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Norman D’Souza Sentenced in $18M Loan Fraud Scheme

Norman D’Souza, 50, of Monmouth Junction, New Jersey, is headed to federal prison for two years after admitting to masterminding an $18 million accounting fraud that duped a New York bank and Gas City, Indiana, into handing over millions in loans based on lies. The former chief financial officer and vice president of finance for a New Jersey-based furniture wholesaler and its Indiana-affiliated manufacturer pleaded guilty on April 1, 2016, and was sentenced yesterday by U.S. District Judge Ronnie Abrams in Manhattan federal court.

D’Souza’s scheme was built on falsified financial documents designed to inflate the health of the companies. From 2011 to September 2014, he repeatedly submitted doctored borrowing base certificates and financial statements to a New York commercial bank, falsely boosting sales and accounts receivable to secure a $17 million revolving credit facility. When the house of cards collapsed, the company defaulted with $16.99 million still owed, leaving the bank to absorb the loss.

But D’Souza didn’t stop there. In 2012, he turned his fraudulent eye toward Gas City, Indiana, where local officials were offering financial incentives to attract jobs. To qualify, D’Souza inflated the sales figures of the Indiana-based furniture manufacturer, tricking the city into issuing over $1 million in municipal loans. By September 2014, that company also defaulted—leaving the city on the hook and 60 residents out of work.

U.S. Attorney Preet Bharara, whose office prosecuted the case, made no bones about the damage: “Norman D’Souza repeatedly misrepresented the financial condition of two companies to deceive a bank and a municipality into lending the companies millions of dollars. He will now spend time in a federal prison for his crimes.” The fraud, Bharara noted, wasn’t just paper pushing—it had real-world consequences for workers and taxpayers.

In addition to his two-year prison term, D’Souza was sentenced to two years of supervised release and ordered to pay $12,256,871.48 in both forfeiture and restitution. That number represents the core financial fallout tied directly to the fraud, though it remains to be seen how much—if any—of it will ever be recovered.

The investigation was led by the Federal Bureau of Investigation, with prosecution handled by the U.S. Attorney’s Office’s Complex Frauds and Cybercrime Unit. Assistant U.S. Attorney Edward A. Imperatore prosecuted the case. The outcome serves as a stark reminder: in the world of corporate finance, lies might balance the books temporarily—but they always come due.

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