Yesterday, Thomas Michael White, 60, of Parkland, Florida
was sentenced to 14 years in prison for leading a multi-year conspiracy that
robbed over a dozen senior citizens of their retirement money.
Ariana Fajardo Orshan, U.S. Attorney for the Southern
District of Florida, George L. Piro, Special Agent in Charge, Federal Bureau of
Investigation (FBI), Miami Field Office, and Ron Rubin, Commissioner, Florida
Office of Financial Regulation (OFR), made the announcement.
A jury in Miami found White guilty, on December 13, 2018, of
one count of conspiracy to commit mail and wire fraud and four counts of mail
fraud, in connection with the scheme to fraudulently raise $2 million from over
a dozen elderly victims throughout the United States (Case No. 18-60174-CR-Bloom). U.S. District Judge Beth Bloom sentenced
White (the mastermind of the fraud scheme) to a total of 168 months in
prison. He was also ordered to pay $1,936,400
in restitution to his victims and serve three years of supervised release.
According to the court record, including evidence introduced
at trial, White was President and CEO of First Call Ventures, LLC, the parent
company of First Call Movers & Transport of Florida, LLC, a moving company
that also brokered customer moves for other companies. From November 2011
through mid-2014, White ran the Broward-based moving business’ call center that
booked moves throughout the Southeast.
He also oversaw a "phone room" out of his corporate offices to
raise money from investors. During
telephone calls, White and his co-conspirators used false statements,
manipulation, and high-pressure tactics to target elderly investors
(“vulnerable, elderly victims”) and their retirement money. The victims
included retired teachers, farmers, small business owners, and homemakers, from
across the United States. When his
targets did not have available funds to invest, White tricked them into
converting their Individual Retirement Account ("IRA") money and
transferring the funds to his corporate bank account. As a result, White and his conspirators were
given a total of more than $2 million from over a dozen senior citizens.
In truth and fact, White and his partners used the
investors’ money for themselves, including millions in cash and bank check
payments. Bank records also demonstrated
that over the course of the fraud scheme, White withdrew over $130,000 in
investor proceeds at the Seminole Coconut Creek casino. White and his partners siphoned all profits
and victim money to their own personal accounts, declared a $1.8 million
"loss," and shuttered the business.
As a result of the fraudulent scheme, some of the senior citizens are
now living on food stamps, lost their homes, or were forced to take on odd jobs
for income.
Four other individuals tied to this case and a related
indictment previously pled guilty.
White's co-defendants, John Kevin Reech, 56, of Delray Beach, Florida,
and Joseph Mario Genzone, 53, of Boca Raton, Florida, previously pled
guilty. Genzone and Reech were also
recently charged by Information for operating a separate offering fraud (Case
No. 18-80193-CR-Bloom). Reech pled
guilty in both matters and was sentenced to a concurrent term of 51 months'
imprisonment. Genzone also pled guilty
and on December 21, 2018, Judge Bloom sentenced him in both cases to 41 months'
imprisonment, concurrently. Daniel
Joseph Touizer, 44, of Aventura, Florida was sentenced to 68 months'
imprisonment for leading a similar fraud scheme linked to White and Reech’s
criminal conduct (Case No. 17-60286-CR-Bloom).
Saul Daniel Suster, 66, of Sunny Isles Beach, Florida, a phone room
worker of Touizer's, was sentenced to 30 months’ imprisonment.
U.S. Attorney Fajardo Orshan commended the investigative
efforts of the FBI and Florida OFR in this matter. This case was prosecuted by Assistant U.S.
Attorney Roger Cruz.
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