ROCHESTER, N.Y. - U.S. Attorney James P. Kennedy, Jr.
announced today that a federal grand jury has returned a 28-count superseding
indictment charging George H. Moses, 50, of Rochester, NY, with conspiracy to
commit wire fraud, wire fraud, and aggravated identity theft. The conspiracy
and wire fraud charges carry a maximum penalty of 20 years in prison and a
$250,000 fine, while the aggravated identity theft charge carries a mandatory
consecutive term of two years in prison. In May 2018, the defendant was charged
in a two-count indictment for making false statements to the FBI. Those charges
are also part of the superseding indictment, and carry a maximum penalty of 20
years in prison and a $250,000 fine.
Assistant U.S. Attorney Richard A. Resnick, who is handling
the case, stated that according to the superseding indictment, the new charges
involve alleged schemes to defraud Quad A for Kids and Rochester Housing
Charities.
Moses is the Executive Director of North East Area Development
Association (NEAD) in Rochester, a not-for-profit neighborhood organization
governed by a volunteer board of directors, which worked with city officials
and agencies to revitalize and stabilize the Sector 8 neighborhood in the
northeast quadrant of Rochester. The defendant was also the Chairman of the
Board of Commissioners of the Rochester Housing Authority (RHA) until 2018, and
a member of the board of directors of the Rochester Housing Charities (RHC)
from March 2015 to 2017.
Former Rochester City Councilmember Adam McFadden was the
Executive Director of Quad A for Kids, which provided after-school and
extended-day learning programs at some elementary schools in the Rochester City
School District. The organization operated as an entity separate from the
Rochester City School District and received funding from the Rochester Area
Community Foundation Initiatives Inc. (RACF). Quad A for Kids shared some of
the RACF’s administrative staff but employed its own executive director,
executive assistant, and program staff. McFadden also owned Caesar Development
LLC, a limited liability company located in Rochester.
Moses is accused of conspiring with Adam McFadden to defraud
Quad A for Kids and the RACF. In August 2017, and February 2018, McFadden
created two false invoices stating that Quad A for Kids owed NEAD $4,000 for
purported training and other services NEAD provided on behalf of Quad A for
Kids at various Rochester City schools. Moses and McFadden fraudulently caused
the RACF, on behalf of Quad A for Kids, to pay NEAD $8,000, knowing that
services were never provided. McFadden then created two invoices which falsely
stated that NEAD owed his company Caesar Development LLC a total of $7,000 for
purported consultation services Caesar Development LLC provided to NEAD. In
fact, Caesar Development LLC did not provided such consultation services to
NEAD. Earlier this month, McFadden pled
guilty in federal court for his role in the Quad A for Kids fraud and is
awaiting sentencing.
Moses is also charged with defrauding the RHC by causing the
RHC to overpay the RHC’s Executive Director’s salary and to make other payments
to the Executive Director to which the Executive Director was not entitled. The
defendant then received a portion of the funds which were overpaid to the
Executive Director, either in the form of a cash payment or a wire transfer to
a bank account controlled by Moses. Specifically, between January 2018 and
September 2019, the defendant caused the RHC to pay to the RHC’s Executive
Director $500 in salary every two weeks to which the Executive Director was not
entitled. Moses then caused $380 from each fraudulent payment to be transferred
to the defendant’s bank account without the knowledge of the Executive
Director.
“As alleged in the superseding indictment, Mr. Moses, a
public servant, unlawfully sought to divert public money to himself,” noted
U.S. Attorney Kennedy. “This Office, together with our partners in law
enforcement, will remain vigilant in our efforts to bring to justice all of those,
like the defendant, who decide to betray the public trust in order to line
their own pockets.”
The superseding indictment is the result of an investigation
by the Federal Bureau of Investigation, Rochester Office, under the direction
of Special Agent-in-Charge Gary Loeffert; the Department of Housing and Urban
Development, Office of Inspector General, under the direction of Special
Agent-in-Charge Brad Geary; and the Internal Revenue Service, Criminal
Investigations Division, under the direction of Jonathan D. Larsen, Special
Agent-in-Charge, New York Field Office.
The fact that a defendant has been charged with a crime is
merely an accusation and the defendant is presumed innocent until and unless
proven guilty.
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