A Greenwood, Ind., man was charged in three separate fraud schemes, including attempted mortgage fraud, a $14 million fraud on an investor and a vehicle title-washing scheme.
Among other things, Daniel Fruits, 46, was charged with an attempted mortgage fraud scheme on Fifth Third Bank. Specifically, in late 2018, Fruits allegedly made false statements to Fifth Third Bank to secure a $432,000 mortgage. He twice allegedly submitted falsified paperwork purporting to show that loans from another bank had been paid off, when they had not been.
The indictment also alleges that Fruits defrauded a Kentucky investor, who was also Fruits’ employer, out of nearly $14 million. In 2015, the investor founded a trucking company, Secure Transit, and hired Fruits to run it. Over the next four-and-a-half years, the investor would invest approximately $14 million in the business.
Throughout that time, Fruits allegedly repeatedly lied about the company’s financial health, who its customers were, and what the money invested was being used for. On multiple occasions, Fruits allegedly sent the investor fictitious customer sales contracts and falsified financial statements that reported inflated company profits. At the same time, Fruits allegedly asked the investor for additional investments, sometimes in the millions of dollars, purportedly for the purchase of trucks or other business expenses.
Fruits spent a significant portion of the money on his own personal purchases and payments. He allegedly spent approximately $880,000 to purchase a horse farm and his personal residence, $560,000 on an RV and trailer, over $111,000 on a Corvette, approximately $90,000 on three Rolex watches, approximately $55,000 on a horse, $33,000 on a horse trailer, $23,000 on payments for two Ferraris, and $30,000 on payments for two escorts.
Finally, Fruits allegedly perpetrated a title-washing scheme to remove a bank’s lien from the title of a truck he purchased. He financed the truck with a loan from Ally Financial for over $69,000. Several months later, he sent the Indiana Bureau of Motor Vehicles a falsified letter purportedly from Ally Financial stating that the loan had been paid off and the lien should be released.
The loan had not been paid off and Ally Financial never wrote that letter. As a result, the BMV issued Fruits a free-and-clear title for the truck, which Fruits then sold for $48,000, without repaying the loan to Ally Financial.
This case was the result of an investigation by the Federal Bureau of Investigations, and Internal Revenue Service Criminal Investigation.