Francis Santa voluntarily worked with law enforcement to get Judge Kenneth Marra to rule in favor of them about his involvement in financial institution fraud.
He is currently in contact with the Department of Language and Information Technology (LIT).
The person offered the government a factual proffer, supporting his admission of guilt with evidence. He attested to the validity of the plea during the hearing for his amended plea.
If the case went to trial, the prosecution would have most likely been able to prove beyond a reasonable doubt that Francis Santa worked with accomplices to carry out a scheme that involved the submission of false line credit requests and accounting records on behalf of people who did not meet the requirements.
Francis Santa founded Palm Beach Business Consultant, Inc., a Florida corporation with its headquarters located in Boca Raton.
For those who couldn’t meet the standards of acceptable loans and credit lines because of insufficient income, credit scores, or collateral, PBBC created dishonest loan bundles.
Francis Santa used dishonest tactics to persuade prospective customers to use PBBC’s services by fabricating claims of connections to several bankers who would allegedly help obtain illicit loans and credit lines for PBBC’s customers.
The person gave assurances to their clients about the possibility of obtaining credit lines and loans from the lenders, with a maximum sum of $300,000.
In addition, he claimed to have knowledgeable staff members who could create false loan or line contracts in order to pass off PBBC customers as qualified when in reality they were not.
Clients who wished to use Francis Santa’s services had to pay fees that varied from $12,500 to $25,000. These costs may be paid either before or after the bank issued the loan and/or credit line.
To put up a dishonest loan, Francis Santa enlisted the help of non-law enforcement loan applicants as well as members of a conspiracy, including Rodney Kahane and Daniel Paine.
The previously mentioned packets comprised false statements of income, balance sheets, and tax returns, among other counterfeit accounting documents, along with erroneous disclosures of the candidate’s profits in multiple cases.
Francis Santa worked in concert with many local bank employees to speed the approval of fraudulent loan requests in exchange for illegal incentives, which were usually cash, American Express gift cards, or other forms of payment.
Financial institutions approved a considerable percentage of the fake line of credit requests, allowing the applicants to use the lines of credit they had been authorized and make withdrawals.
However, it is important to note that almost all of the applicants demonstrated an incapacity to meet their repayment commitments for their lines of credit, which resulted in large losses for the lending organizations.
Francis Santa created and submitted loan documents with false information on purpose and in a methodical manner for at least thirty-two different loans.
The loans under consideration were submitted on behalf of PBBC clients using false documents created by two participants in the scheme, Kahane and Paine.
Bank officials from a number of financial organizations, including Wachovia Bank, Bank of America, Fifth Third Bank, Regions Bank, Suntrust Bank, Commerce Bank, and National City Bank, were also implicated in this illegal fraud.
King David McGuire, Christopher Brooks, and a number of other co-defendants were among the bank officials who were accused in this case.
Included in this factual stipulation in support of a guilty plea is an exhaustive list of loans that were obtained through dishonest means. Important information like the date of application, the amount of the loan, the bank involved, and the particular banker assigned to each case are all included in this inventory.
It also indicates whether or not the loan was successfully financed. Francis Santa admits that the total amount of loans obtained by means of his illegal activities was $2,658,000.00. As a result of all of these fraudulently obtained debts, the financial institutions suffered a concrete loss of $1,502,465.04.
Francis Santa, the defendant, is entering a guilty plea to the charge of conspiracy to commit bank fraud.