Tampa, FL – Troy Cater (30) and David Bell (55), both of St.
Petersburg, have pleaded guilty to a money laundering conspiracy. Each faces a
maximum penalty of 20 years in federal prison. A sentencing date has not yet
been scheduled.
Pursuant to their plea agreements, Cater has agreed to pay
$145,961.35 and Bell has agreed to pay $268,356, in restitution to the scheme’s
numerous victims. In addition, Cater and Bell have consented to forfeiture
money judgments in the amounts of $15,000 and $26,000, respectively, which
represent the proceeds of the fraud.
According to the plea agreements, from 2015 through 2018,
Cater and Bell conspired with others to take money from victims throughout the
United States who wanted to sell their timeshare properties or other parcels of
land. Other conspirators placed telephone calls to these victims impersonating
real estate professionals and misleading the timeshare owners to believe that
the conspirators had identified buyers for the victims’ timeshares and other
properties. The conspirators further advised the victims that the sales could
be consummated if the victims made one or more advanced payments to the
conspirators for various fees purportedly associated with the sales, such as
closing costs, courier services, title searches, transfer fees, and legal fees.
Once the victims agreed to pay the bogus advance fees, the conspirators
directed the victims to send funds via wire transfers to Cater and Bell, who
then withdrew the fraud proceeds or hired others to retrieve the proceeds and
shared them among the conspirators based on each conspirator’s role in the
fraudulent transaction. The conspirators also continued to contact their
victims, fraudulently advising them that additional funds were needed in order
to complete the sales, and they continued to dupe the victims into sending
bogus advance fees until the victims ran out of money or became aware of the
scam.
The scam then evolved into a second stage where the
conspirators re-contacted the victims via email and, now posing as helpful
attorneys, told the victims that they had been defrauded in a timeshare scam.
They offered to “represent” the victims against the “first attorneys,” and to
obtain settlements on their behalves. Once the conspirators had gained the
trust of the timeshare victims in their new roles, they directed the victims to
forward additional bogus fees to Cater, Bell, and others. Some victims paid the
conspirators several hundreds of thousands of dollars for the purported
“litigation,” which Cater and Bell retrieved or had others retrieve at their
direction.
Cater and Bell were initially recruited into the scheme by
others, including several defendants who have pleaded guilty to related
charges. Mark Boring previously pleaded guilty to wire fraud conspiracy and
aggravated identity theft. His sentencing hearing is set for March 7, 2019.
Martin Steele has pleaded guilty to wire fraud conspiracy and aggravated
identity theft. His sentencing hearing has not yet been set. Gary Kinard has
been sentenced to seven years and eleven months in federal prison for wire
fraud conspiracy and aggravated identity theft for his role in the scheme.
This case was investigated by the FBI, the St. Petersburg
Police Department, and the Florida Department of Law Enforcement. It is being
prosecuted by Assistant United States Attorney Rachel K. Jones.
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