Li Lin Hsu,
40, of Diamond Bar, was arrested Wednesday morning by special agents with the
FBI.
Hsu was
taken into custody pursuant to an eight-count indictment returned by a federal
grand jury the day before. The indictment charges Hsu with three counts of mail
fraud, three counts of wire fraud, one count of money laundering, and one count
of obstruction of justice.
Over a
five-year period, while she was employed by Ameriprise and after her
termination from Ameriprise in 2015, Hsu solicited investments from clients
through, among other ways, advertisements in local Chinese-language newspapers.
According to the indictment, Hsu failed to invest her clients’ funds, and
instead spent the money on personal expenses, such as credit card bills,
personal loans, luxury items and real estate. The money laundering charge in
the indictment alleges that Hsu used nearly $1 million stolen from one victim
to purchase a condominium in Diamond Bar.
The
indictment alleges that Hsu attempted to conceal her scheme by using some of
the money stolen from victims to pay back other victims, and that she sent her
clients fabricated account statements and investment purchase confirmations.
The indictment alleges that there are at
least 11 victims of Hsu, and investigators believe those victims sustained
losses of at least $2 million.
Following
her arrest, Hsu was arraigned on the indictment in United States District
Court, where she pleaded not guilty. Hsu was ordered released on a $50,000
bond, and she was ordered to stand trial on June 12 before United States
District Judge Andrew J. Guilford in Santa Ana.
An
indictment contains allegations that a defendant has committed a crime. Every
defendant is presumed innocent until and unless proven guilty in court.
If convicted
of the charges in the indictment, Hsu would face a statutory maximum sentence
of 20 years in federal prison on each of the fraud counts, 10 years on the
money laundering count, and 5 years on the obstruction of justice charge.
Investors
who provided money to Hsu and believe they were defrauded through her actions
at Ameriprise or her own companies – American Capital Trading Group LLC and
American Capital Republic, Inc. – should contact the FBI’s Los Angeles Field
Office at (310) 477-6565.
This matter
is being investigated by the Federal Bureau of Investigation.
This case is
being prosecuted by Assistant United States Attorney Poonam Kumar of the Major
Frauds Section.
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