BOSTON — A Brockton man was charged with fraudulently obtaining over $1.5 million in COVID relief funds, the Justice Department said Monday.
Joao Mendes, 59, has agreed to plead guilty to one count of wire fraud after being charged in connection with a scheme to submit false applications to obtain Paycheck Protection Program (PPP) and Economic Injury Disaster Loan Programs (EIDL) funds through the Small Business Administration (SBA), which were made available under the CARES Act.
Beginning in or around June 2020 until around September 2020, Mendes allegedly "submitted or caused to be submitted" multiple fraudulent PPP and EIDL loan applications on behalf of various entities, charging documents said.
As a result, Mendes and others received over $1.5 million in PPP and EIDL funds, which Mendes spent for "his own personal benefit — including for the purchase of cryptocurrency — or transferred the funds into other accounts he controlled or to other individuals," the Justice Department said.
BSU track canceled: 'So unfair': BSU track team gets 1,000 signatures to bring back winter season
The CARES Act was enacted at the start of the pandemic in March 2020 and was designed to provide emergency financial aid to millions of Americans who were "suffering the economic effects caused by COVID-19."
Mendes' fraudulent PPP loan applications "misrepresented the number of employees and the average monthly payroll expenses of his various businesses," according to the Justice Department.
Here's what $1M buys in Easton: 'Spectacular' Easton contemporary sells for $1 million
He also allegedly submitted false tax records in support of his loan applications.
In his EIDL applications, Mendes allegedly misrepresented the number of employees, gross revenues and costs of goods sold for each business.
Mendes' wire fraud charge could get him a sentence of up to 20 years in prison, up to three years of supervised release and a fine of up to $250,000 or twice the gross gain or loss from the offense, according to the Justice Department.
This article originally appeared on The Enterprise: Brockton COVID relief: Joao Mendes charged with CARES Act wire fraud
(Bloomberg) — Democratic Senator Dick Durbin tested positive for Covid-19 Thursday, the latest in a string of infections that have highlighted the fragility of the party’s majority at a particularly critical time for President Joe Biden’s resurrected economic agenda. Most Read from BloombergThe Crypto Collapse Has Flooded the Market With Rolex and PatekAlito Decries 'Hostility to Religion' in First Public Remarks Since Abortion Decision Rockstar Games Cleaned Up Its Frat-Boy Culture — and Grand
The decades-long cold case murder of a librarian and single mother may be coming to a close, after a Virginia man pleaded guilty this week to strangling the woman nearly 24 years ago. Bobby Joe Leonard, 54, pleaded guilty on Wednesday to first-degree murder in the death of Andrea Cincotta. Leonard said that he agreed to kill Cincotta for $5,000, which he never got from a man he believed was his target's boyfriend, the Washington Post reported. James Christopher Johnson discovered his fiancée’s l
An Augusta man was arrested July 27 after an FBI raid on Richmond Hill Road.
Former Palmetto State Bank CEO Russell Laffitte received a bond hearing and formal arraignment on a five-count federal indictment this week.
In an interview with Fortune, Variant co-founders Jesse Walden and Li Jin announce their third fund raising $450 million. “We aspire to be the marquee seed fund in Web3,” Walden said.
Democrats are suddenly tiptoeing closer to a deal on Biden's economic agenda, but closing the carried interest loophole could be a sticking point.
"I’m exhausted, I’m so f—ing sick and I’m devastated," Peach PRC says in a TikTok video.
Meet the Arizona Republican candidates who deny the legitimacy of the 2020 election.
Story at a glance Although previous research has documented the toll of racially motivated discrimination on individuals’ mental health, new data highlight its effect during the COVID-19 pandemic. Those who experienced discrimination more than once a week had a 17-fold increased risk in depressive symptoms and 10-fold increased risk of suicidality. Researchers hope the findings…
Former Lawrenceburg utilities director indicted on 19 felonies
Los Angeles residents can once again get free recycled water to irrigate their lawns, trees and plants through a Los Angeles Department of Water and Power program, officials announced Thursday.
Story at a glance UPS workers in New York City took to the streets on Thursday to protest unsafe working conditions. Workers rallied outside a UPS distribution center in Brooklyn, and called on leadership to provide air conditioning in delivery trucks. Unlike Amazon and the USPS, UPS trucks do not have AC and workers need…
Quintin Jarnall Larks, 32, of Las Vegas, is charged with attempted murder, home invasion robbery and carjacking, assault with a deadly weapon, evading arrest, and suspicion of DUI.
Despite repeated warnings from the FDA, the Charlotte woman continued to sell a drug that was “adulterated, misbranded and unapproved” to treat COVID.
According to Laura MacNeil, PNC's regional president in Washington, the bank had no employees in the Seattle area before 2020.
(Bloomberg) — Liquidators overseeing the wind-down of Three Arrows Capital may soon try to force founders Kyle Davies and Su Zhu to help clean up the mess left behind by the crypto hedge fund’s collapse.Most Read from BloombergRockstar Games Cleaned Up Its Frat-Boy Culture — and Grand Theft Auto, TooUS Economy Shrinks for a Second Quarter, Fueling Recession FearsThe Strong Dollar Is Wreaking Havoc Globally — And It’s Just Getting StartedBiden Considers New Pause on Paying Back Student Loans, $1
The backdrop is a spike in opioid overdose fatalities in Brockton and elsewhere and a staggering percentage involving fentanyl.
Demand for transportation fuels remains strong despite mixed signals from inventory data collected by the U.S. Energy Information Administration (EIA), U.S. fuelmakers said on Thursday. Fears that the U.S. economy is heading into a recession have sent crude oil prices lower as recessions are usually followed by periods of lower fuel demand. Demand for gasoline has remained below the five-year seasonal average since early June, according to EIA data.
The lawsuit was filed April 29 in the United States District Court, and seeks compensatory and punitive damages, as well as legal fees.
(Bloomberg) — The Federal Deposit Insurance Corp., which protects customers in certain bank failures, has reiterated that it doesn’t insure crypto assets.Most Read from BloombergThe Crypto Collapse Has Flooded the Market With Rolex and PatekAlito Decries 'Hostility to Religion' in First Public Remarks Since Abortion Decision Rockstar Games Cleaned Up Its Frat-Boy Culture — and Grand Theft Auto, TooChinese Government Asked TikTok for Stealth Propaganda AccountEuro-Zone Inflation Hits Record, Bac
Author
Administraroot