Sacramento, California - Charles V. Stanley Jr., 65, of Agua Dulce, was sentenced Tuesday by U.S. District Judge John A. Mendez to six years in prison for conspiring to commit bank fraud and wire fraud, U.S. Attorney McGregor W. Scott announced.
According to court documents, Stanley was the owner and operator of Creditor Specialty Service Inc. (CSS), a debt collection company that operated in California, Oregon, and Nevada. Various companies contracted with CSS to collect debts, including credit unions based in Folsom, Sacramento, and Bakersfield. At Stanley’s direction, CSS employees collected money from debtors but underreported to creditors the amounts CSS actually collected. During the scheme, Stanley caused CSS to file lawsuits or settle with debtors without client authorization. After one credit union terminated its contract with Stanley, he continued to demand and collect money from its debtors, and persisted in this fraudulent conduct even after a court ordered Stanley to cease collecting from the credit union’s debtors.
Evidence was presented at sentencing that Stanley’s business maintained three sets of books and that Stanley used about $839,608 of the collected funds for his own personal spending. He also used funds to pay other clients to whom CSS owed money and to cover CSS’s operating costs. Stanley’s conspiracies and schemes caused clients and debtors to lose over $4 million.
This case was the product of an investigation by the FBI and the IRS Criminal Investigation. Assistant U.S. Attorney Matthew Segal prosecuted the case.