Daily News (Los Angeles)

Ex-JPL employee is fined for scam

Man used COVID-19 loans to pay real estate expenses and illegal marijuana cultivatio­n project

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An ex-employee of NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory in Pasadena was ordered to pay a $10,000 fine Monday for having used federal COVID-19 relief loans to pay off his real estate debt and fund an illegal marijuana cultivatio­n project.

Armen Hovanesian, 32, who worked as a costcontro­l and budget-planning resource analyst for JPL, was also sentenced to two years probation, according to the U.S. Department of Justice.

He pleaded guilty in August to a single federal count of wire fraud.

For four months beginning in June 2020, the Glendale man submitted three loan applicatio­ns in the names of business entities under his control to the Economic Injury Disaster Loan Program, which was administer­ed by the Small Business Administra­tion that provided low-interest financing to small businesses, renters, and homeowners in regions affected by declared disasters, including businesses impacted by the COVID-19 pandemic.

Hovanesian admitted to lying in the applicatio­ns about the gross revenues each of the businesses had generated in the preceding year as well as his intended use of the loan proceeds.

The defendant certified to the SBA under penalty of perjury that he would use all the proceeds of the loans for which he applied and caused others to apply for “solely as working capital to alleviate economic injury caused by disaster” consistent with the terms of the program, according to papers filed in Los Angeles federal court.

Hovanesian instead used those proceeds to repay a personal real estate debt and fund illegal marijuana cultivatio­n, he admitted. Hovanesian caused the SBA to transfer federal proceeds totaling $151,900, according to the DOJ.

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