Business & Tech
Sharon Man Found Guilty of Conspiracy to Commit Wire Fraud
James Bender of Sharon was convicted of conspiracy to defraud international customers of New Hampshire business.
(From the United States Attorney General's Office)
James Bender, 48, of Sharon, Massachusetts, was found guilty of conspiracy to commit wire fraud after a four-day jury trial in the United States District Court for the District of New Hampshire in Concord , announced United States Attorney John P. Kacavas.
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The government said Bender, a former Senior Vice President of Trade Finance for Sovereign Bank conspired with Paul Wilson, the former Manager of International Trade Finance for Goss International Americas Corporation, to defraud several Latin American customers of Goss. Goss manufactures commercial printing presses.
One component of Wilson’s job was to facilitate international sales by arranging financing for foreign purchasers of Goss’s products and working with the Export-Import Bank of the United States to obtain credit insurance for loans extended to Goss’s foreign customers. Bender arranged for Sovereign Bank to purchase most of the loans Goss extended to its foreign customers.
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According to the government, Bender and Wilson formed two shell companies called Zephyr Capital LLC and Zephyr Financial LLC, through which they defrauded two Brazilian and two Mexican businesses that purchased presses from Goss. Bender and Wilson used the shell companies to send fraudulent invoices to these businesses charging them for loan underwriting services that were either never rendered or that Wilson performed as part of his job at Goss.
The invoices totaled over $200,000 in bogus charges. Most of the victim companies wired payments for the fraudulent invoices to Zephyr bank accounts in the United States, which Bender and Wilson divided between themselves over a four year period.
Bender is scheduled to be sentenced on Sept. 2, 2013. He is facing up to 20 years in prison and a $250,000 fine. Wilson pleaded guilty last year to three counts of wire fraud in connection with this scheme and was later sentenced to one year and one day in prison.
This case was investigated by the Office of the Inspector General for the Export-Import Bank of the United States. It was prosecuted by Assistant United Sates Attorney Mark S. Zuckerman.
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