Financial Fraud: Mark Allen Hartley Sentenced on Multiple Wire Fraud Charges Related To The Theft Over 400 Victims

Financial Fraud
Financial Fraud Sentenced

Business Owner Sentenced To 36 Months In Prison For Defrauding Over 400 Victims Of $809,205.43

Owner of Patriot Computers ordered to pay full restitution to victims

LOUISVILLE, Ky. – Mark Allen Hartley, the owner of Patriot Computers, a Virginia corporation, was sentenced this week, in United States District Court, by Chief Judge Joseph H. McKinley Jr., to 36 months in prison, on multiple wire fraud charges related to the theft of $809,205.43 from 434 victims, announced United States Attorney John E. Kuhn, Jr.

“In stealing this money, Hartley victimized many men and women of our armed services,” stated U.S. Attorney Kuhn. “His crime not only exemplifies a shockingly selfish avarice, it is also an affront to the sacrifices made by our servicemembers and their military families.  My office will do everything in its power to recover every penny of the unpaid restitution for these victims.”

According to the four count indictment and facts admitted in court by the defendant, from December 1, 2012, through April 14, 2014, Hartley, age 56, devised a scheme to defraud First Citizens Bank and its customers. At the time, Hartley operated a business called Spartan Group Inc., dba Patriot Computers. Patriot Computers sold computer equipment to its customers on installment sales contracts.  Customers of Patriot Computers agreed to have specified amounts of money taken from their paychecks on a regular basis until their purchases were paid in full.  These customers completed payment authorization forms for these payment arrangements, and then Patriot Computers submitted these forms to First Citizens Bank in Hardin County, Kentucky.  First Citizens Bank, through its bill payment service, would then transfer the payments from each customer’s paycheck to Patriot Computers’ account at Wells Fargo Bank until the customer’s contract with Patriot Computers was paid in full.

As part of the scheme and artifice to defraud, Hartley created fraudulent payment authorization forms and transmitted those, by e-mail, to First Citizens Bank. This caused First Citizens Bank to transfer unauthorized payments from victims’ paychecks to an account at Wells Fargo Bank, controlled by Hartley.  These unauthorized payments totaled approximately $809,205.43.  The average loss Hartley caused to each of his 434 individual victims was $1,864.  The court ordered full restitution for each individual victim in the amount of the loss they sustained, in addition to restitution to First Citizens Bank for the loss of $126,338.38 it sustained due to Hartley’s scheme.

In entering his plea of guilty, Hartley agreed that the United States could put Patriot Computers’ accounts receivable into receivership, with collections from those accounts being directed to pay restitution to victims.

Hartley’s sentence includes not only the three-year prison sentence but also requires the payment of $809,205.43 in restitution to his victims and a three-year term of supervised release after his prison term.  The United States has already collected $150,000 in funds from Hartley that, pending a court order, will be disbursed among victims.

This case was prosecuted by Assistant United States Attorneys Jason Snyder and Jessica R.C. Malloy and was investigated by the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI).

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