Miami Herald

Miami man who bought Lamborghin­i with COVID-19 relief money is sentenced to six years

- BY JAY WEAVER jweaver@miamiheral­d.com

A Miami businessma­n was sentenced to more than six years in prison Wednesday after pleading guilty to fleecing millions from a federal COVID-19 relief program and buying luxury items with the money, including a $318,000 Lamborghin­i Huracán Evo.

David T. Hines, 29, arrested last July, was ordered by a Miami federal judge to turn over the luxury Italian sports car and $3.4 million that he received in government loans.

Hines, who owned South Florida moving businesses, applied to Bank of America for seven loans under a Small Business Administra­tion program. The Payroll Protection Program (PPP) was meant to help struggling businesses during the coronaviru­s pandemic cover legitimate expenses, such as employee salaries. The PPP loans are forgiven by the government if they are properly used by businesses.

The SBA’s payroll program totaling nearly $650 billion was approved by Congress as part of the CARES Act after the coronaviru­s struck the nation in March 2020, but Hines’ and other similar fraud cases have been piling up in South Florida and other parts of the country.

In Hines’ case, Bank of America approved three of his applicatio­ns, totaling more than $3.9 million. One of his first purchases was the Lamborghin­i, according to a criminal complaint.

Prosecutor Michael Berger said Hines also used the loan money for dating websites, jewelry and clothes and for stays at high-end hotels, such as the Fontainebl­eau and Setai in Miami Beach.

Last July, Hines was involved in a hit-and-run accident, which helped investigat­ors link the Lamborghin­i to him.

“As part of his guilty plea, Hines admitted that he fraudulent­ly sought millions of dollars in PPP loans through applicatio­ns to an insured financial institutio­n on behalf of different companies,” the Justice Department said after his guilty plea in February.

“Plea documents indicate that in the days and weeks following the disburseme­nt of PPP funds, Hines did not make payroll payments that he claimed on his loan applicatio­ns. He did, however, use the PPP proceeds for personal expenses.”

The federal case against Hines is not his first brush with the law.

In 2018, Hines flagged down a police officer on Miami Beach to report that his girlfriend had stolen his Lamborghin­i. Police later found the sports car. But Hines became uncooperat­ive, and both he and the girlfriend fled before being found and arrested.

Hines received a probationa­ry sentence for resisting an officer without violence, a misdemeano­r.

Hines is not alone in exploiting the SBA’s Payroll Protection Program. The Justice Department has prosecuted more than 100 defendants in more than 70 criminal cases, seizing $60 million fleeced from the SBA program.

South Florida is recognized as being at the center of the nation’s COVID-19 relief fraud, authoritie­s said at a recent news conference.

Jay Weaver: 305-376-3446, @jayhweaver

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