Federal prosecutors have charged a Florida business owner for orchestrating a multimillion-dollar Paycheck Protection Program (PPP) and Economic Injury Disaster Loan (EIDL) fraud that spanned several shell companies. According to the U.S. Attorney’s Office for the Middle District of Florida, the individual submitted dozens of falsified loan applications claiming inflated payrolls, phantom employees, and fabricated tax records.
Investigators allege that the suspect, based in Tampa, used stolen or synthetic identities to create companies on paper, applying for pandemic relief under each. In total, more than $4.1 million in federal loans were disbursed — funds that quickly went toward luxury cars, cryptocurrency purchases, and real estate rather than payroll support.
The scheme unraveled when bank compliance teams noticed identical employee rosters and IP addresses across multiple applications. A joint task force including the FBI, IRS Criminal Investigation Division, and SBA Office of Inspector General later uncovered a network of falsified EINs and recycled W-2 data.
“This wasn’t financial desperation — it was deliberate exploitation of a national crisis,” said U.S. Attorney Roger Handberg. “Every dollar stolen was a dollar denied to a legitimate small business.”
The case highlights how quickly criminals pivoted to exploit emergency economic aid programs, and how crucial automated identity analytics and cross-application data matching are for fraud detection at scale. The defendant faces multiple counts of wire fraud, bank fraud, and money laundering.
Today’s Fraud of the Day is based on reporting from the U.S. Department of Justice and the Tampa Bay Times regarding pandemic loan fraud investigations in 2025.


