SACRAMENTO, Calif. — Today, U.S. District Judge Garland E.
Burrell Jr. sentenced Mary Sue Weaver, 65, currently of Scottsdale, Arizona and
formerly of Lincoln, California, to four years and two months in prison and
ordered to pay $15,387,945 in restitution for her participation in a $22
million fraud scheme, U.S. Attorney McGregor W. Scott announced.
On December 15, 2017, Weaver pleaded guilty to one count of
wire fraud and one count of bank fraud. On June 1, 2018, co-defendant
Abolghasseni “Abe” Alizadeh, 59, of Granite Bay, was sentenced to four years
and eight months in prison and ordered to pay $15,879,945 in restitution to the
victims of his crimes.
According to court documents, Weaver was employed at a local
title company and assisted Alizadeh, a Sacramento-area commercial real estate
developer, restauranteur and owner of Kobra Properties, in a scheme to
fraudulently purchase land that he planned to develop.
According to court documents, Alizadeh would write checks
for the down payment on a commercial property, but because he lacked funds to
cover the checks, he would call Weaver and ask her to delay depositing the
checks until after escrow closed. Once escrow closed, Weaver disbursed funds
from the title company’s escrow trust account to Kobra Properties. Kobra
Properties then used those funds to cover its down payment and other costs. In
this way, it appeared as though Alizadeh was making a substantial down payment
when in fact he was not. Alizadeh’s entire scheme, involving no fewer than six
properties in the Sacramento area, resulted in a loss to various financial
institutions of over $22 million.
This case was the product of an investigation by the Federal
Bureau of Investigation, the IRS Criminal Investigation, and the Federal
Deposit Insurance Corporation, Office of Inspector General. Assistant U.S.
Attorneys Michael D. Anderson and Heiko P. Coppola are prosecuting the case.
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