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Press Release

Ariel Quiros Pleads Guilty to Fraud Charges Related to The Jay Peak EB-5 AnC Vermont Project in Northeast Vermont

For Immediate Release
U.S. Attorney's Office, District of Vermont

The United States Attorney’s Office announced that today Ariel Quiros, 64, of Key Biscayne, Florida, pleaded guilty before Chief Judge Geoffrey W. Crawford in United States District Court in Burlington to three felony charges in connection with his involvement in the Jay Peak Biomedical Research Park EB-5 investment project, also called the AnC Vermont project.

Quiros pleaded guilty to conspiring with co-defendants William Kelly, Jong Weon (Alex) Choi, and William Stenger in a multi-year wire fraud scheme to defraud immigrant investors seeking green cards through the EB-5 program.  He also pleaded guilty to money laundering and to concealing material facts in a matter within the jurisdiction of a federal agency, namely United States Citizenship and Immigration Services (USCIS), which oversaw the EB-5 process.

During the plea hearing, Quiros admitted to a lengthy statement of facts. That factual statement was appended to the written plea agreement filed with the Court last week.  In sum, Quiros admitted participating in a scheme conceived in 2011 and carried through until he lost control of the project in April 2016. The AnC Vermont project, managed by Quiros and Stenger, was designed to raise $110 million from 220 immigrant investors in order to build and operate a biotechnology company on a property in Newport.  From 2012 to 2016, Quiros and his co-defendants obtained approximately $85 million, plus approximately $8 million in “administrative fees", from approximately 169 immigrant investors in the AnC project. Under the EB-5 program created by Congress, immigrant investors could obtain lawful permanent residency (green cards) by investing $500,000 each in a United States business that would create ten jobs per investment. Pursuant to federal law, the AnC project was regulated and monitored by USCIS and the Vermont Regional Center, a part of state government.

Quiros admitted that the scheme involved misleading AnC investors about important information, including how investor money would be used, the timing of job creation for the project, and Choi’s role in the project. For example, Quiros knew that investors were given a use-of-funds chart that contained a number of misrepresentations about the amount of funds Quiros and Choi planned to receive. Moreover, as the defendants raised investor money, Quiros used investor funds for purposes unrelated to the project, including the payoff of a loan at Raymond James and as collateral for a separate loan at Citibank. Quiros also acknowledged that he participated in concealing this misuse of funds.

Quiros further admitted that the scheme included misrepresentations about the timing of the jobs that would be created by the project and the business revenue that would be generated from the project. Marketing the project to immigrant investors depended on job creation and future revenue, since the defendants emphasized their ability to satisfy the job creation standards under EB-5 law and repay immigrant investors. Quiros understood that his co-defendants devised job and revenue projections based on the number of jobs needed to obtain project approval from USCIS, and Quiros did not inquire whether they had a viable plan to actually create those jobs or achieve those revenues. AnC Vermont would supposedly rent clean rooms, market stem cell therapies, and manufacture artificial organs. Quiros admitted that investors were deceived in regard to all three facets of the future business.

In addition to the wire fraud conspiracy charges, Quiros admitted using AnC investor funds for personal expenses, specifically a $6 million payment to the IRS in early 2015 funded by the Citibank loan described above. In addition, Quiros helped conceal from the Vermont Regional Center that Choi, who was deeply involved in the project, was being investigated in Korea for financial crimes.

In the plea agreement, Quiros agreed to cooperate in the government’s ongoing matters. The plea agreement caps Quiros’s jail sentence at 97 months, so long as he abides by the terms of the agreement. The government agreed that it would not recommend a fine or forfeiture, but instead focus on seeking a restitution order for victims. The government requested that the Court delay Quiros’s sentencing pending his ongoing cooperation.

Co-defendants Kelly and Stenger have entered not guilty pleas to the pending charges, which are only allegations. These defendants are presumed to be innocent unless and until proven guilty beyond a reasonable doubt in a court of law. The Court has scheduled their trial for 2021.  Co-defendant Choi remains at large. 

United States Attorney Christina E. Nolan expresses her ongoing gratitude for the outstanding investigation assistance by the Federal Bureau of Investigation, the Criminal Investigation Division of the Internal Revenue Service, the Food and Drug Administration, and for the assistance of the Justice Department’s Fraud Section and Office of International Affairs. The prosecutors handling the case are Assistant U.S. Attorneys Nicole Cate and Paul Van de Graaf and Trial Attorney Jessee Alexander-Hoeppner, from the Department of Justice Criminal Division. Ariel Quiros is represented by Neil Taylor, Esq. and Robert Katims, Esq. William Kelly is represented by Robert Goldstein, Esq. and Mary Kehoe, Esq. William Stenger is represented by Brooks MacArthur, Esq. and David Williams, Esq.

The year 2020 marks the 150th anniversary of the Department of Justice.  Learn more about the history of our agency at www.Justice.gov/Celebrating150Years

Updated August 14, 2020

Topics
Financial Fraud
Securities, Commodities, & Investment Fraud
Immigration