South Florida federal authorities say Andre Lorquet, pictured here on his Instagram page, fraudulently received $4.4 million in COVID-19 relief funds. He has been indicted on four counts of wire fraud, four counts of money laundering, and one count of aggravated identity theft. - Instagram
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COVID-19 loan fraud in South Florida

South Florida, long known as the nation’s capital of fraud schemes, has incurred more than 140 PPP criminal cases over the past three years, according to the U.S. Attorney’s Office. Here are a few.

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Miami-Dade Corrections sergeant faces prison time for COVID-19 loan fraud

Former immigration detention guard in Miami charged with COVID-19 loan fraud and ID theft

A Miami-Dade police officer has pleaded guilty to a $275,000 COVID-19 relief loan fraud

A Florida lawyer’s $1.6 million fraud cash got used on a jet, house and a Trump golf club

Miami woman pleads guilty to COVID loan fraud, leasing Bentley with illicit funds

Brothers bought 14 Broward houses in a $2.5 million COVID relief fraud, feds say

Fort Lauderdale businessman raked in pandemic loans, but splurged on ‘Bimmer,’ himself

Former Miami cop admits to milking a COVID-19 relief program out of more than $40,000

South Florida ‘Ponzi’ schemer headed to prison after ripping off $3 million from investors

Miami police officer fraudulently acquired over $40,000 in COVID relief, authorities say

Former Miami TD Bank manager gets 10-year sentence for swindling pandemic loan program

A Miami influencer shared her luxurious lifestyle online. It was funded by COVID cash

Florida man gets 6 years for bilking millions in PPP loans. He’ll also lose his Lamborghini

Florida man faces more than prison for $3 million PPP fraud. He’ll lose citizenship

Miami woman’s Bentley purchase got the feds’ attention. She’s charged with PPP fraud

Feds bust $28M pandemic loan-fraud ring after tip on South Florida liquor store owner

Florida TD Bank manager masterminded $30 million COVID loan fraud and kickback scheme

Miami man bought Lamborghini with federal pandemic funds. Now, he faces prison

Feds: Miami man spent $4.4 million in COVID loans on Teslas, a Lamborghini and a Porsche

Feds in Florida and two other states to lead crackdown on COVID-19 relief fraud

Did a Florida lawyer use PPP loan money to help cover a $288,000 trust account shortage?

Prominent Florida developer got $900,000 in pandemic loans. Feds charge him with fraud

Coral Springs cop used COVID relief loan to repair his own vintage car, feds say

Florida man got $4.5 million from COVID-19 PPP fraud, then lost $3 million — and freedom

South Florida ring busted, punished in COVID-19 business fraud case stretching to Ohio

Another person linked to former Broward Mayor Holness charged with COVID relief fraud

Video shows accused Miami hitman counting PPP cash for murder of TSA officer

For $1,000, a Miami-Dade police employee would run a COVID-19 relief scam for you

The hit on a Miami TSA officer was likely bankrolled by a PPP loan, new records show

Daughter of former Broward mayor gets prison time for ripping off COVID-19 program

2 Florida men helped ring rip off federal loan program for $35 million, took cut of proceeds

Ex-NFL player given more than 3 years in prison in $1.2 million COVID fraud scheme

A Hialeah Gardens tax preparer had $773,600 cash at home. Was it from COVID-19 fraud?

A Miami man used his dead business and sold condo for a $920,000 COVID-19 relief fraud

A Miami-Dade County employee tried a $160,000 COVID-19 relief fraud. Here’s what happened

Ex-NFL player who starred at Miami high school pleads guilty to COVID-19 relief fraud

A Miami-Dade County worker admits attempting a $160,000 COVID-19 relief scam

Four Doral cops suspended with pay as feds probe COVID relief small business loans

South Florida couple claiming to be ‘farmers’ for COVID-19 relief sent to prison

Miami man who bought Lamborghini with COVID-19 relief money sentenced to six years

Feds spotlight Miami as capital of COVID-19 fraud, from business to employee benefits

A Hialeah Gardens tax preparer tried to pull a $2.3 million COVID loan fraud, feds say

South Florida couple claiming to be ‘farmers’ plead guilty to $1 million pandemic scam

Man accused of using COVID-19 relief loans to buy a Lamborghini pleads guilty

Miami-Dade nurse accused of using $474K in PPP funds to pay Mercedes lease, child support

Top South Florida coach charged with fleecing $1 million in COVID-19 relief loans

South Florida rapper accused of buying Ferrari with federal COVID-19 relief money

NFL player accused of bilking $1.2 million from federal COVID-19 loan program

North Miami neighbors claimed to be farmers to get COVID-19 relief. Feds gave them $1 million.

It is the state’s largest PPP loan scheme. Three from South Florida have been charged

First he got $4 million in COVID-19 relief loans. Then he bought a Lamborghini.

