Former college and NBA Basektball player found guilty
Posted: 09.08.2010 at 4:57 PM
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DES MOINES, IOWA -- Press Release from U.S. Attorney's Office, Southern District of Iowa

On September 8, 2010, former college and NBA basketball player Rumeal Robinson was found guilty of bank bribery, wire fraud, conspiracy to commit bank fraud, and making a false statement to a financial institution, announced U. S. Attorney Nicholas A. Klinefeldt. The jury returned guilty verdicts on all 11 counts against Robinson.

Evidence at trial showed that Robinson received the proceeds of a $377,000 business loan from Community State Bank in Ankeny, Iowa, on October 26, 2004. The next day, he wired $100,000 to the personal bank account of Brian Williams,
the Community State Bank loan officer who had authorized the loan. Williams pled guilty to conspiracy to commit bank fraud shortly before the start of Robinson’s trial.

In connection with the $377,000 loan, Robinson stated on loan documentsthat the purpose of the loan would be “short term working capital” for his business, Megaladon Development, Inc., which was pursuing a development project in Jamaica. However, he actually used a large portion of the loan proceeds to purchase a condominium for himself and his girlfriend and to furnish the condominium with plasma televisions and designer furniture. Robinson and his girlfriend purchased the condominium in the girlfriend’s name and claimed that she was the “Marketing Director” for Megaladon Development, with a salary in excess of $100,000. She actually worked in a strip club.

Following the $377,000 loan, Robinson received an additional business loan in the amount of $80,022 from Community State Bank in January 2005 even though he had not made any payments on the first loan. Williams was again the
loan officer who approved the loan. The loan documents again stated that the purpose of the loan was business; however, Robinson used a large portion of the money on personal expenses, including cars, clothes, and more furniture.

Williams had a personal lending authority limit at Community State Bank of $500,000. Any loans to a single borrower above that amount would have to be approved by a loan committee. Following the January 2005 loan, Community
State Bank loans to Robinson’s company totaled nearly $500,000 in outstanding principal and interest. Thus, he could not take out additional loans in his or his company’s name.

Williams and Robinson circumvented the lending authority limit of $500,000 by having the mother-in-law of Robinson’s business partner, Jorge Rodriguez, sign the loan documents for a $150,000 loan in April 2005. The loan proceeds were wired directly to the bank account of Robinson’s company, over which he had exclusive control. The mother-in-law, Magdalena Salup, was a long-time paraprofessional in a Miami, Florida, school district and earned less than $40,000 per year. She was informed that she was signing the papers to make an “investment” in Robinson’s company.

Rather than using the money for his business, Robinson spent more than $44,000 to buy or lease 10 vehicles, including 3 Mercedes-Benz, 2 BMWs, and 5 motorcycles. He also spent more than $3,000 at strip clubs, purchased a dog for
$1,000, and spent approximately $28,000 on condominium and house-related payments. It took him only 45 days to spend the entire $150,000.

Starting in July 2005, Robinson obtained three loans from Community State Bank, totaling $111,027.08, in the name of his girlfriend, Stephenie Hodge. Hodge’s name was used to circumvent Williams’ lending authority limit. Part of
the money was wired to a company with whom Robinson was making an investment. The remainder was wired from Community State Bank to Hodge, who then wired most of it to Robinson.

By November 2005, Robinson had received more than $700,000 in loans from Community State Bank but had not made any repayments. Meanwhile, it was becoming apparent that the Jamaica project would not succeed, either. Thus,
Williams and Robinson became jointly involved in an energy project with a company called “Fairway Energy.” Williams, with Robinson’s knowledge and encouragement, loaned $495,000 to Fairway Energy in exchange for a promise of
a $495,000 payment to Williams personally. Williams and Robinson expected that Williams would keep part of the $495,000 payment for himself but use most of it to pay down the loans that had been made directly and indirectly to Robinson. Williams later made an additional loan of $101,044 in connection with the Fairway Energy deal, again for the benefit of himself and Robinson.

In January 2006, as part of the Fairway Energy project, Robinson arranged the sale of his mother’s house in Cambridge, Massachusetts, from Rodriguez, his business partner, to Stephen Hodge, his girlfriend’s brother. Rodriguez had
become the owner of the house in early 2004 because Robinson convinced his mother, Helen Ford, to allow him to use equity from the house for the Jamaica project. The sale of the house from Rodriguez to Hodge in January 2006 occurred,
however, without Ford’s knowledge. The purchase price was $1 million, even though the sale to Rodriguez less than two years earlier had been for only $625,000. Hodge gave all the proceeds to Robinson, who invested most of the
money in Fairway Energy.

U.S. Attorney Nicholas A. Klinefeldt said: “This was a complicated case, but it arose from a very simple transaction: a bribe. Mr. Robinson could not get money through legitimate means, so he paid off the bank officer. He also lied on
bank documents, took advantage of people for their credit scores, and used a project in Jamaica as an excuse to ask people for money that, in reality, he planned to use for his own lavish lifestyle. I am pleased that after hearing the evidence, the jury concluded Mr. Robinson was in fact guilty of the charges against him.”

Each of the 11 counts of conviction carries a maximum penalty of 30 years’ imprisonment and a fine of $1,000,000.