PROVIDENCE, RI – Former Rhode Island state senator and
businessman James E. Doyle, II, 47, of Pawtucket, was sentenced today to 24
months in federal prison for engaging in a $74 million dollar check-kiting
scheme in which he wrote tens of thousands of worthless checks, and failed to
report more than $1 million dollars in income and pay taxes to the IRS,
announced by United States Attorney Aaron L. Weisman, Special Agent in Charge
of Internal Revenue Service Criminal Investigation Kristina O'Connell, and Special
Agent in Charge of the FBI Boston Division Joseph R. Bonavolonta.
Doyle pleaded guilty on September 28, 2018, to thirty-one
counts of bank fraud and one count each of filing a false tax return and
failing to file a tax return. At the time of his guilty plea Doyle admitted
that as owner of Doyle Respiratory, LLC and Doyle Sleep Solutions, LLC, he
engaged in criminal conduct during which $74 million dollars in worthless bank
transactions were executed in check-kiting schemes through bank accounts he controlled
at three banks. Doyle admitted that he executed the schemes through the use of
checks, cash withdrawals, ATM electronic transfers and ACH transfer payments.
Doyle also admitted that for tax years 2013 thru 2016 he and
his wife failed to report to the IRS more than $1 million dollars in income and
failed to pay $305,426 in taxes due the IRS.
At sentencing, U.S. District Court Chief Judge William E.
Smith sentenced Doyle to 3 years supervised release upon completion of his term
of incarceration and ordered Doyle to pay restitution totaling $426,707.25 to
Santander Bank and Alliance Blackstone Valley Federal Credit Union.
United States Attorney Aaron L. Weisman commented, “As so
well articulated by Chief Judge Smith, an incarcerative sentence of 24 months
is most appropriate considering the damage Mr. Doyle’s actions, in defrauding
three banks of almost half a million dollars, has done to erode the people’s
trust in their public officials.”
At the time of his guilty plea, Doyle admitted to the Court that
he accomplished the check-kiting schemes by writing checks from accounts he
knew were not backed by sufficient funds and depositing those checks into
different accounts to cover daily overdrafts.
Simultaneously, he wrote checks out of the second bank account and
deposited those checks back into the first account. The purpose and effect of writing and
depositing these worthless checks was to manipulate the numerical balances in
the checking accounts, and thereby create the false and fraudulent appearance
that the accounts had sufficient available funds in the accounts and to deceive
and trick the banks into honoring the checks drawn against the checking
accounts with insufficient funds.
Doyle executed the scheme on a daily basis, at times
undertaking in excess of 50 transactions per day, included the utilization of
ATMs in order to lengthen the time it took for checks to be presented for
clearing. The investigation revealed
that over the life of the scheme the defendant wrote tens of thousands of worthless
checks.
The case was prosecuted by Assistant U.S. Attorney Dulce
Donovan.
The matter was investigated by Internal Revenue Service
Criminal Investigation and the Federal Bureau of Investigation.
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