Los Angeles Times

Man guilty of fraud

As part of plea deal, O.C. resident could face $26-million fine, 50 years in prison.

- By Miranda Andrade

A Newport Beach man has pleaded guilty to charges in connection with a multimilli­on-dollar Ponzi scheme and faces up to 50 years in prison when he is sentenced Nov. 16.

As part of a plea deal last week, Brandon Walton Stewart, 33, is expected to be fined $26,594,810.

Stewart pleaded guilty to one count of burglary, 22 counts of using untrue statements in the purchase or sale of a security, 125 counts of money laundering, 38 counts of check fraud and multiple counts of tax fraud, according to court documents.

He was arrested in May 2015 in Dallas before being extradited to Orange County, where he faced charges that he ran a $13.5million Ponzi scheme from April 2009 through January 2013.

A Ponzi scheme is a type of fraud in which initial investors are paid artificial­ly high returns using money from subsequent investors in an effort to encourage even more investment.

Stewart was accused of misleading four victims, including a 92-year-old relative, into investing a total of $10.6 million by saying their funds would be added to a $100-million investment pool.

Instead, authoritie­s said, Stewart used the funds for personal expenses such as flights to Las Vegas on a private jet and betting thousands of dollars in casinos.

He also was accused of defrauding banks by writing nearly $3 million in bad checks from November 2012 to July 2014, and of not filing state tax returns from 2010 to 2013.

Andrade writes for Times Community News.

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