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BALTIMORE FUNERAL HOME OWNER SENTENCED TO
OVER FOUR YEARS
FOR DEFRAUDING CUSTOMERS AND BANK OF OVER $925,000 IN
PREPAID FUNERAL EXPENSES
Paul Stella Stole
Prepaid Funeral Funds from 191 Customers Over a 43 Month
Period
Baltimore, Maryland - Chief U.S. District Judge
Benson E. Legg sentenced Paul Stella, age 43, of Forest
Hill, Maryland, today to 53 months in prison, followed
by three years of supervised release for bank fraud in
connection with stealing over $925,000 in prepaid
funeral expenses to pay for gambling, hotels, trips and
lavish gifts, announced United States Attorney for the
District of Maryland Rod J. Rosenstein. Judge Legg
ordered Stella to pay $757,521.22 in restitution.
U.S. Attorney Rod J. Rosenstein stated, “Paul Stella
defrauded 191 customers of over $925,000 in prepaid
funeral funds. He stole from elderly, sick and
financially strapped people so that he could maintain a
lifestyle that included extravagant gambling, vacations,
eleven expensive vehicles and lavish gifts.”
William D. Chase, Special Agent in Charge of the
Baltimore Division of the Federal Bureau of
Investigation said, “The actions of Mr. Stella in
stealing monies designated for funerals was an egregious
breach of trust.” Mr. Chase also thanked the FBI’s Bel
Air Office for their hard work on this case.
According to his plea agreement and court documents,
Stella owned and operated Paul Stella Funeral Home
located at 7527 Harford Road, Baltimore. Customers who
wanted to pay in advance for the cost of their funeral
entered into contracts with Stella. Stella defrauded the
customers using two schemes.
First, Stella falsely represented to approximately 75
customers that he would safeguard their money and hold
it in trust so the money would be available to pay for
the customers’ funerals when they died. Instead, from
2003 to December 2006, Stella cashed and/or deposited
over $370,000 of the customers’ monies into his personal
and business bank accounts.
In the second fraud scheme, Stella looted over
$550,000 in prepaid funeral funds from bank accounts
which were established under the former owner of the
funeral home. From June 2004 to January 2005, Stella
illicitly closed 111 customer bank accounts by forging
and causing to be forged customers’ signatures on
letters to the bank purporting to authorize the closing
of the prepaid funeral expense accounts. As a result,
the bank closed the accounts and issued checks payable
to the customers. Stella then fraudulently endorsed the
bank checks and deposited the proceeds in bank accounts
he controlled.
Many of the funeral home customers had particular
health or financial problems that caused them to seek
out the funeral arrangements. Some suffered from severe
health problems including dementia, cancer or lung
disease. Many were retired individuals on fixed pension
incomes.
Stella spent the ill-gotten gains from the above
schemes on extravagant gambling in Atlantic City, New
Jersey and Las Vegas, spending over $500,000 at casinos
and hotels. He also used the money to lease and make
loan payments on 11 high-priced vehicles, and for a
horse for his daughter, home improvements, vacations and
lavish gifts.
Eventually, customers started to ask questions about
their money and complained to the State Board of
Morticians (Board). When the Board initiated an
investigation, Stella asked one of his employees to take
funeral files home, and falsely claimed that all prepaid
funeral expense account monies in the bank accounts had
been reinvested in life insurance products. The Board
suspended his license on November 30, 2006.
United States Attorney Rod J. Rosenstein praised the
Federal Bureau of Investigation and U.S. Postal
Inspection Service for their investigative work. Mr.
Rosenstein thanked Assistant U.S. Attorney Harry Gruber,
who prosecuted the case.
Balt Sun story
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