South Florida Sun-Sentinel (Sunday)

Oklahoma film financier sentenced to 22 years for $60M fraud scheme

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An Oklahoma man claiming to be a film financier has been sentenced in Florida to nearly 22 years in federal prison for participat­ing in a scheme to steal more than $60 million from investors and producers seeking financing for movies and Broadway shows.

Jason Van Eman, 44, of Bartlesvil­le, Okla., was sentenced Thursday in Fort Lauderdale federal court, according to court records. A jury found him guilty in May of conspiracy, wire fraud and money laundering.

According to court records, Van Eman and co-defendant Benjamin McConley, operating as Weathervan­e Production­s, offered to provide financing to investors and producers seeking funds to produce motion pictures, theater performanc­es and other projects. McConley and Van Eman promised the victims they would match their cash contributi­ons and use the combined funds to secure financing from financial institutio­ns in South Florida and elsewhere, investigat­ors said.

Benjamin Rafael, a former Wells Fargo bank employee recruited by McConley and Van Eman, furthered the scheme by lying to victims about the security of their funds, prosecutor­s said. Victims lost millions of dollars and their contributi­ons were never matched.

Instead of financing projects, the money was transferre­d to personal and corporate bank accounts and spent on luxury automobile­s, personal watercraft, real estate, stocks, jewelry, home furnishing­s, designer clothes, hotel accommodat­ions and air travel, prosecutor­s said.

Eman was sentenced on Thursday to 21 years and

10 months in prison. On a previous occasion, McConley was sentenced to 13 years in prison after pleading guilty to one count of conspiracy to commit wire fraud. Rafael previously pleaded guilty to his part in the scheme, as well as another case involving fraudulent applicatio­ns for

COVID-19 relief loans. He was sentenced to 3 ½ three and a half years in prison.

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