NEW ORLEANS – U.S. Attorney Peter G. Strasser announced that
a federal jury returned guilty verdicts against two Maryland men for defrauding
victims of over $15 million during the defendants’ operation of the New Orleans
EB-5 Regional Center after Hurricane Katrina.
After a three-week trial before U.S. District Judge Greg G.
Guidry, the defendants, Maryland businessman WILLIAM B. “BART” HUNGERFORD, JR.,
age 58, and TIMOTHY O. MILBRATH, age 63, a former U.S. Air Force colonel who
served as a White House military aide for three presidential administrations,
were found guilty of conspiracy to commit wire fraud and mail fraud, conspiracy
to commit immigration fraud, conspiracy to commit money laundering, and six
counts of wire fraud.
The charges stemmed from their scheme to defraud immigrant
investors who entrusted their money to the defendants to invest in job-creating
companies in New Orleans after Hurricane Katrina. As was alleged in the indictment, HUNGERFORD
and MILBRATH conspired together to defraud immigrants who sought to apply for
EB-5 visas. The visa program permits
immigrants to invest a minimum of $1,000,000.00 in a United States job-creating
enterprise and obtain permanent residency if, after two years, that investment
created or preserved ten American jobs.
The minimum investment required was lowered to $500,000.00 if the
investment was made in a targeted employment area (“TEA”), defined as an area
with an unemployment rate of 150% of the national average.
The superseding indictment alleged that HUNGERFORD and
MILBRATH formed NobleOutReach, LLC, to operate the EB-5 investment fund, and
they contracted with the City of New Orleans to run the New Orleans Regional
Center. Because New Orleans was a
designated TEA in the years after Hurricane Katrina, immigrant investors only
had to invest $500,000.00 in order to qualify under the EB-5 visa program. HUNGERFORD and MILBRATH represented to investors
that their $500,000.00 investment would be used to create jobs in New Orleans
and contribute to the rebuilding of the City.
A total of 31 immigrants invested a total of $15.5 million in the
defendants’ investment fund.
Evidence at trial showed that, instead of investing the
immigrant investors’ entire $15.5 million into New Orleans-based job-creating
enterprises, HUNGERFORD and MILBRATH fraudulently misappropriated investor
funds for their own personal gain.
HUNGERFORD and MILBRATH wrote themselves checks drawn from investor
funds which they disguised as “loans” or “loan repayments.” The evidence showed that the defendants
created multiple companies in order to conceal the path of investor funds and
misappropriate them. The defendants also
spent investor funds to purchase vacation and rental properties for their own
benefit. In the course of perpetrating
the fraud, the defendants made false representations to investors, U.S.
Citizenship and Immigration Services (USCIS), and the City of New Orleans.
As to each of the six counts of wire fraud, along with
conspiracy to commit wire and mail fraud, the defendants face a maximum penalty
of twenty years in prison, a $250,000.00 fine, and up to three years of
supervised release. As to the money
laundering conspiracy, the defendants face a maximum of 20 years in prison, a
$500,000.00 fine, and up to three years of supervised release. As to the conspiracy to commit immigration
fraud, the defendants may receive a maximum of five years in prison, a $250,000.00
fine, and up to three years of supervised release. Sentencing was set for December 17, 2019
before Judge Guidry.
“This was a very complex case with many moving parts,” The
U.S. Attorney’s Office noted. “But it in
the end, it ultimately all comes down to greed. This scheme to defraud our
community, taxpayers and those lawfully seeking permanent residency in the
United States, occurred in the wake of one of the most turbulent times in our
city’s history. Any attempt by perpetrators to conduct fraudulent schemes must
not be tolerated. It is our greatest
hope that this verdict serves as notice to everyone that justice will prevail
in the end.”
“The protection of our citizens is one of the most sacred
responsibilities entrusted to the FBI.
The crimes charged, not only involved stealing money from potential US
citizens, but also money that was to be utilized to help re-build New Orleans
after Hurricane Katrina. The FBI takes a
proactive approach to identify perpetrators involved in these crimes and will
continue to investigate and prosecute them to the fullest extent of the
law. As in this instance, these crimes
truly victimized an entire community and are not tolerated by the FBI nor
should they be tolerated by any citizens”, said FBI Acting Special Agent in
Charge Anthony Riedlinger.
U.S. Attorney Strasser praised the work of the Federal
Bureau of Investigation’s New Orleans Field Office. The case was prosecuted by Assistant U.S.
Attorneys Matthew R. Payne, Shirin Hakimzadeh, Maria M. Carboni, and Andre J.
Lagarde.
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