The Palm Beach Post

Chinese investors sue Jupiter developer

Claims center around agreement to build Harboursid­e Place in Jupiter.

- By Jeff Ostrowski Palm Beach Post Staff Writer

Chinese investors who bankrolled Harboursid­e Place in Jupiter say they’re being defrauded of millions by developer Nicholas Mastroiann­i II.

Nearly 80 investors have signed on as plaintiffs in a suit filed this week in Palm Beach County Circuit Court. From 2011 to 2013, they paid $540,000 each for a stake in a promising real estate developmen­t, along with permission to move to the United States.

Harboursid­e Place is a thriving mixed-use center with shops, restaurant­s, a hotel and a marina. But the investors say they haven’t gotten their investment­s back and fear Mastroiann­i won’t pay them.

“We think it was a fraud from the beginning,” said Jeffrey Schneider, a Miami attorney representi­ng the investors.

In all, 199 foreign investors put $500,000 apiece into Harboursid­e Place for a total of $99.5 million. Mastroiann­i also collected a $40,000 administra­tive fee from each investor.

The financing was arranged through the EB-5 visa program, which grants U.S. residency to foreign inves- tors who put $500,000 into job-creating businesses in the United States. The suit says Mastroiann­i took pains to structure the financing in a way that left foreign investors unable to foreclose on the loan to get their money back.

“They were stepping into a carefully planned fraud designed to yield Mastroiann­i unfettered access to their money to finance his project,” the suit alleges.

The suit says Mastroiann­i converted the EB-5 investors’ money from debt to “powerless, non-voting equity.”

Mastroiann­i couldn’t be reached for comment Friday.

It’s not the first time he has been criticized for his handling of EB-5 money. In 2015, Mastroiann­i’s former chief financial officer accused the developer of fraudulent­ly using money raised from foreign investors.

In court papers, David Finkelstei­n said Mastroiann­i failed to follow rules for the use of investment funds raised through the EB-5 program.

“Mastroiann­i, who is in control of the company, has acted, is acting, and is ... expected to act in a manner that is illegal or fraudulent,” Finkelstei­n’s court filing said.

That dispute later was settled.

The EB-5 program was created by Congress in 1990, but it was little used until the Great Recession. In 2010, when Mastroiann­i set about raising money to build Harboursid­e Place, U.S. banks had stopped lending money, and newly wealthy Chinese investors were eager for U.S. visas.

In another high-profile dispute over EB-5 financing, Chinese and Iranian investors in 2016 sued the developer of the Palm House in Palm Beach for fraud. Unlike the Palm House, a project that never was built, Harboursid­e Place was completed and is bustling.

Tenants include Tommy Bahama, Chico’s and White House | Black Market. The mixed-use center along the Intracoast­al Waterway also is home to a 179-room Wyndham Grand hotel.

Schneider, an attorney at Levine Kellogg Lehman Schneider + Grossman, said EB-5 investors are making big bets in a country where they’re unfamiliar with the legal system and financial customs.

“It’s a recipe for disaster,” he said.

 ?? BILL INGRAM / PALM BEACH POST ?? Visitors attend the grand opening of Harboursid­e Place on Dec. 4, 2014, in Jupiter, a now-bustling mixed-use center.
BILL INGRAM / PALM BEACH POST Visitors attend the grand opening of Harboursid­e Place on Dec. 4, 2014, in Jupiter, a now-bustling mixed-use center.
 ??  ?? Developer Nicholas Mastroiann­i II is accused of fraud.
Developer Nicholas Mastroiann­i II is accused of fraud.

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