Former Beverly pizzeria owner admits he defrauded federal Covid-relief fund to finance his new life as a Vermont alpaca farmer
The former owner of a Beverly pizza place admitted last week he obtained federal Covid-19 payroll-support funds based on employees he didn't have so he could retire to the life of a gentleman alpaca farm and cryptocurrency radio host in Vermont, the US Attorney's office reports.
Dana McIntyre, 59, who still lives in Grafton, VT, despite having his woolly dreams interrupted by federal investigators, now awaits sentencing on July 12 on four counts of wire fraud and three counts of money laundering. Each of the charges carries a maximum potential sentence of 20 years in federal prison.
McIntyre is the former owner of Rasta Pasta Pizzeria in Beverly. In March 2020, McIntyre used the names of his adult children to submit two fraudulent applications to the U.S. Small Business Administration (SBA) for Economic Injury Disaster Loans (EIDL) for fictitious businesses. Beginning in April 2020, McIntyre submitted an application and weekly certifications in order to receive Pandemic Unemployment Assistance (PUA) benefits. In these filings, McIntyre falsely claimed that he was not working or receiving income as a result of the pandemic, while McIntyre in fact was still operating the restaurant and paying himself income from the business. By September 2020, when McIntyre sold the restaurant, he had received over $17,000 in PUA and related benefits that he was not entitled to receive.
In April 2020, McIntyre submitted a fraudulent application for a PPP loan of over $660,000 through an SBA-approved lender. In the application, McIntyre inflated information about the pizzeria’s employees and payroll expenses and falsified an official tax form in an effort to qualify the business for a larger loan amount. After receiving a PPP loan of over $660,000, McIntyre sold the pizzeria and used nearly all the funds to purchase and improve an alpaca farm in Vermont and on other personal expenses, including two vehicles and air time for his crypto-currency themed radio show.
According to an affidavit by an FBI agent on the case, McIntyre used the PPP funds - based on a claim he had 47 employees at his pizza place, rather than the three or four he actually had - to buy a farm in Grafton, VT, for $395,000. He then stocked the farm with alpacas for which he paid almost $10,000, as well as spending $7,800 to buy fencing for them and $16,555 for storage sheds, according to the affidavit. He also paid $14,000 for a 2007 GMC Sierra and $8,500 for a 1950 Hudson.
Once the farm was outfitted and operational, McIntyre sold Rasta Pasta.
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Comments
Trying to pull the wool over their eyes?
Shear madness.
At least he didn't buy something dumb, like a boat.
For sale: one llama ranch, all new, turn key operation, comes complete with a 1950 Hudson.
The 1950 Hudson...
... Is a sublime touch. I swear, at least three Stephen King short stories or novellas have centered on a 1950 Hudson rotting away in our great north woods, brooding in baleful malevolence. Sadly, this one will no-doubt prove to be endowed merely with its (soon-to-be-former) owner's tacky/sleazy corruption...
Form still available for bookings
https://houghtonvillefarm.com/
And don’t forget the Airbnb
https://www.airbnb.com/rooms/49909761?preview_for_ml=true&source_impress...
Maybe this guy would have
Maybe this guy would have gotten away with it if it weren't for the scheming of his Hudson.
So glad
we're going after people who pulled this crap.
This is the Tip of the Iceberg in PPP fraud
Despite some real business difficulties during 2020, I never applied for PPP b/c naively I thought it would signal weakness to competitors and customers. I also didn't think that gov't should be bailing out private business that otherwise could negotiate with lenders and creditors. Businesses are big boys and should be able to figure it out. I presumed everyone had some negotiating leverage since the courts were basically shutdown.
Based on some information I've seen, PPP fraud was pervasive and they've only scratched the surface of it.
If anyone wants to bitch about welfare, start here
who was his attorney?
Fernando Llamas?
I'm moving to Vermont soon
to grow me up a crop of alpaca floss.
Sounds like there's a farm
Sounds like there's a farm for sale. Check federal auctions ;)
What all this free money
What all this free money revealled is, just how seriously lame people's dreams are.