Dayton Daily News

COVID aid thieves bought cars, cards and a private island

- By Richard Lardner GOVERNMENT SPENDING

YANKEETOWN, Fla. — A freshwater spring bubbles amid the mangroves, cabbage palms and red cedars on Sweetheart Island, a twoacre uninhabite­d patch of paradise about a mile off the coast of this little Gulf Coast town. Pelicans divebomb nearby into the cool waters of Florida’s Withlacooc­hee Bay and the open view westward holds the promise of dazzling sunsets. It may have seemed like an ideal getaway for Florida businessma­n Patrick Parker Walsh. Instead, he’s serving five and half years in federal prison for stealing nearly $8 million in federal COVID-19 relief funds that he used, in part, to buy Sweetheart Island. While Walsh’s private island ranks among the more unusual purchases by pandemic fraudsters, his crime was not unique. He is one of thousands of thieves who perpetrate­d the greatest grift in U.S. history. They potentiall­y plundered more than $280 billion in federal COVID-19 aid; another $123 billion was wasted or misspent. The loss represents close to 10% of the $4.3 trillion the U.S. government has disbursed to mitigate the economic devastatio­n wrought by the COVID-19 pandemic, according to an analysis by The Associated Press. An AP review of hundreds of pandemic fraud cases presents a picture of thieves and scam artists who spent lavishly on houses, luxury watches and diamond jewelry, Lamborghin­is and other expensive cars. The stolen aid also paid for long nights at strip clubs, gambling sprees in Las Vegas and bucket-list vacations. Their crimes were relatively simple: The government’s goal was to get cash into the hands of struggling people and businesses with minimal hassle, particular­ly during the early stages of the COVID-19 crisis. Safeguards to weed out the swindlers were dropped. As Walsh’s case and thousands of others have shown, stealing the money was as easy as lying on an applicatio­n. The thieves came from all walks of life and all corners of the globe. There was a Tennessee rapper who bragged about the ease of stealing more than $700,000 in pandemic unemployme­nt insurance on YouTube. A former pizzeria owner and host of a cryptocurr­ency-themed radio show bought an alpaca farm in Vermont with pilfered aid. And an ex-Nigerian government official who grabbed about half a million dollars in benefits was wearing a $10,000 watch and $35,000 gold chain when he was arrested. Nearly 3,200 defendants have been charged with COVID-19 relief fraud, according to the U.S. Justice Department. About $1.4 billion in stolen pandemic aid has been seized. Investigat­ors won’t catch every crook. The scale and scope of the fraud are too large. Pandemic cases often depend on digital evidence, which is perishable, and the financial trail can go cold, said Bob Westbrooks, former executive director of the federal Pandemic Response Accountabi­lity Committee. “The uncomforta­ble truth is the federal criminal justice system is simply not equipped to fully address the unpreceden­ted volume of pandemic relief fraud cases, large and small, and involving thousands upon thousands of domestic and foreign actors,” Westbrooks said. Top Justice Department officials are undeterred by the enormity of the task. They’ve created special “strike forces “to hunt down COVID-19 aid thieves and vowed not to give up the chase. “We’ll stay at it for as long as it takes,” U.S. Deputy Attorney General Lisa Monaco said in August. Konstantin­os Zarkadas, a New York doctor deeply in debt, joined the rogues’ gallery of COVID-19 fraudsters by falsifying at least 11 separate applicatio­ns for pandemic aid that netted him almost $3.8 million, according to prosecutor­s. He bought Rolex and Cartier wristwatch­es valued at $140,000 for himself and family members and made a hefty down payment on a yacht, according to court records. Zarkadas used about $3 million to pay off part of an earlier civil judgment against him for breaching a real estate lease. His most brazen move was to send $80,000 of the looted cash back to the government to settle a federal lawsuit alleging he violated the Controlled Substances Act by dispensing more than 20,000 doses of a weight-loss drug without keeping accurate records, prosecutor­s said. The state of New York revoked Zarkadas’ medical license shortly after he was sentenced to more than four years in prison for swiping the pandemic aid. The stolen funds financed the high-rolling lifestyle of Lee E. Price III, a Houston resident with prior felony conviction­s for forgery and robbery. He swindled nearly $1.7 million by submitting bogus aid applicatio­ns on behalf of businesses that existed only on paper, according to court records. Price wasted little time blowing $14,000 on a Rolex and more than $233,000 for a flashy white Lamborghin­i Urus, a luxury SUV that can go from zero to 60 mph in three seconds. He also spent thousands of dollars at the Casanova, a Houston stripclub. Price was sentenced to more than nine years in prison. Vinath Oudomsine of Georgia also created a fake company that he claimed made $235,000 a year and had 10 employees. A few weeks after Oudomsine applied for the pandemic aid, the government rushed him $85,000 to keep his non-existent business afloat. Oudomsine spent nearly $58,000 on a 1999 Charizard Pokémon card, which depicts a gold dragon-like creature, jaws wide open, poised to attack. While not as valuable as rare baseball cards — a mint condition Mickey Mantle card sold for $12.6 million last year — Pokémon merchandis­e can command big money as collectors have driven up prices for collectibl­es issued by the popular franchise. At Oudomsine’s sentencing last year, U.S. District Judge Dudley H. Bowen called Oudomsine’s theft “an $85,000 insult” to a country reeling from the pandemic. “I feel foolish every time I say it: Pokémon card,” Bowen said before sending Oudomsine to prison for three years. Patrick Walsh’s bid to save his aerial advertisin­g businesses started out legitimate­ly but quickly escalated into sizeable fraud. Walsh operated a small fleet of cigar-shaped blimps that flew corporate logos over crowded venues. In June 2017, one of his blimps crashed and burned on live television at the men’s U.S. Open golf tournament, one of the world’s premier sporting events. “I was teeing off and I looked up and saw it on fire, and I felt sick to my stomach,” said profession­al golfer Jamie Lovemark, according to an Associated Press report. The pilot — the sole passenger — was badly injured but survived, according to a National Transporta­tion Safety Board investigat­ion. In the wake of the crash, Walsh’s clients began to bail, his attorneys wrote in court filings. To stay afloat, he obtained high-interest loans that also allowed him to expand his businesses. By 2019, his companies had sales of $16 million and had expanded into Latin America and Asian markets. Then the pandemic hit. “COVID-19 did not slow down business, it killed it,” Walsh’s attorneys wrote. He panicked. Between March 2020 and January 2021 Walsh submitted more than 30 fraudulent applicatio­ns for emergency pandemic aid and received $7.8 million, according to the Justice Department. Even if Walsh had followed the rules, his companies would have only qualified for a “small subset” of those loans, federal prosecutor­s alleged. “His crimes are egregious and the product of greed,” prosecutor­s wrote in court papers. They cited the purchase of Sweetheart Island, undisclose­d “luxury goods,” oil fields in Texas and a downpaymen­t on a home in tony Jackson Hole, Wyoming.

 ?? JULIO AGUILAR / AP ?? Patrick Parker Walsh is serving five and half years in prison for stealing nearly $8 million in federal COVID-19 relief funds that he used, in part, to buy this island.
JULIO AGUILAR / AP Patrick Parker Walsh is serving five and half years in prison for stealing nearly $8 million in federal COVID-19 relief funds that he used, in part, to buy this island.

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