraudsters, with Maseratis,
Plenty of others, though, said they put their money toward personal expenses. Some made tuition payments; others paid off credit card balances.
“They do it because they can, because they’re greedy and they want it and they somehow feel they’re smart enough to get away with it,” she said.
She figured that a majority of fraudsters came in below
Some fraudsters claimed altruistic motives.
“Had he wanted to, he could’ve brought multiple houses during this time and easily spent the loan money. But he didn’t because he intended to do what he wrote on the loan application: build a business,” the lawyer said.
Prosecutors said that is tough to square with what Sissoko did spend.
Within days of getting the
The only thing that headed off more spending was that his bank realized it had made a mistake and froze the rest of the funds, prosecutors said.
His niece ratted him out.
Korner’s attorney said his fraud had altruistic motives: He wanted to get the towing company up and running, and he figured his father would want to help him even though he never sought permission to use his identity.
“It was fueled by a harmful desperation to fast forward reintegration in the community and to reestablish a past life,” the lawyer said.
Other fraud suspects were blunter about their intentions.
“I’m tired of struggling it’s time to put the ski mask on,” she texted a friend. “I’m about to get bold as [expletive]! Especially while nobody’s paying attention … due to corona.”
“Williams simply wanted money, so he committed fraud to obtain it,” his attorney told the judge. “There’s no underlying reason other than greed.”
Luckily for Williams, President Biden’s blanket pardon for some marijuana offenses squelched the two drug convictions, and he was left with the pandemic fraud charge. His attorney said that should have earned him a sentence of about 30 months.
Unluckily for Williams, the judge looked at his history of mayhem and slapped him with 60 months in prison.
Indeed, he saw it as just another “hustle.” It didn’t help that he was going through a divorce and needed money at the same time the government was making cash available.
“PPP loans proved irresistible to those who had grown up engaging in an informal economy within a community that distrusts, holds little respect for, or just tends to be apathetic toward large government agencies in general,” Bellamy’s attorney told the judge. “There was an opportunity that proved to be very easy to obtain a large amount of cash with victims that for him could easily be rationalized away.”
Bellamy has been discharged from the Army. He was slapped with a 22-month prison sentence and ordered to pay back
He blew his cash on
Some fraudsters took thoughtful approaches to their gains and pumped their windfalls into investments.
He bought 25 properties in
Not everyone was savvy.
Shaan Diyali pumped
For more information, visit The Washington Times COVID-19 resource page.
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