SANTA ANA, CA—A husband and wife from Newport Coast have been
sentenced to federal prison for defrauding a consortium of seven banks,
including Bank of America, in connection with a $130 million line of
credit.
Thomas Chia Fu, 64, was sentenced yesterday to 21 months in federal prison.
Fu’s wife, Cheri L. Shyu (also known as Cheri Fu), 61, was sentenced on March 4 to three years in federal prison.
In addition to the prison terms, United States District Judge Cormac
J. Carney ordered to Fus to pay $4.7 million in restitution.
The Fus owned Anaheim-based Galleria USA, Inc., which imported home
decor items manufactured in China. The Fus obtained a $130 million
revolving line of credit for Galleria from a consortium of seven banks.
In connection with that revolving line of credit, the couple overstated
by tens of millions of dollars the accounts receivables of the
company—lies they told the banks in order to continue borrowing funds
under the revolving line of credit, according to court documents. When
they pleaded guilty last year, the Fus also admitted to falsifying in
Galleria’s computer system the accounts receivable amounts by a factor
of 10 or more times the actual amount purchased to support the
exaggerated numbers and hide Galleria’s true financial status.
“Bank fraud is not a victimless crime, as it has detrimental effects
on both creditors and consumers,” said United States Attorney André
Birotte Jr. “The Fus plundered a consortium of banks, which deprived
legitimate customers from having access to the those funds and caused
the financial institutions to suffer millions of dollars in losses. The
prison sentences issued to this couple demonstrate our resolve to hold
fraudsters accountable for their crimes.”
The banks suffered losses of $4.7 million on the revolving line of credit from October 2008 to July 2009.
This case was investigated by the Office of the Special Inspector
General for the Troubled Asset Relief Program (SIGTARP), the Federal
Bureau of Investigation, and the United States Secret Service.
“At a time when taxpayers were bailing out Bank of America and United
Commercial Bank with TARP funds, Thomas and Cheri Fu defrauded those
banks and others out of nearly $5 million,” said Christy Romero, Special
Inspector General for TARP (SIGTARP). “The Fus fraudulently obtained
funds from the TARP banks and other banks using a second set of books
that overstated accounts receivable. They lived comfortably off the
money, buying property and putting their daughter through college, when
many taxpayers who funded the bailout were tightening their belts.
Illegally profiting from the TARP bailout is reprehensible and will be
met with swift justice by SIGTARP and our law enforcement partners.”
SIGTARP investigates fraud, waste, and abuse in connection with the
Troubled Asset Relief Program (TARP). To report suspected illicit
activity involving TARP, call the SIGTARP Hotline at 1-877-SIG-2009
(1-877-744-2009).
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