BOSTON – A Marlborough business owner was sentenced today in
federal court in Worcester in connection with a scheme to commit bank fraud.
James R. Faro, 61, of Dover, was sentenced by U.S. District
Court Judge Timothy S. Hillman to two years in prison, three years of
supervised release, and ordered to pay $1,121,155 in restitution. In March
2018, Faro pleaded guilty to conspiring to commit bank fraud. Faro and
co-conspirator John J. Crowley, 62, of Boca Raton, Fla., were charged in
January 2018. Crowley has also pleaded guilty and is scheduled to be sentenced
on Sept. 24, 2018.
Faro is the former owner and president of Sea Star Seafood
Corporation, a company previously headquartered in Marlborough that distributed
frozen seafood products. Crowley is the former chief financial officer for Sea
Star.
From October 2010 until August 2012, Sea Star maintained an
asset-backed loan agreement whereby a bank agreed to loan Sea Star up to $6
million pursuant to a revolving line of credit. Sea Star pledged its assets –
most notably its inventory and accounts receivable – as collateral for the
loan.
Between November 2010 and August 2012, Faro and Crowley
conspired to intentionally overstate the value of Sea Star’s outstanding
accounts receivable that it reported to the bank. By doing so, Faro and Crowley
fraudulently increased the level of assets against which Sea Star could borrow
from the bank. In August 2012, Sea Star informed the bank that it had
discovered a “discrepancy” of well over $2.5 million in its reported versus
actual accounts receivable. Sea Star declared bankruptcy and discontinued its
business operations approximately one week later.
United States Attorney Andrew E. Lelling and Harold H. Shaw,
Special Agent in Charge of the Federal Bureau of Investigation, Boston Field
Division, made the announcement today.
Assistant U.S. Attorney Greg A. Friedholm of Lelling’s Worcester Branch
Office is prosecuting the case.
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