Los Angeles Times

Developers accused of stealing millions

- By David Zahniser and Shashank Bengali david. zahniser @ latimes. com shashank. bengali @ latimes. com

Two executives at a Los Angeles- based real estate developmen­t company and two of their employees have been indicted on charges they defrauded government agencies of millions of dollars in funds for housing lowincome families.

The 67- page federal grand jury indictment says Salim Karimi and three others at Advanced Developmen­t and Investment Inc. engaged in a conspiracy to fraudulent­ly obtain more than $ 50 million in loan proceeds for affordable housing projects in Chinatown, Glendale and elsewhere.

As part of the scheme, Karimi and others submitted fraudulent invoices that “significan­tly overstated” the true costs of framing, plumbing, drywall and other constructi­on work at affordable housing projects built with taxpayer support, according to the federal grand jury indictment, which was f iled in 2014 and unsealed this week.

Karimi, ADI’s onetime president and co- owner, was arrested Dec. 26 in Mumbai, India, as he was boarding a plane to Mexico, according to Indian police. He was later released on bail of 15,000 rupees, or around $ 225. In the U. S., he has been charged with felony counts of conspiracy, wire fraud, aggravated identity theft, tax evasion and making false statements to a federal f inancial institutio­n.

Federal officials are seek- ing Karimi’s extraditio­n. Atulchandr­a Kulkarni, chief of the Mumbai police crime branch, said police have filed an appeal to cancel Karimi’s bail so he can be turned over to the U. S.

Also facing federal charges are Ajit Mithaiwala, ADI’s founder and Karimi’s father- in- law; Ulhas Jain, ADI’s controller; and Mekala Ganapathy, who ran the company’s compliance department. Prosecutor­s believe they also are in India, said Thom Mrozek, spokesman for the U. S. attorney’s office in L. A. “We are continuing to look for the other three defendants with the intention of seeing them face the charges in Los Angeles,” he said.

Neither the four defendants nor their lawyers could be reached for comment by The Times.

ADI built 50 affordable housing projects across California over nearly two decades. Prosecutor­s say the conspiracy spanned from 2001 to 2010, according to the federal indictment. Among the company’s victims were the cities of Los Angeles and Glendale, as well as banks that provided constructi­on loans, the document states.

ADI’s f inancial practices f irst became public in 2010, as part of divorce proceeding­s between Karimi and Jannki Mithaiwala, daughter of the company’s founder. A court- appointed receiver overseeing the company informed the divorce court that he had uncovered “potential fraud and criminal activity.”

An investigat­ion by The Times found ADI subcontrac­tors provided more than $ 400,000 in campaign contributi­ons to politician­s across the state, including at least $ 165,000 in Los Angeles. Four subcontrac­tors told The Times they felt pressured to donate by ADI.

In Glendale’s 2009 City Council election, nearly one of every four dollars received by the top four candidates — more than $ 100,000 in total — came from ADI subcontrac­tors, those subcontrac­tors’ employees and the em- ployees’ relatives, The Times found.

Glendale provided ADI more than $ 33 million to help build four affordable housing projects. Officials there believe roughly half that amount was lost due to fraud. “Hopefully they’ll be able to bring these folks into custody and look at their assets,” said Glendale City Manager Scott Ochoa. “Because whatever assets they’re sitting on, at least some of that should accrue back to Glendale.”

L. A. officials provided $ 29 million in subsidies for 15 apartment projects. After the federal probe into ADI was launched, ethics investigat­ors concluded that ADI employees had engaged in “campaign money laundering ” — reimbursin­g donors so that they could exceed the city’s limits on campaign contributi­ons.

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