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Beverly pizzeria owner gets two years for trying to start a new life as a Vermont alpaca farmer using Covid-relief funds

A Beverly pizza-shop owner who got $680,000 in federal Covid-19 relief funds based on applications with inflated employee counts, then used the money to jump from pizza making to alpaca farming, was sentenced to two years in federal prison this week for his wooly fabrications, the US Attorney's office announced.

Dana McIntyre, 59, who remained at the farm he bought in Grafton, VT even after his scheme was uncovered and the money he had not already spent on buying land, fences and alpacas seized, was also ordered to pay a total of $679,156 in restitution and forfeiture, the US Attorney's office reported.

McIntyre, the former owner of Rasta Pasta, had pleaded guilty in April to four counts of wire fraud and three counts of money laundering.

McIntyre was arrested in May, 2021, after federal agents began looking into his Payroll Protection Plan application, on which he stated he had 47 employees and a monthly payroll of $265,000 at Rasta Pizza, when, in fact, he had maybe three to six employees and a monthly payroll closer to $10,000.

With the money in hand, he spent $395,000 for a farm in Grafton, along with $10,00 on alpacas, $7,800 on fencing and $16,555 for storage sheds - as well as $14,000 for a 2007 GMC Sierra and $8,500 for a 1950 Hudson. He also used some of the money to buy time on a Vermont radio station to broadcast a show on cryptocurrency investing.

Prosecutors had sought 32 months in prison. In a sentencing memorandum to US District Court Judge Denise Casper, they wrote:

During a national catastrophe when the federal government and lenders were racing to get loans out to small businesses and in turn, wages to employees who needed the money to survive, the Defendant took advantage of the program by stealing. He made up false information about fictitious companies purportedly operated by his children, and he reported grossly inaccurate information about his own business and work status. He did not merely steal from the government (although that alone is reprehensible); he stole from a program specifically designed to provide a lifeline to existing small businesses and their employees. He stole from a limited pool of money, which ultimately was exhausted, and he harmed not only the government, but also other businesses that truly needed those loans and, consequently, their employees. And he involved his children in his illegal activity by using their names and information in an attempt to fraudulently obtain additional funds meant to help real businesses through real economic disaster.

After he obtained a massive loan for the small pizzeria that he actually operated, the Defendant sold that business and used the loan proceeds to make a fresh start for himself in Vermont. He acquired and upgraded a farm, stocked it with alpacas, bought automobiles, and cut checks to a radio station so he could continue to expound on cryptocurrency and current events on the airwaves. No portion of the loan proceeds went toward keeping a business running or employees paid.

Notably, the Defendant's crime was not a momentary lapse in judgment. He did not submit just one false application. The Defendant systematically filled out fraudulent application documents until he was eventually awarded a loan that he did not deserve. The PUA claims that the Defendant submitted underscore his greed; even after obtaining a six-figure PPP loan, the Defendant continued to falsely collect smaller amounts of pandemic-related unemployment assistance, for no discernable reason other than that the PUA was another emergency program for the Defendant to take advantage of. ...

A 32-month sentence will serve as a warning and deterrent to others inclined to exploit similar relief programs in the future. It will illustrate that relief programs are not designed to be cash grabs and that the receipt of relief funds is not a right, but rather a privilege afforded to those who qualify based on true and accurate information.

McIntyre's attorney, however, argued that 12 months was more than enough to teach him a lesson on a life already filled with misery: His father died before he was 3 and his stepfather repeatedly sexually abused him and his three brothers and when his mother finally left the guy, she struggled to support her children, and McIntyre still remembers the shame of "having to present a punch-card at the cafeteria to obtain lunch." And while he eventually saw success in his work life, it all ended when his wife left him and made false accusations against him and he became a pothead and an alcoholic, with impaired judgment.

