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Related: About this forumDeveloper Pleads Guilty- Defrauding Investors seeking Citizenship under Federal Immigration Program
https://www.justice.gov/usao-wdwa/pr/developer-pleads-guilty-defrauding-investors-seeking-citizenship-under-federalDepartment of Justice
U.S. Attorneys Office
Western District of Washington
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
Wednesday, January 4, 2017
Developer Pleads Guilty to Defrauding Investors seeking Citizenship under Federal Immigration Program
Submitted Falsified Documents and Diverted Money for his Personal Benefit
A Bellevue developer who raised more than $150 million from immigrant investors pleaded guilty today to fraud charges in U.S. District Court in Seattle, announced U.S. Attorney Annette L. Hayes. LOBSANG DARGEY, 43, entered guilty pleas to two federal felonies alleging that DARGEY defrauded immigrant investors, federal regulators, and institutional investors. The charges allege that DARGEY promised to use the immigrant investors investment funds to construct two Puget Sound-area developments in compliance with a federal immigration program designed to stimulate growth and create jobs. DARGEY admitted at the court hearing that, contrary to his promises to investors, regulators and others, he secretly diverted tens of millions of dollars of investor funds to unauthorized uses and attempted to make up the resulting funding shortfall by raising additional capital using falsified financial records.
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According to records filed in the case, between 2012 and 2015, DARGEY recruited overseas investors, primarily in China, to fund two development projects one in Everett, Washington known as the Path American Farmers Market and one in Seattles Belltown neighborhood known as the Potala Tower. DARGEY promoted the projects under a federal program known as the EB-5 program, which allows immigrant investors to qualify for permanent residency if they create American jobs by investing $500,000 in a qualifying American business project. DARGEY represented to the immigrant investors and to the U.S. Department of Homeland Security that he was investing all of investors funds in the Everett and Seattle projects in compliance with program requirements.
DARGEY admitted at the court hearing that, contrary to his promises, he used tens of millions of investor dollars for uses not allowed under the federal program and not disclosed to investors. This included approximately $11.5 million of investor funds that DARGEY secretly used to pay unauthorized sales expenses, including sales commissions to Asian brokers, as well as $16.8 million that DARGEY used for unrelated real estate projects. In addition, DARGEY told investors and the United States government that DARGEY would contribute $32.5 million of his own money toward the projects. DARGEY admitted at the hearing that, in fact, he made no contribution to the projects. DARGEYs fraud resulted in tens of millions of dollars in funding shortfalls for the projects. DARGEY admitted that he attempted to fill these shortfalls by using a falsified bank statement to obtain a $25 million construction loan, and by using altered financial statements to obtain $60 million in additional funding from a private institutional investor.
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