Showing posts with label Fraud. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Fraud. Show all posts

IRS Busts Trump’s Phony Charity For Scamming Veterans, Revokes Its Nonprofit Status


Most of us are appalled by the things Donald Trump has to say. He has been very callous with his disrespect towards war hero John McCain while venerating our troops in the next breath. So it makes sense that he may have helped a shady veterans’ group raise funds that does not actually work for veterans’ advocacy. On Tuesday, he appeared on the USS Iowa in Los Angeles to accept an endorsement from a “nonprofit” veterans group, Veterans for a Strong America, headed by huckster Joel Arends.

Arends’ group, according to the Associate Press lost its nonprofit status in early August for not filing tax returns, which would let us know how the group collects money and how it spends it. According to OpenSecrets.org, the group presently has $30 on hand and $318 in debts, which might explain why they held a fundraiser rally featuring Trump as main speaker – charging up to $1,000 a person.
Trump said, in front of 16-inch guns on the Iowa: “You know, Joel and the group called and they said, ‘Would you come over and speak?…I got here and they asked a couple of days ago would it be possible to come over and say a few words. An endorsement from your group, with so many veterans, hundreds of thousands of veterans, I really appreciate that, Joel. I did not expect it. I didn’t expect it, I didn’t ask for it. I will say this: I am with the veterans, 100 percent. They’re our greatest people.”

Rachel Maddow points out, in the video below, it appears as if Arends is the only member of Veterans for a Strong America, and it is actually not possible to join this organization. Making matters worse, Arends was not only involved with a fake U.S. Senate candidate in South Dakotahe was also involved a phony super PAC scam in Texas, and he is currently under investigation in Arizona.
All this information would have been easily available to Trump with a simple Google search – some bare minimum you might have expected from a candidate for the presidency. Or else he was entirely aware of their shady status and had no problem helping to raise funds for a shady organization.
In addition, that simple search might also might have saved Trump some potential new grief, because AP reports: “Regardless of its legal status as a nonprofit, Veterans for a Strong America’s endorsement of Trump on the deck of the USS Iowa may also raise campaign finance questions. Under federal law, corporations are restricted to donating $2,700 either in cash or in-kind contributions to a campaign. But the event, which Veterans for a Strong America paid for, involved 850 attendees, putting the cost at roughly $11,000.”
As many have said, Trump is an embarrassment to himself and this country and to the office he seeks.

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Sources: Feds probe possible $90 million fraud tied to Bohemia firm



Federal law enforcement officials are investigating whether nearly $90 million in bank loans to a Bohemia finance company were the object of a "massive fraud," according to court records and sources familiar with the case.
The investigation involves Oak Rock Financial Llc, at 3900 Veterans Memorial Hwy., a commercial lending company that often provides capital that other lenders would then loan for transactions such as automobile and business-related purchases.

Last week, Israel Discount Bank of New York, the lead institution of the five banks that have loaned as much as $90 million to Oak Rock, asked a federal bankruptcy court judge in Central Islip to appoint a trustee to oversee the operation of the company on an emergency basis to preserve any of its remaining assets. The banks stated in court papers that Oak Rock falsified its financial position in order to borrow money.

Attorneys for Israel Discount Bank said in court papers that they had learned that the founder and head of Oak Rock, John P. Murphy, had resigned and can't be located -- and the manager who took over at Oak Rock estimated that the fraud went as high as $70 million.
"Oak Rock had perpetrated a massive fraud upon its senior secured lenders," the attorneys allege in the court papers.

As an example of the fraud allegation, the banks said in court filings that Oak Rock claimed recently to have $2.5 million in credit available when it actually was over-advanced by $47 million. The other banks that loaned the money to Oak Rock were identified as Bank Leumi USA, Capital One, Bank Hapoalim, and First National Bank of New York.

Lawyers for Oak Rock did not return telephone calls or emails seeking comment. Attorneys for the banks also declined to comment.

Murphy, who legal sources said had more than 20 years' experience in commercial lending, didn't return phone calls to his Nesconset home.

New chief discovers fraud
A longtime associate of Murphy's, Tom Stephens, took charge of Oak Rock, court papers said. Stephens later told the attorneys for the banks that on April 17 he discovered "that Murphy had been perpetrating a long-running, extensive fraud with Oak Rock by creating fictitious records," court papers said.
Murphy then resigned, the court papers said. According to state records, Oak Rock was incorporated in July 2001 as a Delaware corporation. The incorporation papers listed Murphy as president and said the company had four employees.

Further, Stephens said he informed the FBI and the U.S. attorney's office in the Eastern District of the situation at Oak Rock and they are investigating, the court papers said.
Sources confirmed the FBI's and U.S. attorney's inquiries into Oak Rock. Spokesmen for both the FBI and federal prosecutors declined to comment.

Stephens also said in light of the company's situation, "Oak Rock cannot possibly continue as a going concern and must be orderly liquidated," the papers said.
Two Oak Rock workers told Newsday that Stephens resigned Friday. Attempts to reach him were unsuccessful.

According to the court papers, Stephens began this past January to visit Oak Rock's offices to get a firsthand look at the company's operations and its books and records.
During the week of April 15 Stephens noticed unusual collection activity with respect to one of Oak Rock's customers and confronted Murphy, the court papers said. It was at that point, according to Stephens, that Murphy admitted to Stephens "that he had been creating fictitious records in order to increase Oak Rock's borrowing base," court papers alleged.

Though Stephens had told the banks about the problems at Oak Rock, the banks' attorneys now say they do not believe Stephens has the financial skills to operate Oak Rock and they want an experienced trustee appointed to oversee the firm, the court papers say.
A hearing on the banks' request for the trustee is scheduled for Monday in federal bankruptcy court in Central Islip.

The banks said in court papers that Stephens "has essentially hijacked" Oak Rock and accused him of denying the banks access to critical information about the company's financial health as well as failing to take steps to safeguard its assets.

Oak Rock specializes in a variety of businesses that involve credit -- in effect, borrowing money from banks and then loaning the money to other lenders or businesses or financing its own credit transactions.
The lending of money to other lenders or businesses is known as asset-based lending. Such loans can allow businesses to engage in installment financing for the purchase of consumer products or other business transactions, the court papers stated.

Oak Rock also had other companies participate in its loans to spread the risk, according to court papers and legal sources.

Marketplace impact
Jerome Reisman, a Garden City attorney who is representing AmeriMerchant LLC, a firm that borrowed from Oak Rock to advance to merchants, said the matter has the potential to dry up credit for some consumers and merchants.

"Right now it is catastrophic to the borrowers who can't draw down [from Oak Rock] on funding needs to fund their operations," Reisman said.

He explained that firms such as auto finance companies and merchants who let consumers make credit card purchases aren't able to fund their consumer accounts and commercial accounts.
"The end result is that [some] commercial and consumer funding has been cut off, pending a court hearing," Reisman said.

He declined to give specifics about AmeriMerchant's borrowing from Oak Rock, but stressed that the company had obtained alternate financing so it could pay off what it owed Oak Rock.
By noon Friday, an "administrative hold" on Oak Rock's operating bank account was lifted, court records stated.

With Chau Lam

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