On May 29, 2025, a jury found Dr. Reginald Eburuche guilty of bank fraud after he obtained over a million dollars in fraudulent Paycheck Protection Program (PPP) loans, the government mandated, U.S. taxpayer funded bank loan established to help Americans during the COVID-19 pandemic crisis. Turns out, Eburuche didn’t have a real business on the PPP loan application. Not from lack of trying. Eburuche had been unsuccessful in obtaining a line of credit for his new start-up business Renovis Healthcare 2019. But then the Small Business Administration was told to focus on supporting businesses quickly and prioritize speed over accuracy when it came to applications. Perfect for a fraudster.
In order to get that money though, Eburuche grossly inflated the number of employees and the average monthly payroll for the fledgling company. In support of his application, he also created and uploaded fraudulent tax documents, meant to make it appear as though his stated headcount and salary expenditures were legitimate.
Eburuche used the fraudulently COVID-19 pandemic relief monies as seed money to start business previously deemed by a bank as not worthy of funding. Can’t beat a $1.7 million at 1% interest Paycheck Protection Program loan repayment plan. Although, 97% of PPP loans ended up being forgiven by the U.S. government, which also means that debt falls on the U.S. taxpayers’ shoulders.
Great job by the special agents from the Federal Bureau of Investigation on this base.
Today’s Fraud of The Day is based on article “Southfield doctor convicted of bank fraud after securing $1.7M PPP loan” published by FOX2 Detroit on June 2, 2025.
A Southfield doctor has been convicted of bank fraud for illegally obtaining a $1.7 million loan for a business using a Covid-era financing option. Reginald Eburuche was found guilty of bank fraud by a federal jury, the U.S. Attorney for the Eastern District of Michigan announced.
Southfield-based doctor Reginald Eburuche fraudulently obtained a loan through the federal Paycheck Protection Program in July 2020, a jury concluded last week. Announcing the conviction over the weekend, the U.S. Attorney’s office said Eburuche applied for a $1.7 million PPP loan to pay for his start-up business, Renovis Healthcare. After failing to obtain a line of credit for the venture, he applied for the loan, lying about the number of employees on the payroll as well as uploading fraudulent tax documents.