Executives at Debt Collection Agency Admit Roles in $10 Million Client, Lender, and Investor Fraud Scheme
Arizona Free Press
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Three more executives of Oxford Collection Agency Inc. have pled guilty in Bridgeport federal court to charges stemming from a $10 million fraud scheme. Oxford Collection Agency was a private financial services company that engaged in accounts receivables management, primarily debt collecting, with offices in New York, Pennsylvania, and Florida.
Randall Silver, 43, of New Hyde Park, New York, pleaded guilty on December 13 to one count of conspiracy to commit wire fraud, bank fraud, and money laundering and one count of wire fraud. Silver was a vice president of finance and chief financial officer at the Oxford Collection Agency Inc. Charles Harris, 38, of Babylon, New York, and Carlos Novelli, 43, of Vero Beach, Florida, pleaded guilty on December 17 and December 18, respectively, to one count of conspiracy to commit wire fraud and bank bribery. Harris was an executive vice president at the Oxford Collection Agency, and Novelli was the companys chief operations officer.
According to court documents and statements made in court, various businesses and other entities contracted with Oxford Collection Agency (Oxford) to collect debts owed them by consumers. Oxfords clients included, among others, an educational institution, a laboratory, a computer company, and various banks. Oxford collected debts from consumers under the pretense that it would report all such collections to its clients and remit the appropriate amount to the client. However, Silver, Harris, Novelli, and other Oxford executives routinely caused Oxford to collect debts that were never remitted to its clients. The co-conspirators referred to these unremitted collections as a clients backlog. To hide the backlog, co-conspirators would make periodic fraudulent collection reports to certain clients that under-reported the amount of funds collected.
Certain co-conspirators also transferred money from one client trust account to another client account, from Oxfords operating account to a client account, or from a client account to Oxfords operating account, to cover various shortfalls and backlogs or to improperly use collections to directly fund Oxfords operations.
Starting in April 2007, Oxford secured a line of credit from Connecticut-based Webster Bank, a bank that received funds through the Troubled Asset Relief Program (TARP), without informing Webster Bank about its significant client backlogs or outstanding payroll taxes. Oxford executives, including Richard Pinto, Oxfords chairman of the Board, and his son, Peter Pinto, Oxfords president and chief executive officer, sent falsified financial statements to Webster Bank. With Silvers assistance in the fraud scheme, the Webster Bank credit line was increased to $6 million. Richard Pinto, Peter Pinto, Silver, and others also laundered funds from the credit line to promote the ongoing fraud scheme against their clients. During this same period, the Pintos, Silver, and others also solicited millions of dollars in investments from various investors, without ever disclosing to their investors the existence of their backlogs. Some of the investor funds were transferred into Richard Pintos personal bank account without investor knowledge.
Victims lost more than $10 million as a result of this scheme.
As part of the scheme, certain co-conspirators also paid kickbacks to employees of one or more financial institutions in order to compensate them for providing Oxford with the banks debt collection business.
In pleading guilty to a wire fraud charge unrelated to the conspiracy offenses, Silver admitted that he embezzled $193,963 from Oxford by transferring funds from Oxfords Client Payables account at Webster Bank to an account at a New York bank that he controlled.
On May 11, 2012, Richard Pinto and Peter Pinto each pleaded guilty to one count of conspiracy to commit wire fraud, bank fraud, and money laundering and one count of wire fraud stemming from this scheme.
Each of the conspiracy charges carries a maximum term of imprisonment of five years, and wire fraud carries a maximum term of imprisonment of 20 years. When they are sentenced, the defendants also face fines and orders of restitution.
This matter is being investigated by the Internal Revenue Service-Criminal Investigation; the Federal Bureau of Investigation; the Special Inspector General for the Troubled Asset Relief Program (SIGTARP); and the Connecticut Securities, Commodities, and Investor Fraud Task Force.