Close X
Tuesday, September 24, 2024
ADVT 
National

Indian-American Hotelier And Former Banker Admits To Defrauding Investor Of $500,000

Darpan News Desk IANS, 16 Jul, 2015 01:36 PM
    A hotelier and former banker of Indian origin has admitted in a federal court to defrauding an investor of $500,000 and now faces a prison sentence, according to a federal prosecutor in Tennessee.
     
    Rajesh C. Patel, 55, of Duluth, Georgia, pleaded guilty Monday before federal Senior Judge William J. Haynes, Jr., in Nashville, Tennessee, to two charges of wire fraud in defrauding the investor, according to the prosecutor, David Rivera.
     
    Patel had received the money from the Tennessee-based investor for a $3.75 million auction bid for a hotel mortgage, but when he lost the bid he diverted the money to pay a debt, the the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) said Tuesday. He also misrepresented the result of the auction to the investor.
     
    He has since, however, repaid the money to the investor.
     
    The maximum penalty Patel can receive when he is sentenced Oct. 15 is 20 years in prison for each of the offenses, in addition to fines and property forfeiture. In practice, though, it is unusual for someone to receive the maximum prison sentences to run serially.
     
    Wire fraud charges involve the use of telephones or digital communications to carry out the crime.
     
    Patel and his brother, Mukesh "Mike" Patel had been been the main shareholders of Haven Trust Bank in Duluth, Georgia, which was shut down in 2008 by Georgia state authorities.
     
    Subsequently he and 14 others who were directors or officials of the bank were sued by the federal agency which guarantees deposits made by bank customers. The agency had accused them gross negligence and failure to carry out their duties properly.
     
    In 2014 all the 15 reached a settlement in which they agreed to pay the agency $2.45 million.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Furlong Lashed Out Against Journalist In Media: Lawyer In B.C. Court

    VANCOUVER — Former Vancouver Olympics boss John Furlong's accusations that freelance journalist Laura Robinson fabricated a story over a personal vendetta have ruined her career, says her lawyer.

    Furlong Lashed Out Against Journalist In Media: Lawyer In B.C. Court

    Justin Trudeau Would End First-past-the-post Electoral System, Make Every Vote Count

    OTTAWA — Justin Trudeau wants this fall's national vote to be the last federal election conducted under the first-past-the-post electoral system.

    Justin Trudeau Would End First-past-the-post Electoral System, Make Every Vote Count

    Goldcorp Selling Stake In Tahoe Resources For Nearly $1 Billion

    Goldcorp Selling Stake In Tahoe Resources For Nearly $1 Billion
    VANCOUVER — Goldcorp Inc.  (TSX:G) is selling its one-quarter interest in Tahoe Resources Inc. (TSX:THO) for just under $1 billion.

    Goldcorp Selling Stake In Tahoe Resources For Nearly $1 Billion

    Man Injured In Early-Morning Port Coquitlam Shooting: Police

    Man Injured In Early-Morning Port Coquitlam Shooting: Police
    Police say they received a report about a man who suffered a gunshot wound at about 5 a.m. Tuesday. The man was taken to hospital with non-life-threatening injuries.

    Man Injured In Early-Morning Port Coquitlam Shooting: Police

    Abbotsford Man Could Be Responsible For 11 Bank Robberies In Langley And Surrey: Police

    Abbotsford Man Could Be Responsible For 11 Bank Robberies In Langley And Surrey: Police
    ABBOTSFORD, B.C. — Clothing, firearms and replica weapons seized at two homes in Abbotsford, B.C., have led to the arrest of a man suspected in four bank robberies.

    Abbotsford Man Could Be Responsible For 11 Bank Robberies In Langley And Surrey: Police

    Vancouver Olympics CEO John Furlong Lashed Out Against Journalist In Media: Lawyer In B.C. Court

    Bryan Baynham told a defamation trial that Laura Robinson has devoted her career to giving a voice to marginalized people and that's what she was doing when she investigated allegations that Furlong abused First Nations children.

    Vancouver Olympics CEO John Furlong Lashed Out Against Journalist In Media: Lawyer In B.C. Court