David Hansen Admits to 8-Year Wire Fraud Scheme
POCATELLO - David Hansen, 48, of Idaho Falls, pleaded guilty
today to wire fraud, U.S. Attorney Bart M. Davis announced. Pursuant to a
written plea agreement filed with the court, Hansen pleaded guilty to count 16
of the superseding indictment. The trial set for January 21, 2020 was vacated.
According to court records, Hansen was the Chief Executive
Officer and a 90-percent partner in Yellowstone Partners, LLC, an investment
management firm headquartered in Idaho Falls. Clients of Yellowstone Partners
entrusted their monies to Yellowstone Partners to invest and manage on their
behalf. In exchange, Yellowstone Partners earned fees for its services. Yellowstone Partners’ fees were set forth in
investment agreements between Yellowstone Partners and its clients.
According to court records, Yellowstone Partners’ clients’
monies were kept in accounts at third party custodians. Yellowstone Partners
directed how the monies in client accounts were invested and how they were
disbursed. This included submitting email billing requests to a third party
custodian to take fees from client accounts and to deposit them into
Yellowstone Partners’ own accounts.
According to court records, from 2008 through April of 2016,
Hansen knowingly and intentionally devised a scheme to defraud clients of
Yellowstone Partners by obtaining money or property by means of false and
fraudulent pretenses, representations, and promises. Specifically, the scheme
was to fraudulently bill clients for fees to which Yellowstone Partners was not
entitled under the terms of the investment agreements or otherwise. Through
this overbilling scheme, Hansen fraudulently obtained client funds from a third
party custodian and used them to enrich himself and to fund Yellowstone
Partners’ operations. For certain identified victims, Hansen personally
submitted, or was carbon-copied, on 50 fraudulent overbilling requests to a
custodian, which resulted in a loss of $2,675,856. For each of the
overbillings, Hansen acted with the intent to deceive or cheat the victims.
As part of the plea agreement, Hansen agreed to pay full
restitution to the victims of the wire fraud scheme, in an amount to be
determined by the court at the time of sentencing. Further, Hansen agreed to a
forfeiture judgment in the amount of restitution ordered by the court at the
time of sentencing. Finally, Hansen agreed to cooperate with an Internal
Revenue Service civil tax examination and assessment, and pay any unpaid tax
due and owing, and accrued interest for his 2012 and 2013 Form 1040 joint
income tax returns.
“Mr. Hansen was entrusted with other people’s money. He
breached their trust. And his conduct over a prolonged period of time
undermines the confidence of everyone who entrusts their money with others to
invest,” said U.S. Attorney Davis. “By this prosecution and guilty plea, we
hope to strongly deter others in Hansen’s position from engaging in the same
behavior, and assure the investing public that those who do will be held fully
accountable.”
“High-ranking corporate officials, such as Mr. Hansen, hold
positions of trust not only in their companies, but also in the eyes of the
public,” said IRS-CI Special Agent in Charge Andy Tsui. “IRS Criminal
Investigation is committed to investigating individuals who abuse that trust by
fraudulently using their corporations as personal piggy banks.”
For the wire fraud count, Hansen faces a statutory maximum
of 20 years in prison, a $250,000 fine, and up to 3 years of supervised
release.
Sentencing for Hansen is currently set for March 31, 2020, before
Chief U.S. District Judge David C. Nye at the federal courthouse in Pocatello.
The case was investigated by Federal Bureau of Investigation
and Internal Revenue Service-Criminal Investigation Division.
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