His arrest on May 4, 2021, which resulted in the immediate cancellation of his radio shows, shocked McIntyre into an acute awareness that he needed to break from the path he was on. Since that day, McIntyre has maintained continuous sobriety - he has used neither marijuana nor alcohol. In so doing, McIntyre has been able to repair the damage he caused to his relationship with his son and daughter while abusing alcohol. In addition, McIntyre tried to find gainful employment apart from the farm he knew he would eventually be required to forfeit. In the months following his arrest, McIntyre was hired by NH Exteriors as an estimator and salesman which had a commission structure that had the potential for him to make many times its base salary of $75,000. He was terminated during his second day on the job after the company learned about the instant charges. McIntyre was then able to find a job in door-to-door sales for cable and internet services which paid exclusively on commission. After knocking on over 300 doors during a 2-week period in January 2022 with minimal results, he decided to pursue other opportunities but soon found that his pending charges were an obstacle he was unable to overcome. He has since found success from the time he has devoted to the alpaca tours at the farm and maintaining the property for AirBnB, garnering hundreds of 5-star reviews in the process that speak to his kindness and hospitality. Although this will not be an option for him upon his release, McIntyre has found a construction company of small cottages and cabins willing to hire him in the future, notwithstanding his felony conviction.

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Comments

"he spent ... $8,500 for a 1950 Hudson"

What, no Packards or Kaiser-Frazers were available?

Also, will the alpacas be on sale soon in Craigslist?

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As for the alpacas, I was a bit surprised to read his attorney's sentencing memorandum that he still owns the farm and is still raising alpacas and has even branched out into running an Airbnb on the property (I thought the government had moved to seize the farm, if not the alpacas, after his arrest, but I guess not).

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It's always the alpacas that get hurt the most in situations like these.

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They hit the road in a 1950 Hudson.

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How does he still own the farm though? Wasn't it obtained through a criminal enterprise?

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Hudsons were very fast cars in the early 50s, and dominated stock car racing for some years. You could make a worse investment.

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I've read lots of anecdotes like, "The owner of my company got a PPP loan and bought a boat."

Are those cases being investigated, the ones where the PPP loan wasn't blatantly fraudulent, but still not quite legit? Is there a whistleblower reward system for reporting those cases?

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But there certainly have been a fair number of cases brought just by the US Attorney's office in Boston.

I suspect if you called the US Attorney's office, you could find out if there's any sort of reward system. At least the cases I've seen, it looks like it's more dogged work by federal agencies (and state agencies in the cases of people charged with defrauding the unemployment system).

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He also used some of the money to buy time on a Vermont radio station to broadcast a show on cryptocurrency investing.

Crypto. Where every asshole's an expert and every expert's an asshole.

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question from the group: Did he have a Boston accent? I feel like Ollie def. did.

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to stay at the AirBnB for free since we paid for it?

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Please use airbnb to schedule your .000000000000005 second stay.

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Or is scheduling limited to certain taxpayers?

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And there will be more cases like this that emerge. The best way to make a fortune in this God Blessed Land nowadays is to privatize public funding (and socialize cost).

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...you're saying he failed to pull the wool over their eyes?

:)

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I've added a link to his overall farm site in the first paragraph of the story.

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I thought he had alcaldes

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Grafton was flooded in July, like many other places in Vermont. Yet there are 9 reviews for July and August. Some of the reviewers are recognizable from stock photos.

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It wasn't entirely underwater. Some areas flooded badly and there were roads washed out or covered in debris, but parts were still passible/accessible.

Source: friends who live up there, family who lives there

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...there weren't any towns that were entirely under water, ever. Comes of having an entire state built on hills.

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He's still not the worst (former) pizzeria owner in Massachusetts.

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Dat

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Just go to prison dude, life has no meaning in the absence of alcohol or 420

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to raise me up a crop of alpaca floss ...

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or you'll become a tycoon....

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I wouldn't have no boss

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step 1: buy alpaca farm
step 2: ...
step 3: profit

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