A New Jersey-based real estate investor pleaded guilty for his role in a multi-year conspiracy to fraudulently obtain over $54.7 million in loans and to fraudulently acquire multifamily and commercial properties.
Aron Puretz was an employee of Apex Equity Group, a real estate investment and advisory firm. According to the U.S. Department of Justice, Puretz conspired with others to deceive lenders into issuing multifamily and commercial mortgage loans between 2016 and 2022. This chicanery included the creation of fictitious documents – including purchase contracts with inflated purchase prices and fake financial statements – that were submitted to lenders.
The fraudsters acquired the Eureka, Illinois-based multifamily property Maple Lawn for $4.1 million in February 2017, but Puretz and his co-conspirators from Apex Equity Group utilized the identity of a co-conspirator to present a lender and Freddie Mac with a purchase and sale contract for $5.8 million, along with other fraudulent documents. As a result of that fraud, a title and settlement company performed two closings on the property – one for the true $4.1 million sales price and another for the fraudulent $5.8 million sales price presented to the lender.
Furthermore, part of the conspiracy was to create a nonprofit entity, JPC Charities, for the purpose of receiving tax-exempt status for the properties owned by Puretz and co-conspirators – these individuals provided false statements to the city of Eureka, Illinois, to receive a property tax exception.
In July 2019, Puretz and his co-conspirators acquired another multifamily property, Big Country Chateau in Little Rock, Arkansas. However, Puretz knew the lender and Freddie Mac would not approve him as an owner and used the identity of an associate instead of his own. Furthermore, Puretz hid his ownership and involvement with the property management company from the Department of Housing and Urban Development and other federal and state agencies.
In September 2020, the fraudsters acquired Troy Technology Park, a Troy, Michigan-based commercial property, acquired for $42.7 million. Puretz and his co-conspirators presented the lender with a fraudulent purchase and sale contract for $70 million – and to support the inflated purchase price, the fraudsters provided the lender and appraiser with a fake letter of intent to purchase the property from another party for $68 million, along with other fraudulent documents. To conceal the fraudulent nature of the transaction, Puretz and his co-conspirators arranged for a short-term $30 million loan, which was used to make it appear that they had the funds needed to close on the loan. Once again, the title and settlement company performed two closings – one for the true $42.7 million sales price and another for the fraudulent $70 million sales price presented to the lender.
Puretz pleaded guilty to one count of conspiracy to commit wire fraud affecting a financial institution. He is scheduled to be sentenced on Oct. 30 and faces a maximum penalty of five years in prison.
Wow, only five years…
So where is all the money. 5 years in club fed and party the rest of your life. What a joke.
He won’t care. 5 years? He’ll only have to do 3 and then he’s got all that money to live on. Who really wins?
Surely he’ll be required to make restitution. Has the title Company been charged?
Your tax dollars at work because incompetent of hud and Freddie Mac.
Then other local and state dollars.
This is how local and state officials spend those housing bonds and tax credits!!!
The tax payers get stuck with the bill!!!
So curious….which title company in Michigan had the misfortune of insuring this transaction?
The Department of Justice announcement did not identify the title company.
Just a slap on the wrist…sadly when you got money you have power even if its money he scammed and got…and “yes” we…the taxpayers foot the bill.