Dealer perpetrated forgery, bribery, wire fraud, threats to a CEO, fake down payments and trade ins
Multiple counts of wire fraud, conspiracy, issuing forged securities, and aggravated identity theft. These are just some of the charges that Bobby Chris Mays, 49, President and Chief Executive Officer of the Big Red Dealerships, Charles Gooch, 63, former vice President and compliance office and Courtney Wells, 36, Comptroller were engaged in. Fortunately, on November 19, 2021, Acting United States Attorney for the Western District of Oklahoma, Robert J. Troester has put an end to it. But not before a laundry list of major lenders were defrauded for millions.
Ally, American Credit Acceptance, BBVA, Consumer Portfolio Services, Crescent, Encore, Exeter, FinancePoint, First Investors, Flagship, Global Lending Services, Peak Acceptance, Prestige, Santander, and Tinker Federal Credit Union. These are just some of the lenders defrauded in this multi-year fraud enterprise that included at least 542 loans worth millions of dollars.
On September 16, 2020, a federal grand jury returned an indictment alleging that from January 2014 to March 2019, Mayes, Gooch, and Wells used their positions as co-owners of the Big Red Dealerships (Big Red Sports/Imports, Big Red Kia, Norman Yamaha, Norman Mitsubishi, and Mayes Kia) to engage in a conspiracy to commit wire fraud in which they sought to obtain millions of dollars of loan proceeds.
The indictment further alleged that the defendants made materially false statements and omissions to lenders about the type, source, and amount of borrower’s down payments or vehicle trade-ins, and bribed at least one loan officer.
The trial began on November 2, 2021, before Senior United States District Judge Stephen P. Friot, and the federal jury returned its verdict on Friday, November 19, 2021. At trial, the jury heard testimony that the Big Red Dealerships used advertisements to target potential customers with poor credit and that Mayes, Gooch, and Wells then fraudulently induced lenders to approve loans for such customers by documenting that the customers provided cash down payments and/or trade-in vehicles when that was untrue.
Twelve different Big Red Dealership customers testified about their experiences buying cars at the Big Red Dealerships, along with several former employees and representatives of several lenders. In some circumstances, the purported cash down payment was simply fictitious, and the Big Red Dealerships referred to those cash down payments as “King Cash” on internal documents. The jury also heard testimony that in late 2014, one lender discovered these fake cash down payments, and Mayes emailed threats to the CEO of that lender in an effort to stop the lender from further investigating the Big Red Dealerships.
Evidence at trial also showed that from February 2015 until late 2017, the Big Red Dealerships continued to document fictitious cash down payments for lenders. During that time period, for at least 519 customers, the down payment was purportedly based on a pawned item provided to Norman Pawn & Gun, a pawn shop owned by Gooch and located in a building owned by Mayes, although it was never open for business and never had any employees.
After loan proceeds were received from lenders, Big Red Dealership employees generated checks to the customers, forged the customers’ signatures on the backs, deposited the checks in Big Red Dealership accounts, and fully reimbursed Norman Pawn & Gun for the purported down payments. The jury also heard that the Big Red Dealerships falsely documented vehicle trade-ins for lenders to approve loans.
On at least 542 occasions, the vehicle was never provided to the Big Red Dealerships and a separate transaction was documented—unbeknownst to the lender—in which the trade-in vehicle was resold to the customer for a dollar. Finally, the jury heard testimony that at least one lender approved questionable loans—for up to two to three times’ the value of vehicles being purchased—after a Big Red Dealership manager gave cash bribes to a loan officer and the Big Red Dealerships provided fake invoices to justify the inflated prices.
The jury convicted all three defendants of conspiring to commit wire fraud, alleged as Count 1 of the indictment. The jury convicted Mayes and Gooch with 12 counts of wire fraud based on false information sent to lenders for 12 specific customers, as alleged in Counts 2-13. The jury convicted Wells of six of those counts of wire fraud. For each conviction charged as Counts 1-13, each defendant faces up to 20 years in prison and a $250,000.00 fine.
The jury convicted all three defendants of six counts of uttering forged securities based on Norman Pawn & Gun checks forged by Big Red Dealership employees, as alleged in Counts 14-19 of the indictment. For Counts 14-19, each defendant faces up to 10 years in prison and a $250,000 fine.
The jury convicted all three defendants of six counts of aggravated identity theft, as alleged in Counts 20-25 of the indictment, for using the signatures of six customers without lawful authority. For Counts 20-25, each defendant faces a mandatory term of imprisonment of two years to run consecutive to any other term of imprisonment and a $250,000 fine. Sentencing will take place in approximately 90 days.
This case is the result of an investigation by FBI’s Oklahoma City Field Office. Assistant U.S. Attorneys K. McKenzie Anderson and Thomas Snyder are prosecuting the case.
U.S. Attorney’s Office, Western District of Oklahoma
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