Briefly in the news
The U.S. attorney’s office on Thursday indicted three men -- two of
them from Costa Mesa -- on charges of running a $2.6-million investment
scam that allegedly used investor funds to buy automobile loans,
officials said.
Paul Jerome Booth, 73, and James Cunningham, 44, both of Costa Mesa,
along with 50-year-old Donald Lee Roat of Waldport, Ore., allegedly spent
investors’ money on themselves, officials said.
Booth and Cunningham formed CBN Financial Resources Corp. in June
1997. Roat joined them later that year. Officials said the business, also
known as Trans Lending Co., was initially run out of Cunningham’s Costa
Mesa home but later moved to Huntington Beach.
Prosecutors allege that the men used their company to sell nine-month
promissory notes to investors, who typically made a minimum investment of
$25,000 after being told the notes paid 10% interest.
Officials said between July 1997 and November 2000 about 50 people
invested about $2.6 million. Officials at the U.S attorney’s office say
authorities are seeking to expose similar scams in Orange County.
The three defendants have been charged with nine counts of mail fraud
and one count of money laundering. If convicted, each faces up to 55
years in federal prison.
All the latest on Orange County from Orange County.
Get our free TimesOC newsletter.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Daily Pilot.