NRIpress.com
NRI lawyer might go to jail 30 years for $2 mn fraud
Los Angeles, CA, Oct 03, 2009
An Indian-American lawyer has agreed to plead guilty to two felony
charges relating to a scheme where he took more than $2 million
awarded in a class action suit and lost it all on the stock market.
A criminal information filed in the US District Court in Los Angeles
charges Sandeep Baweja, 39, with one count of wire fraud and one
count of obstruction of justice, the Federal Bureau of Investigation
(FBI) said Friday.
Prosecutors filed a plea agreement in which Baweja agreed to plead
guilty to the two charges which carry a statutory maximum penalty
of 30 years in federal prison. Baweja was the sole proprietor of
Baweja Law Group (BLG), which was based in Los Angeles until August
2008 when BLG relocated to Irvine.
According to court documents, Baweja filed a class action on behalf
of current and former real estate agents of ZipRealty, Inc. in May
2007. The complaint alleged that ZipRealty denied class members
certain sales commissions, refused to reimburse business expenses,
and made unlawful wage deductions.
In the fall of 2007, Baweja reached a settlement with ZipRealty
in which the company agreed to pay $3.55 million to compensate class
members and to pay for attorney's fees and other costs.
On March 10, 2008, United States District Judge S. James Otero
finalised the judgment in the case, which prompted ZipRealty to
pay the $3.55 million settlement, a quarter of which went to attorney's
fees for Baweja and his co-counsel.
Baweja's share of the attorney's fees was $660,000. The balance
of the settlement - approximately $2,525,000 - was to be paid to
approximately 800 class member claimants on a pro rata basis.
After the settlement money was deposited into a bank account that
Baweja controlled on behalf of the class, Baweja set up his own
online stock brokerage account and began transferring most of the
settlement proceeds into that trading account.
Although he had no experience as a trader in the stock market,
Baweja used the misappropriated funds to day trade securities on
margin. By December 2008, the value of Baweja's stock account had
shrunk to approximately $55,000, meaning that Baweja had lost virtually
all of the settlement money that he had held in trust for his clients.
(IANS)

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