SEC charges couple with
fraud in Chinese investor visa scheme
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[June 03, 2016]
By Suzanne Barlyn
(Reuters) - A California couple raised $27
million from at least 50 Chinese investors seeking U.S. immigration
visas but misused two-thirds of the money, instead of building a cancer
treatment center they had proposed, the U.S. Securities and Exchange
Commission said on Thursday.
Charles C. Liu and Xin “Lisa” Wang, both of Laguna Niguel, California,
promoted the facility as a project that would help the Chinese investors
obtain permanent U.S. immigration visas through a federal program known
as EB-5, the SEC said.
But Liu transferred $11.8 million of the funds to three firms in China,
including one in which he is chief executive and chairman, according to
the SEC's civil complaint, unsealed in a Los Angeles federal court on
Thursday.
Liu also diverted another $7 million to personal accounts for him and
Wang, the SEC said. No construction has started at the proposed facility
site more than 18 months after the couple began taking investments, the
SEC said.
A lawyer for Liu and Wang did not return a call requesting comment.
The SEC obtained a court order freezing the assets and accounts of Liu,
Wang, and their entities, as well as barring them from collecting
additional funds, the agency said.
Under the federal EB-5 program, wealthy foreigners can in effect buy
U.S. immigration visas for themselves and families by investing at least
$500,000 in certain development projects. In the past two decades, much
of the investment has gone into commercial real-estate projects such as
luxury hotels, ski resorts and gas stations.
But the program has also sparked concerns about possible scams, which
the SEC addressed in a 2013 investor warning. The Liu case is one of
several EB-5 fraud cases filed the agency has filed since that warning.
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The headquarters of the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission
(SEC) are seen in Washington, July 6, 2009. REUTERS/Jim Bourg
The project's investors were told that the center would provide a cancer
treatment that uses protons, instead of x-rays, to treat cancer, and
create more than 4,500 full-time jobs. The proposed building, slated for
Montebello, California, would contain 125,000 square feet, according to
the SEC's complaint.
Most of Liu's fund transfers occurred in February and March, just after
the SEC subpoenaed Liu in its investigation, according to the SEC's
complaint.
The SEC, whose lawsuit also names business entities related to the
purported treatment center, is seeking preliminary and permanent
injunctions as well as disgorgement of ill-gotten gains plus interest
and penalties.
The case is U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission v. Liu U.S. District
Court, Central District of California, 8:16-cv-00974-CJC-AGR.
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