Fradella to be sentenced Sept 24,'14
   Florida Contractor, Brian Marshall has been sentenced to serve four years in federal prison for a construction fraud scheme.
   According to the FBI, Marshall from Tampa was sentenced in a Dallas,  Texas court on Monday by U.S. District Judge, Barbara M. G. Lynn. His  crime which he admitted to over half a year ago, was defrauding  investors who decided they wanted to invest in a company that aided  those in need. This company is known as Home Solutions of America Inc.  (Home Solutions). Home Solutions CEO, Frank J. Fradella of Covington,  Louisiana has also pleaded guilty to securities fraud, and is scheduled  to be sentenced on September 24, 2014.
   Marshall helped run Home Solutions as the Vice President of the  company. The NASDAQ-traded Corporation was at one time based in Dallas,  before it was then relocated to New Orleans, Louisiana in July 2008. The  new location provided a market for the company’s business, which is to  construct and restore communities. As the president of Fireline, a large  subsidiary for the construction and restoration company Home Solutions,  Marshall took advantage of his power to defraud those who just wanted  to contribute in a company that made a difference for hurricane victims.
        According to court records of his plea agreement, Marshall confessed  that between December 2006 and August 15, 2007, he used his executive  power to scam investors by using fraudulent revenue information that  connected to a series of construction contracts in Tampa. Specifically  he used Fireline to enter private companies that he admittedly owned  wholly or partially. This included a $4 million contract that was  designed for the construction of his personal residence.
   In addition to using the company for his own personal gains, Fireline  was manipulated to record revenue and income from the construction  contracts that contained false information. This strategy was used to  make it look as though a great work had been done, when little to no  work had been done at all. This phony information was knowingly reported  to public investors in Home Solutions’ 2Q 2007 10-Q.
   Assistant U.S. Attorneys J. Nicholas Bunch and Andrew Wirmani had brought forth the case against Marshall. |