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Florida Men Facing Fraud Charges For Reportedly Cheating Investors

MIAMI (CBSMiami/AP) — A pair of Florida men are facing fraud charges after an Securities and Exchange Commission investigation found they cheated investors out of a lot of money.

According to the investigators, Larry Brodman misappropriated more than $1 million in investor funds for personal use.

The SEC also said it caught Brodman using money from newer investors to pay a portion of the supposed profits of earlier investors.

The Miami Herald reports on the complaint, which also involves another Florida man accused of acting illegally as an unregistered broker while offering and selling the securities involved.

Anthony Nicolosi was charged with violating the offering registration and broker-dealer registration provisions of the federal securities laws.

The complaint said Brodman and his companies told investors their money would be used to buy turnkey, multifamily properties in South Florida, which would then be renovated and rented out. From January 2016 to September 2020, Brodman and his companies raised more than $9 million from about 156 investors from 26 states through a series of unregistered securities offerings.

The investigation revealed Brodman and his companies told investors that commissions would only be paid to licensed brokers and dealers, but paid sales commissions exceeding the agreement and totaling about $1.2 million to unregistered sales agents, including Nicolosi.

Meanwhile, Brodman was only entitled to receive at most about $312,000, but the SEC said he misappropriated $1.12 million, diverting money into his personal account.

The SEC said it found that at least $124,000 returned to some investors as "profits" were actually payments by later investors. Also, a significant portion of $460,000 raised from two 2020 investors was immediately distributed to earlier investors, the complaint said.

Both men have agreed to pay a settlement to be determined by the court at a later date.

(© Copyright 2021 CBS Broadcasting Inc. All Rights Reserved. The Associated Press contributed to this report.)

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