Geoffrey S. Berman, the United States Attorney for the
Southern District of New York, announced that PETER G. JOHNSON was sentenced to
36 months in prison for leading a scheme to defraud a group of lenders (the
“Banks”) by submitting false “borrowing base” reports designed to secure and
maintain a $400 million line of credit for his cocoa trading company, Transmar
Commodity Group Ltd. (“Transmar” or the “Company”). JOHNSON pled guilty on March 9, 2018, to one
count of conspiracy to commit bank fraud and wire fraud affecting a financial
institution. The sentence was imposed by
United States District Judge Jed S. Rakoff.
U.S. Attorney Geoffrey S. Berman said: “Peter G. Johnson, CEO of Transmar, a
commodities trading company specializing in cocoa trading, previously admitted
to his role in a scheme to defraud the banks which extended high lines of
credit to Transmar. Johnson and his
co-defendants fudged the company’s required reports, which banks used to gauge
the amount they extended Transmar, to make the company seem financially
healthier, thus receiving higher credit than deserved. All told, Johnson’s scheme led to the
bankruptcy of Transmar, unpaid debt of over $350 million, and now he has been
sentenced to 36 months in prison time.”
According to the allegations in the Indictment and other
documents filed in federal court, as well as statements made in public court
proceedings:
Transmar was a closely-held, family-run cocoa commodity
trading company. PETER G. JOHNSON was
Transmar’s founder, President, and chief executive officer.
From at least 2014 through at least December 2016, Transmar
maintained a credit facility from the Banks that varied from approximately $250
million to approximately $400 million.
To secure and maintain these hundreds of millions of dollars in credit,
PETER G. JOHNSON, his son, Peter B. Johnson, Transmar’s Vice President of
Finance, Thomas Reich, and others schemed to misrepresent material information
about Transmar’s finances, making it appear that Transmar had far more
credit-eligible collateral than it actually had.
The scheme centered on periodic “borrowing base” reports
(“BB Reports”) that the Banks required Transmar to submit, sometimes as
frequently as weekly, as a condition to continued credit extension. The BB Reports were supposed to accurately
reflect and quantify those portions of Transmar’s collateral that qualified for
financing under the terms of credit agreements between Transmar and the Banks.
Beginning no later than 2014, Transmar employees, acting
with JOHNSON’s knowledge and at his direction, manipulated the BB Reports and
related documents to give the false impression that Transmar had sufficient
eligible collateral to support the amount of credit the Banks were extending. The manipulation involved, among other
devices, counting inventory that Transmar had already sold or was otherwise
ineligible for inclusion, counting accounts receivable for which Transmar had
already received payment, recording fake accounts receivable, and arranging
“circle” transactions through which amenable third-party intermediaries agreed
to “buy” goods from Transmar with Transmar’s own money, funneled to the third
parties through Euromar Commodities GMBH, Transmar’s affiliate.
Following the discovery of the fraud, Transmar filed for
bankruptcy in December 2016. At that
time, the Company owed the Banks approximately $360 million.
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In addition to the prison term, JOHNSON, 69, of Harding
Township, New Jersey, was sentenced to two years of supervised release.
Peter B. Johnson, 39, of Morristown, New Jersey, and Thomas
Reich, 60, of Montvale, New Jersey, each pled guilty to the same offenses for
their participation in the scheme to defraud the Banks. They are scheduled to be sentenced on
September 17 and 21, 2018, respectively.
Mr. Berman praised the outstanding investigative work of the
Federal Bureau of Investigation.
This case is being handled by the Office’s Money Laundering
and Asset Forfeiture Unit. Assistant
U.S. Attorneys Benet J. Kearney and Daniel M. Tracer are in charge of the
prosecution.
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