BOSTON – A former Quincy man, who had been a fugitive for
more than 20 years prior to his arrest in April 2017, was sentenced today in
federal court in Boston in connection with a $1.9 million real estate
investment fraud scheme in Quincy.
Scott J. Wolas, 69, was sentenced by U.S. District Court
Judge F. Dennis Saylor IV to 81 months in prison, three years of supervised
release and ordered to pay $1,949,813 in restitution to the victims of his
fraud scheme. Judge Saylor also ordered Wolas to pay restitution of $69,768 to
Social Security and Medicare and $318,266 to the IRS. In June 2018, Wolas
pleaded guilty to seven counts of wire fraud, one count of aggravated identity
theft, misuse of a Social Security number and tax evasion.
From at least 2009 through 2016, Wolas, using the name
Eugene Grathwohl, operated a real estate business known as Increasing Fortune
Inc. and worked as a licensed real estate agent for Century 21 in Quincy. From
2014 through 2016, he solicited investments for the development of the
Beachcomber Bar property on Quincy Shore Drive and for the construction of a
single-family home on the adjacent property. He collected more than $1.9
million from at least 24 investors and promised each of them a significant
return on their investments. He further promised to pay out at least 125% of
the profits related to the single-family home construction. However, Wolas used the money mostly for
personal expenses unrelated to development of the real estate projects.
Wolas was scheduled to close on the Beachcomber property on
Sept. 15, 2016. A week before, however, he left Quincy and ceased all contact
with his then-girlfriend, his co-workers, and his investors. Law enforcement
then discovered that Grathwohl was actually Wolas, a former lawyer who had been
a fugitive since 1997 after being charged with fraud and grand larceny in New
York. The real Eugene Grathwohl resided in Florida and was known to Wolas.
On Nov. 17, 2016, law enforcement officers interviewed
Wolas’ ex-wife, Cecily Sturge, of Delray Beach, Fla., who stated that she had
not been in contact with her ex-husband for approximately 15 years. Sturge continued
to say that this was so, despite evidence of contact between her cell phone and
one known to belong to Wolas that demonstrated more recent communication
between the two.
After further investigation, Wolas was arrested on April 7,
2017, at a condominium he was renting in Delray Beach, Fla. Investigators
learned that Wolas had first rented a room in the condo from Nov. 12 through
Nov. 21, 2016, through an online rental website in the name of Cecily Sturge.
Messages exchanged between the condo owner and Sturge depicted a photo of
Sturge and messages claiming that Wolas (using the name Cameron Sturge) was
Sturge’s brother and a retired paleontologist in need of a place to stay. The
owner of the condo told authorities that Sturge and Wolas arrived at the condo
together in the same car on Nov. 12, 2016, five days before Sturge’s interview
with law enforcement.
Sturge was divorced from Wolas in 2001 by default judgment
in Palm Beach County, Fla. In February 2017, Sturge filed a petition to modify
the judgment in order to obtain the contents of Wolas’ retirement account,
which had a balance of approximately $647,000, from the New York law firm where
he worked prior to being indicted in 1997 by New York authorities. In pleadings
filed in February and March 2017 regarding that matter, Sturge swore that
Wolas’ whereabouts were unknown to her, despite telephone records showing
frequent contact between the two. In addition, copies or drafts of documents
filed in the Florida proceeding, along with a thumb drive, were found in the
room where Wolas was arrested. Wolas later admitted that he drafted the
pleadings that Sturge filed. The United States previously obtained a court
order freezing the retirement account pending the resolution of the criminal
proceedings.
Sturge previously pleaded guilty to making a materially
false statement to a federal agent and was sentenced in May 2018 to one year of
probation.
United States Attorney Andrew E. Lelling; Joseph R.
Bonavolonta, Special Agent in Charge of the Federal Bureau of Investigation,
Boston Field Division; Kristina O’Connell, Special Agent in Charge of the
Internal Revenue Service’s Criminal Investigation in Boston; Scott Antolik,
Special Agent in Charge of the Social Security Administration, Office of
Inspector General, Office of Investigations, Boston Field Division; and Quincy
Police Chief Paul Keenan made the announcement today. Assistant U.S. Attorneys
Sandra S. Bower of Lelling’s Criminal Division and David G. Lazarus of
Lelling’s Civil Division prosecuted the case.
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