LOS ANGELES
– A Canadian national pleaded guilty today to five wire fraud charges for
defrauding investors in a $5 million Ponzi scheme in which he pretended to be a
successful beverage entrepreneur with close ties to well-known business
executives and NBA stars such as Stephen Curry and Shaquille O’Neal.
Khemraj Dave
Hardat, 50, a former resident of the Ritz-Carlton Residences at L.A. Live in
downtown Los Angeles, entered his plea before United States District Judge Dale
S. Fischer, who scheduled an August 12 sentencing hearing. As a result of
today’s guilty pleas, Hardat faces a statutory maximum sentence of 100 years in
prison.
In a plea
agreement filed in United States District Court, Hardat admitted that, from
August 2014 through November 2018, he falsely held himself out as a successful
investor and businessman in the performance beverage and water-bottling
industries. Hardat duped his investors by falsely representing that he had
advanced educational degrees – including a Ph.D. – and that he maintained
relationships with established business figures such as computer entrepreneur
Michael Dell and the chief executive officer of PepsiCo.
Hardat also
falsely represented that Basketball Hall of Famer Shaquille O’Neal was one of
his business partners, and that professional basketball star Stephen Curry
would be endorsing one of his company’s products, according to court documents.
Furthermore, Hardat falsely claimed that PepsiCo and Dr. Pepper Snapple Group,
Inc. owed him more than $100 million as the result of purported business deals
he consummated with them, the plea agreement states.
Hardat
supported his bogus claims of financial success by showing victims doctored
digital images of bank account statements showing balances inflated far beyond
any amount Hardat actually had at these financial institutions. One doctored
image emailed to a victim purportedly showed a balance of nearly $500 million
in one bank account, while another phony image purported to show a bank account
balance of nearly $170 million, court papers state.
In reality,
Hardat never intended to use his investors’ proceeds for the business purposes
that he represented, the plea agreement states. Instead he used the funds to
pay off his personal debts, purchase luxury cars worth more than $100,000 each,
pay rent at the Ritz-Carlton Residences, pay tuition for exclusive private
schools for his children, and purchase luxury boxes and tickets for sporting
and entertainment events, according to the plea agreement. Hardat also admitted
that, in the style of a Ponzi scheme, he made payments to prior
victim-investors out of subsequent victim-investors’ money.
During the
course of the scheme, Hardat took in more than $5 million from investors, who
have suffered losses of more than $4 million.
This matter was investigated by the Federal
Bureau of Investigation.
This case is
being prosecuted by Assistant United States Attorney Adam P. Schleifer of the
Major Frauds Section.
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