Melbourne property developer charged with $1 million fraud

Melbourne property developer charged with $1 million fraud
Jessie RichardsonDecember 7, 2020

A Sunbury man appeared in the Melbourne Magistrates Court after the Australian Securities and Investment Commission alleged that he fraudulently obtained more than $1 million from investors.

Barry John Patrick, a 71 year old from Sunbury, Victoria, allegedly obtained the money from 14 investors between 2007 and 2010, telling investors it was to be used to fund a property development.

The Australian Securities and Investment Commission (ASIC) allege that Patrick took some of the funds for personal use, and used some of the money to pay interest payments to past and existing investors and to make loan repayments. According to ASIC, investors were persuaded to refinance their self managed superannuation funds and homes, take out additional loans or use credit cards to pay Patrick.

Patrick has been charged with eight counts of obtaining property by deception, five counts of obtaining financial advantage by deception, one count or theft and one count of running a financial services business without an Australian financial services license.

The charges relate to the three-year period between 2007 and 2010, in which ASIC alleges Patrick formed companies to purchase properties for development and consequently persuaded investors to refinance their homes or self-managed super funds, or take out additional loans or credit cards.

“ASIC allege the funds raised by Mr Patrick were not used to develop the properties, instead, they were used to pay interest payments to past and existing investors and to meet repayments on loans as well as for personal use,” said the regulator.

But this is not the first time Patrick has fallen on the wrong side of the law.

In 2010, Patrick received a four-month suspended jail sentence and a five-year good behaviour bond after pleading guilty to one charge of carrying on a financial services business without holding an AFS license and three charges of managing a corporation while disqualified.

According to ASIC, during August 2003 and December 2006, Patrick persuaded 40 investors to invest in three companies: E.K.B Properties, Sandgrove Specialised Securities and Cardinia Specialised Securities.

During the time, E.K.B Properties raised approximately $4 million, Sandgrove Specialised Services raised approximately $1.5 million and Cardinia Specialised Services raised approximately $1 million.

According to Money Management, ASIC alleged Patrick and his associate Karl Heinz Veljkovic were pushing investors to roll over their superannuation into self-managed funds and then invest those funds into the three companies.

However, the companies, which were controlled and managed by Patrick and Veljkovic, were placed into liquidation by the Federal Court in 2007 following investigations by ASIC. As of December 2010, ASIC said none of the investors had been repaid.

In 2007, both men consented to Federal Court orders banning them from carrying on a financial services business; parting with any funds that have come into their possession by issuing, selling or offering a financial product; and managing corporations for a period of 20 years.

Graeme Colley, director of technical and professional standards at the SMSF Professionals’ Association of Australia, said these kinds of cases arise from time to time, and are the result of a “failure of the independence between initial advice given to individuals and where the money ends up”.

Colley says cases like this don’t preclude investing your self-managed super fund in property, but says “the hotter it gets, the closer you are getting to the fire”.

As a general rule, Colley says investors should only consider advice from advisers with AFS licenses. This way, if something goes wrong, the investor potentially has some recourse against the licensee and can use formal complaints arrangements.

Colley says it is also important to do your own research and be as thorough as possible. “Make some investigations into who owns the business, the relationship between the adviser and the organisation, and if there are any other real investors,” says Colley.

Patrick is next due to appear in court on 16 September. He faces a maximum 10 years in jail for each of the deception and theft charges, and a maximum jail sentence of two years if found guilty of operating a financial services business without an AFS license.

Parts of this article first appeared on SmartCompany.

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