Los Angeles Times

Irvine man used pandemic relief loans to buy luxury cars, officials say

Mustafa Qadiri, 38, allegedly submitted bogus applicatio­ns for federal PPP funds.

- By Michael Finnegan

An Irvine man was arrested on fraud charges Monday after authoritie­s say he used $5 million in pandemic relief loans to buy luxury sports cars, take lavish vacations and cover his personal expenses..

Mustafa Qadiri, 38, submitted bogus applicatio­ns for federal loans under the Paycheck Protection Program on behalf of four Newport Beach businesses he purportedl­y ran, according to federal prosecutor­s.

None of them are currently in business, they said.

Federal agents have seized Ferrari, Bentley and Lamborghin­i sports cars that Qadiri bought with the loan money, along with $2 million from his bank accounts, according to the U.S. attorney’s office in Santa Ana.

Qadiri was indicted by a federal grand jury on four counts of bank fraud, four counts of wire fraud, six counts of money laundering and one count of aggravated identity theft.

His lawyer, Bilal Essayli, could not be reached for comment.

Qadiri’s arrest is the latest example of rampant fraud that has plagued the federal programs set up to relieve economic hardship caused by the pandemic.

In California alone, officials have confirmed at least $11 billion in illicit unemployme­nt claims — a number that is expected to balloon by billions of dollars.

Congress created the Paycheck Protection loan program in March 2020 to provide emergency aid to small businesses.

The loans, designed to prevent layoffs, can be spent on payroll, rent, mortgage payments or utility bills — but not personal expenses. Qadiri secured loans to two mortgage businesses, All American Lending and All American Capital Holdings, and two advertisin­g outlets, RadMediaLa­b and Ad Blot, according to the indictment.

His loan applicatio­ns inflated the number of employees on his payrolls and altered the companies’ bank records with inflated balances, the grand jury charged.

Qadiri also provided fictitious federal tax returns to banks that processed the loans, the indictment says, and falsely certified that he would use the money for business purposes.

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