PROVIDENCE – A federal grand jury returned a 14-count
indictment today charging an East Greenwich, Rhode Island business woman, whose
business specializes in preserving foreclosed homes for resale, with nine
counts of wire fraud, two counts aggravated identity theft, and one count each
of money laundering, structuring, and obstructing an Internal Revenue Service
investigation, announced United States Attorney Aaron L. Weisman for the
District of Rhode Island, Principal Deputy Assistant Attorney General Richard
E. Zuckerman of the Justice Department’s Tax Division, Special Agent in Charge
of Internal Revenue Service Criminal Investigation Kristina O'Connell, and
Special Agent in Charge of the FBI Boston Division Joseph R. Bonavolonta.
According to the indictment and court documents, Monique N.
Brady, owner and operator of MNB LLC, operated a scheme whereby she raised and
pocketed millions of dollars from investors, including close friends, a family
member, and business associates, by misrepresenting to them that she needed to
raise tens of thousands of dollars for various repair projects. In return for
their investment, investors were promised a return of fifty percent of the
profit.
It is alleged that Brady fraudulently represented to
potential investors that MNB had secured contracts to perform large scale
rehabilitation projects on foreclosed properties in Rhode Island, Connecticut,
Massachusetts, and New Hampshire, and that payments ranging from approximately
$20,000 to $80,000 were needed to pay subcontractors to perform the work. Brady
often solicited and received multiple investments for the same property. To
make potential investors believe she had secured contracts for large scale
rehabilitation projects, Brady forwarded to her investors fraudulent emails
purporting to be from a national property rehabilitation company claiming Brady
had been approved to rehabilitate a property. Brady included in the emails
fraudulent itemizations of work to be performed. Brady also included, without
permission, the identity of an actual employee of the national property
rehabilitation company in an attempt to make the emails appear authentic.
For the majority of properties for which Brady received
investments from third parties, allegedly no work whatsoever was performed by
MNB. On some properties, MNB performed
low-dollar tasks and was paid less than $1,000, at times as little as $25.
From January 2014 to July 2018, Brady received approximately
$10.2 million dollars in investments from about 32 individuals and corporations
to whom she fraudulently represented that large-scale rehabilitation projects
had been awarded to MNB. These investors
have sustained a loss of approximately $4.78 million. Some of the investor funds
allegedly were spent by Brady on personal expenditures, to include numerous
vacations, personal mortgage payments and gambling-related expenses. When
individual investors demanded from Brady a return on their investment she
would, at times, use other investors funds. In this way, Brady allegedly
operated a “Ponzi scheme.”
The indictment further alleges Brady attempted to obstruct
an IRS criminal investigation when, after being told by IRS investigators she
was under investigation, she asked investors to delete or destroy all email
correspondence, texts, and documents relating to their investments in MNB
rehabilitation projects.
An indictment is merely an accusation. A defendant is
presumed innocent unless and until proven guilty.
Each wire fraud charge carries statutory penalties of up to
20 years in prison, up to 5 years supervised release, and a fine of up to
$250,000 or twice the gross profit/loss. Aggravated identity theft is
punishable by statutory penalties of a 2-year mandatory sentence consecutive to
any other sentence imposed and 1 year of supervised release. Money laundering
is punishable by statutory penalties of up to 10 years imprisonment, 3 years
supervised release, and a fine of up to $250,000. Structuring is punishable by
statutory penalties of up to 5 years imprisonment, 3 years supervised release,
and a fine of up to $250,000. Obstructing an IRS investigation is punishable by
statutory penalties of up to 3 years in prison, 1 year supervised release, and
a fine of $5,000.
The case is being prosecuted by Assistant United States
Attorney Lee Vilker of the District of Rhode Island and Trial Attorney
Christopher O’Donnell of the Tax Division.
The matter was investigated by agents from IRS-Criminal
Investigation and the FBI.
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