Massachusetts woman sent to prison for $2.1M in COVID relief fraud

LAWRENCE, Mass. (WWLP) – A Massachusetts woman who owned a tax preparation company was sentenced to prison for bank fraud and $2.1 million in Covid relief fraud.

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According to the Department of Justice, 42-year-old Luz Paulino owned and operated Agape Financial Services, a Lowell-based company that provided tax preparation and notary services. She allegedly filed false and fraudulent federal tax returns for the calendar year 2019 using the stolen identities, names, and Social Security numbers of individual victims.

The Department of Justice says that she concealed her involvement by stating the returns had been prepared by two former employees of Agape. She then used the fraudulent returns to obtain Refund Advance Loans in the names of her victims and then cashed the loan checks using false identification documents and forged signatures.

Paulino also stole identities of people in California, Michigan, Indiana, and elsewhere to apply to the SBA for $2.1 million in COVID-19 Emergency Injury Disaster Loans (EIDL). She filed applications between June 2020 and October 2021 listing fake companies that appeared to suffer revenue loss due to the coronavirus pandemic.

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