Politics & Government
Rocky Hill Man Sentenced For Role In Auto Loan Fraud Scheme: Feds
The used car salesman was accused of defrauding lenders out of more than $260,000 through an auto loan scheme, according to officials.
ROCKY HILL, CT — A used car salesman in Middletown has been sentenced to 21 months in prison for his role in a car loan scheme in which lenders were defrauded out of more than $260,000, according to authorities.
Justin Williams, 42, of Rocky Hill, was also sentenced Thursday to five years of supervised release following the prison term, Acting U.S. States Attorney for Connecticut Leonard C. Boyle announced. Williams was ordered to serve the first three months of his supervised release in home confinement, and to perform 200 hours of community service, according to Boyle.
Williams worked as a salesman and de facto general manager at a used car dealership at 1075 Newfield St. in Middletown, known variously as Car Nation, LLC, Car Nation CT, LLC, and Middletown Motorcars, which was owned and operated by George Hajati, according to court documents.
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“In connection with automobile loan applications for multiple borrowers, Williams, Hajati and others submitted documents and statements to victim lenders that falsely represented the borrower’s employment, salary, sources of income, and amount of a down payment,” officials wrote in a news release. “The false documents included fictitious or altered borrower pay stubs and income verification letters purportedly from the Social Security Administration.
“Williams submitted loan applications indicating that borrowers made salaries they did not make, worked at jobs they did not work, received income from the Social Security Administration they did not receive, and made down payments they did not make. In some instances, the borrower was not aware of, and did not authorize, Williams’ use of his or her personal identifying information to obtain automobile loans in these ways.”
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Williams was accused of defrauding lenders of $264,345 November 2015 and June 2016 through the scheme. He was ordered to pay $251,267 in restitution.
Williams was previously convicted of federal fraud charges related to a Hartford-area scheme to defraud mortgage lenders, and he was on federal supervised release as the time of his participation in this auto loan fraud scheme, according to officials.
Williams was arrested on a criminal complaint on Jan. 16, 2020 and pleaded guilty in November to one count of wire fraud. He was released on a $100,000 bond and is required to report to prison on July 5.
Hajati pleaded guilty to one count of wire fraud stemming from the scheme. He also was previously convicted of federal fraud charges related to the Hartford-area mortgage fraud scheme and was serving a term of supervised release. He was sentenced in June to 27 months in prison and ordered to pay $654,952 in restitution for his role in the auto loan fraud scheme, and was sentenced to an additional 21 months of imprisonment for violating the conditions of his supervised release.
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