Arizona Attorney General
October 19
 
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Attorney General Terry Goddard announced on Friday that Guillermo  Ricardo De La Vara, 68, of Phoenix, has been sentenced in Maricopa  County Superior Court to three-and-a-half years in prison on charges of  theft and fraudulent schemes and artifices.

Over a two-year  period from 2005 to 2007, De La Vara fraudulently obtained millions of  dollars from investors by selling promissory notes and interests in  deeds of trust, called “lien investments” though his companies,  “Mortgage Notes, Inc.” and “MNI Properties, LLC.”  De La Vara falsely  claimed that these lien investments were secured by real property, and  would be appropriately recorded.  However, neither De La Vara nor his  companies had any legal right to the properties covered by many of the  lien investments, and investors did not receive the monthly payments  from the investments that they were promised.

De La Vara  was indicted on 80 counts, including 19 counts of theft, one count of  fraud, two counts of forgery, one count of illegal control of an  enterprise and 57 counts of securities law violations.

In  addition to prison time, De La Vera will be placed on seven years of  probation upon his release.  He is also required to pay the 26  investor-victims in the case restitution of $5.7 million and pay  $125,000 in administrative penalties to the Arizona Corporation  Commission.

The investigation of the case was led by  Special Agents of the Securities Division of the Arizona Corporation  Commission, and the case was prosecuted by Assistant Attorney General  Michael Flynn.

Attorney General Terry Goddard announced on Friday that Guillermo Ricardo De La Vara, 68, of Phoenix, has been sentenced in Maricopa County Superior Court to three-and-a-half years in prison on charges of theft and fraudulent schemes and artifices.

Over a two-year period from 2005 to 2007, De La Vara fraudulently obtained millions of dollars from investors by selling promissory notes and interests in deeds of trust, called “lien investments” though his companies, “Mortgage Notes, Inc.” and “MNI Properties, LLC.”  De La Vara falsely claimed that these lien investments were secured by real property, and would be appropriately recorded.  However, neither De La Vara nor his companies had any legal right to the properties covered by many of the lien investments, and investors did not receive the monthly payments from the investments that they were promised.

De La Vara was indicted on 80 counts, including 19 counts of theft, one count of fraud, two counts of forgery, one count of illegal control of an enterprise and 57 counts of securities law violations.

In addition to prison time, De La Vera will be placed on seven years of probation upon his release.  He is also required to pay the 26 investor-victims in the case restitution of $5.7 million and pay $125,000 in administrative penalties to the Arizona Corporation Commission.

The investigation of the case was led by Special Agents of the Securities Division of the Arizona Corporation Commission, and the case was prosecuted by Assistant Attorney General Michael Flynn.

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