Two South Florida men accused of fleecing millions from SBA’s COVID-19 loan program

The federal government handed out hundreds of billions of dollars in emergency business loans during the COVID-19 pandemic, including giving away small fortunes to people who didn’t qualify for them, authorities admit.

Take Andre Lorquet, who federal prosecutors say pretended to be a certified tax preparer and falsely claimed a handful of businesses were struggling during the pandemic. The 38-year-old Miami man ended up spending the millions he got from the government on exotic sports cars, from a couple of Teslas to a Lamborghini, according to a new indictment.

Lorquet is the latest person among dozens charged in South Florida with scamming the system during the pandemic, prosecutors in the U.S. Attorney’s Office in Miami said.

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Lorquet applied for federal relief loans totaling $4.7 million, completing falsified IRS forms with bogus revenue, payroll and other information through his company, Miami ENT LLC, between June 2020 and November 2021, prosecutors allege in the indictment. Lorquet received almost the entire loan amounts he asked for — $4.4 million — all approved by lenders and guaranteed by the Small Business Administration under the massive pandemic relief program.

But instead of spending the money the right way on payroll and other overhead costs, prosecutors say, Lorquet went on a luxury-car shopping spree, South Florida-style, scooping up a Tesla Plaid, a Tesla Model S, a Lamborghini Urus and a Porsche Panamera GTS.

South Florida federal authorities say Andre Lorquet, pictured here on his Instagram page, fraudulently received $4.4 million in COVID-19 relief funds. He has been indicted on four counts of wire fraud, four counts of money laundering, and one count of aggravated identity theft. - Instagram

The indictment, accusing him of a scheme to “unjustly enrich himself,” charges Lorquet with four counts of wire fraud, four counts of money laundering and one count of aggravated identity theft. If convicted, he faces up to 22 years in prison.

Lorquet had his first appearance in Miami federal court on Tuesday, according to prosecutors in the U.S. Attorney’s Office. His case was listed on the court’s website, but no defense attorney was listed for him.

Prosecutors said in a news release that Lorquet “fraudulently” obtained the COVID-19 relief loans under the SBA’s Paycheck Protection Program, the Economic Injury Disaster Relief Program, and the Shuttered Venue Operator Grant. Under these programs, if the loans were used by businesses for legitimate purposes, such as payroll and lease expenses, then they would be forgiven.

But that wasn’t the case with Lorquet’s applications, according to Homeland Security Investigations.

The COVID-19 business relief programs have been so riddled with fraud that the U.S. Department of Justice designated South Florida and two other regions of the country to take the lead in cracking down on the nationwide problem.

After losing billions of dollars in pandemic relief funds due to phony claims, the U.S. government started deploying investigative teams in South Florida, California and Maryland in September to zero in on criminal organizations that are suspected of stealing from public programs offering small business loans as well as unemployment insurance.

The federal strike-force teams were picked in these states not only because they have experienced significant relief fraud during the pandemic, but they also boast the resources to help combat the escalating problem across the country.

The number of prosecutions and losses have been staggering over the past two years.

To date, Justice Department officials say prosecutors have brought criminal charges against more than 1,500 defendants nationwide, with relief fund losses exceeding $1.1 billion and seizures surpassing $1.2 billion. Additionally, prosecutors have launched civil probes of more than 1,800 individuals and entities that applied for pandemic relief loans totaling more than $6 billion.

As the nation’s No. 1 fraud capital, South Florida has led the financial crime wave that followed the passage of the CARES Act, according to federal prosecutors.

The U.S. Attorney’s Office in South Florida has charged more than 80 COVID-19 relief cases, mostly involving the Paycheck Protection Program program, making it the nation’s leader in such prosecutions. Those schemes account for loan requests totaling about $250 million, with applicants such as Lorquet receiving ill-gotten funds, prosecutors said.

In South Florida, criminal cases have included a businessman using PPP money to buy a $318,000 Lamborghini, a nurse who lied about his business to get $474,000 that was used in part to pay a Mercedes-Benz lease and child support, and a North Miami suburban couple who claimed to be farmers to qualify for $1 million in relief benefits.

Miami Herald staff writer David Ovalle contributed to this story.

This story was originally published November 09, 2022 10:14 AM.

Jay Weaver writes about federal crime at the crossroads of South Florida and Latin America. Since joining the Miami Herald in 1999, he’s covered the federal courts nonstop, from Elian Gonzalez’s custody battle to Alex Rodriguez’s steroid abuse. He was part of the Herald teams that won the 2001 and 2022 Pulitzer Prizes for breaking news on Elian’s seizure by federal agents and the collapse of a Surfside condo building killing 98 people. He and three Herald colleagues were 2019 Pulitzer Prize finalists for explanatory reporting on gold smuggling between South America and Miami.