PROVIDENCE – Former East Greenwich, R.I. businesswoman
Monique N. Brady, 44, whose company, MNB, specialized in preserving the
condition of foreclosed homes for resale, today admitted to utilizing her
business and business contacts, often times family members, friends, and
business associates, to operate a $10.3 million dollar Ponzi scheme.
Brady admitted to the Court that she fraudulently represented
to potential investors that her company had secured contracts to perform large
scale rehabilitation projects on foreclosed properties in Rhode Island,
Connecticut, Massachusetts, and New Hampshire. She represented to investors
that payments ranging from approximately $20,000 to $80,000 were needed to pay
subcontractors to perform the work.
In reality, MNB was hired by banks to perform menial tasks
such as mowing grass, changing locks, winterizing properties, boiler or
electrical inspections, and snow removal. The majority of projects secured by
MNB were for less than $1,000. Many were for as little as $25 dollars to a few
hundred dollars.
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 provided 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.
Records indicate that of the 171 properties for which Brady
solicited and received funds from investors for rehabilitation projects, 98
were for properties her company was never hired to preserve, on which
absolutely no work was performed.
In return for their investment, thirty-one investors were
promised a return of fifty percent of the profit realized on the project they
invested in. Many investors realized little or no return on their investment.
By the time the scheme ended after its discovery in the summer of 2018,
twenty-two individuals had lost approximately $4.78M to Brady.
Brady admitted that among those defrauded were close friends
in the East Greenwich community, a close friend from childhood, a close friend
from law school, her step-brother, and an older woman who was essentially a
nanny to her children. Other victims included three Warwick firefighters and an
elderly man with Alzheimer’s disease.
Brady also admitted to attempting to obstruct an Internal
Revenue Service 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.
Appearing today before U.S. District Court Judge John J.
McConnell, Jr., Monique N. Brady pleaded guilty to wire fraud, aggravated
identity theft, and obstructing an IRS 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.
Brady, who remains detained in federal custody, is scheduled
to be sentenced on October 4, 2019. Wire fraud is punishable by 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. 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. Aggravated identity theft is
punishable by statutory penalties of a 2-year mandatory sentence consecutive to
any other sentence imposed in this matter and 1 year of supervised release.
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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