Brandon Frere Was Arrested At SFO While Attempting to Leave
the Country
SAN FRANCISCO – Brandon Frere pleaded guilty today to wire
fraud and money laundering charges in connection with a multi-million-dollar
scheme to use deceptive sales tactics to convince people to enroll in his
companies’ student loan repayment services programs, announced United States
Attorney David L. Anderson and Federal Bureau of Investigation, Special Agent
in Charge John F. Bennett. The plea was
accepted by the Hon. Susan Illston, United States District Judge.
Frere, 42, of Sonoma County, owned and operated three
companies—American Financial Benefits Center (AFBC), the Financial Education
Benefits Center (FEBC), and Ameritech Financial (Ameritech)—all based in
Rohnert Park, Calif. According to his
plea agreement, between January of 2014 and November of 2018, Frere used the
companies to market student loan document preparation services for borrowers
who wished to apply for programs through the Department of Education. Frere targeted potential customers who were
seeking federal loan forgiveness, loan consolidation, and reduced-payment
programs. When Frere’s companies sold
consumers “document preparation” services, they also sold them a purportedly
optional membership in a “financial education benefits program.” The so-called benefits program provided the
opportunity to customers to sign up for services such as LifeLock identity
theft protection and roadside assistance.
Frere admitted he instructed his employees to follow
misleading sales scripts and to employ deceptive sales tactics so that people
would enroll for services without fully understanding what they were paying
for. For example, when initially
enrolling consumers in the document preparation service and signing them up for
the financial education benefits program, Frere hid the fees for the financial
education benefits program and described the benefits program in a way that
made it seem like the cost of the program was included in the document
preparation services. Further, Frere
admitted he instructed enrollment associates not to present the benefits
program as an optional or additional service to the document preparation
service; this way, consumers would purchase the benefits packages without
knowing they were doing so.
In sum, Frere instructed his employees (1) to make false
statements concerning the companies’ ability to deliver fixed payments for the life
of student loans and loan forgiveness under alternative repayment plans; (2) to
engage in enrollment practices that improperly inflated a consumers’ family
size to reduce their prospective payments under federal alternative repayment
plans (and therefore make it appear to the consumer that their monthly payments
would be lower than what they would have been if the family size were not
inflated); and (3) to hide the monthly fees that consumers would pay for a
purportedly optional financial education benefits program while leading victims
to believe that the benefits program was already included in the document
preparation service. Frere admitted for
the purposes of sentencing that the amount of losses attributable to his scheme
was no less than $25,000,000 and up to $65,000,000.
Moreover, Frere admitted that in order to conceal the
proceeds of his wire fraud scheme, in 2015, he began transferring to overseas
bank accounts that he controlled large sums of the funds that he had received
through the scheme. He continued this
process in August 2017, after he became involved in litigation with the Federal
Trade Commission (“FTC”) and became concerned the FTC or a court might be able
to seize the proceeds of his fraud. The
FTC filed a civil complaint in February 2018 against Frere and his companies in
federal court in Oakland. (Federal Trade Commission v. American Financial
Benefits, et al., Case No. CV 18-00806-SBA).
Frere was arrested December 5, 2018, at SFO as he attempted
to board a flight to Cancun, Mexico. He
is now free on bond pending sentencing.
Judge Illston scheduled Frere’s sentencing for March 27, 2020 at 11:00
AM.
Frere was charged by information on October 1, 2019 with one
count of wire fraud, in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 1343, and one count of money
laundering, in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 1956(a)(2)(B). Frere pleaded guilty to both counts. Frere faces a maximum sentence of 20 years in
prison, for each count. In addition,
with respect to the fraud count, Frere faces a fine of $250,000, or the greater
of twice the gross gain or twice the gross loss from the fraud. With respect to the money laundering count,
Frere faces a fine of $500,000, or the greater of twice the gross gain or twice
the value of the money instruments involved.
In addition, restitution, supervised release, and additional fines may
be ordered. However, any sentence
following conviction will be imposed by the court only after consideration of
the U.S. Sentencing Guidelines and the federal statute governing the imposition
of a sentence, 18 U.S.C. § 3553.
Assistant U.S. Attorney Scott Joiner is prosecuting the case
with the assistance of Kimberly Richardson. The prosecution is the result of an
investigation by the Federal Trade Commission, Federal Bureau of Investigation,
and Internal Revenue Service Criminal Investigation, with assistance from the
U.S. Department of Education Office of Inspector General.
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