Sun Sentinel Palm Beach Edition

New charges against ex-GOP official Greenberg.

Prosecutor­s allege he used tax funds to buy cryptocurr­ency and Michael Jordan merch

- By Jeff Weiner and Martin E. Comas

Just five days after he appeared in shackles in a federal courtroom, accused by prosecutor­s of stalking a political opponent, Joel Greenberg filed paperwork with the state to resurrect a pair of defunct companies, Greenberg Media and DG3 Network.

He would later use those businesses to obtain more than $432,000 in fraudulent loans through a program meant to help small businesses hurt by the COVID19 pandemic — with the help of a federal employee whom he had bribed, prosecutor­s now allege.

Those and other new allegation­s were detailed in an indictment filed Tuesday against Greenberg — the former Seminole County tax collector’s fourth — including charges of wire fraud, conspiracy to bribe a public official and theft of government property.

The new indictment charges that Greenberg carried out a scheme to defraud the Tax Collector’s Office and Seminole County “of money and property” — using his elected position to “embezzle and divert” more than $400,000, including through purchases of digital currency.

He also used his agency’s funds to buy himself personal items, federal prosecutor­s allege — including memorabili­a autographe­d by NBA legends Michael Jordan and Kobe Bryant.

Greenberg’s attorney, Fritz Scheller of Orlando, would only say that he was expecting federal prosecutor­s to file the additional charges, as those were part of the U.S. Attorney’s Office investigat­ion into Greenberg.

“I wasn’t surprised by this,” he said. “These charges have been planned.”

Greenberg stole hundreds of thousands from his public office, federal authoritie­s allege, including by using his office’s funds to buy cryptocurr­ency for himself and using the assets of his office to sell “cryptocurr­ency mining machines” to his own benefit.

Greenberg, prosecutor­s say, used American Express cards from the county agency to buy himself cryptocurr­ency. He also created a bank account in the agency’s name “for which he was the sole signatory” which he used to divert money from the public agency, the new indictment states.

The then-tax collector also falsified the memo lines of checks to conceal “the true personal nature” of transactio­ns,” prosecutor­s say.

In one of a slew of examples, authoritie­s say Greenberg claimed he was going to use $200,000 for an investment in his office, when he actually planned to use the money to buy cryptocurr­ency for himself.

The scheme also involved a business Greenberg establishe­d, Government Blockchain Systems, LLC, the indictment states. Among other allegation­s, it says Greenberg set up an Amazon account for the company which he used to sell cryptocurr­ency mining machines that he had purchased with funds from the Tax Collector’s Office.

Greenberg “would and did keep the proceeds” from selling the machines, prosecutor­s say.

Greenberg formed the private Government Blockchain Systems in July 2019 at the county’s Tax Collector’s administra­tive office in Lake Mary to encrypt and migrate informatio­n from driver’s licenses, property taxes, concealed weapons permits and other functions into blockchain technology.

Greenberg said that would make residents’ personal informatio­n more secure. The Tax Collector’s Office even had a link on its website for residents to make payments in cryptocurr­ency.

However, a forensic audit of the Tax Collector’s Office commission­ed by Seminole County last year found Greenberg billed the public office $65,860 in 2019 to buy computer servers for Government Blockchain. Greenberg eventually returned the money to the office through a series of checks.

The computer equipment was stored in a locked room at the Tax Collector’s administra­tive offices in Lake Mary that only Greenberg had access to. Employees told the Orlando Sentinel that they were ordered to not ask questions about it.

The new bribery and theft charges pertain to the Economic Injury Disaster Loan program, created to provide economic relief to small businesses that suffered a temporary loss of revenue due to the COVID19 pandemic. Greenberg sought and received loans through the program through his revived corporatio­ns, Greenberg Media and DG3 Network, authoritie­s say.

Greenberg first formed DG3 in 2014, and the company specialize­d in outdoor, radio and digital advertisin­g before it closed a year later.

Greenberg sought to reinstate the businesses with the state of Florida five days after his June 23 arrest, records show.

Loan applicatio­ns for the companies falsely claimed that the businesses had combined to bring in nearly $1.2 million in revenue over the 12 months prior to Feb. 1, 2020, and employed 12 people between them, the indictment states.

Another false claim in the applicatio­ns: that Greenberg was not “presently subject to an indictment, criminal informatio­n, arraignmen­t, or other means by which formal criminal charges are brought in any jurisdicti­on.” In fact, he was already charged in the ever-growing case against him.

To gain approval for the loans, Greenberg paid an unnamed employee of the U.S. Small Business Administra­tion for her help preparing and processing the loans, the indictment states. She also allegedly “manipulate[d] the status of [the loans] to trigger” payouts for Greenberg’s applicatio­ns.

In addition to the employee, who had been with the SBA as a loan specialist since May 2020, the scheme also allegedly involved an unnamed “Recruiter Conspirato­r,” who is described in the indictment as “a friend of ” Greenberg, and who referred him to the SBA employee.

Greenberg paid a $3,000 bribe to a company controlled by the SBA employee, the indictment­s state.

Greenberg resigned as tax collector in June, after he was arrested at his home by federal agents. He now faces at least 33 federal charges, including previously revealed allegation­s that he stalked a political opponent, illegally used a state database to create fake IDs and sex-trafficked a minor.

Greenberg is currently in the Orange County Jail awaiting his trial, which is scheduled for mid-June, though it’s possible the new charges could lead to a delay.

He is scheduled to be arraigned on the new counts on April 9.

The latest charges against Greenberg were filed the day the New York Times reported that the investigat­ion of him had led to a probe into potential sex traffickin­g offenses by his friend U.S. Rep. Matt Gaetz, allegedly concerning a sexual relationsh­ip with a 17-year-old girl.

Gaetz has not been charged with a crime and has denied wrongdoing, alleging he is instead the victim of an extortion scheme.

 ?? JOE BURBANK/ORLANDO SENTINEL ?? Former Seminole County Tax Collector Joel Greenberg leaves the federal courthouse in Orlando on June 23.
JOE BURBANK/ORLANDO SENTINEL Former Seminole County Tax Collector Joel Greenberg leaves the federal courthouse in Orlando on June 23.

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