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February 20, 2012
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Three Indicted For Bankruptcy Fraud, Impeding The Fdic's Operations

FDIC Inspector General Gaston L. Gianni, Jr., announced today that Frank C. Romano, Jr., of Rowley, MA, the owner and operator of several Massachusetts nursing homes; Frank M. Griswold of Dorchester, MA; and David M. White, an architect from Goffstown, NH, were indicted in connection with two fraudulent involuntary bankruptcy petitions filed in December 1992 and September 1994 against the developers of "Brandon Woods of Hingham," a proposed elderly care facility in Hingham, MA. The three men were charged with conspiracy, corruptly impeding the functions of the FDIC and bankruptcy fraud.
This investigation was conducted by special agents of the FDIC's Office of Inspector General and the U.S. Secret Service.

According to the indictment, from December 1992 through October 1997, Romano, Griswold and White conspired to commit bankruptcy fraud and corruptly impede the FDIC in its efforts to foreclose on and sell the Brandon Woods of Hingham project. Romano had originally borrowed $8.1 million from First Mutual Bank of Boston to develop the project, but defaulted on the loan in 1990. The bank failed in June 1991, and the FDIC was appointed receiver.

The FDIC twice attempted to foreclose on and sell the property-in December 1992 and September 1994. On both occasions, Romano allegedly orchestrated a scheme for purported creditors of the project to file involuntary bankruptcy petitions against the developers, the Brandon-Hingham Associated Limited Partnership and the Charles Street Development Corporation. The involuntary bankruptcy filings effectively forced the FDIC to cancel the scheduled foreclosure sales of the project.

While both the Brandon-Hingham Associated Limited Partnership and the Charles Street Development Corporation were nominally owned by Frank Griswold, the indictment alleges that Romano actually controlled the project. According to the indictment, Romano and David White, the project architect, recruited other "creditors" to sign and file the involuntary bankruptcy petitions on the basis of false and inflated claims. White allegedly signed both of the fraudulent bankruptcy petitions on behalf of his architectural firm, SLA Associates. The filing of both petitions delayed the FDIC's sale of the project by over two years, from December 1992 until July 1995, when the FDIC regained control of the project.

White was originally indicted in December 1997 and charged with one count of corruptly impeding the FDIC and two counts of bankruptcy fraud.
 

 

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Did You Know?    
 
 
There are a number of protections for consumers in the Fair Debt Collections Practices Act
One important point - you are responsible for your debts. Nothing in this law gives you the right to skip out on your bills. It just protects you from unscrupulous collection agencies. And the lender can take legal action to collect the money.

 


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Bankruptcy Terms

 


Today's Terms

Post-petition

Definition:
Occurring after the filing of a petition. Preference - a payment by a debtor made during a specified period (90 days or one year) prior to the filing that favors one creditor over others.

Chapter Thirteen

Definition:
Bankruptcy proceedings for an individual with the intention of rescheduling the individual's debt (rather than liquidating the individual's assets and debt; an individual files under Chapter 7 to liquidate);

Foreclosure

Definition:
Your mortgage lender may start a foreclosure action and sell your home at a Sheriff's sale. If the sale nets less than you owe, there will be a "deficiency balance" that you will own to the lender.

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