American Expatriate Costa Rica

English-language news and information on Costa Rica

  • Home
  • Original Articles
  • News Reports
  • Book Reviews

American investigated for fraud in the US hid in Costa Rica

February 19, 2019 by Staff News Writer

A 42-year-old American wanted by the United States justice system for an alleged millionaire fraud of nearly $36 million, sought Costa Rica as his destination to flee from the authorities. However, he did not achieve his goal.

Paul McDaniel, who called himself Edward Martin Karuku and resided in Orange County (California), committed the crimes and fled in early 2017.

During that year, the investigations allowed authorities to find him in Costa Rican territory, but he was extradited last Thursday, February 14th. All this time, McDaniel was under arrest by immigration authorities.

The man, transferred to Los Angeles, is charged with 10 counts of bank fraud and is subject to a maximum penalty of up to 20 years in prison.

Why is he a suspect? Between July 2009 and December 2016, the subject apparently embezzled millionaire funds belonging to a company called Hypermedia Systems Inc. A technology services company based in Los Angeles. His role as accounting manager of that company allowed him to devise a scheme to -presumably- commit fraud.

McDaniel was assigned to work at Hypermedia as an accounting manager for E-Times Corp. As part of his job, he would request that payments be made from a Hypermedia account to pay the alleged suppliers. According to the indictment filed in September 2017, during the time he was working with Hypermedia, he formed a corporation in the state of Nevada with a name similar to one of the company’s suppliers and then opened a bank account on behalf of that entity.

Then, he allegedly used his authority as Hypermedia’s accounting manager to approve and direct payments for more than $36 million to this bank account. To justify the payments, he allegedly created false and fictitious invoices on the letterhead of the actual Hypermedia suppliers, falsely claiming that specific products had been provided to the company. The fraudulent payments were transferred to the bank account controlled by McDaniel.

How did you use the money? It is believed that McDaniel used the embezzled money to pay $23 million in credit cards and transferred another $8 million to personal bank accounts. Apparently, he also used millions of dollars in miscellaneous indeterminate expenses

crhoy.com

Related articles:

  1. American arrested for laundering more than $ 2 million in Costa Rica
  2. U.S. Embassy Reports Cases of Social Security Fraud in Costa Rica
  3. An American couple carried out illegal activities from Costa Rica
  4. Costa Rican “call center” scams 57 American senior citizens
  5. Yankelewitz lawyer: “Technically it’s not fraud”
  6. Costa Ricans on world child pornography chat are being investigated

Filed Under: News Reports

SIGN UP FOR AMERICAN EXPATRIATE IN COSTA RICA

It's free, we respect your privacy and you can unsubscribe at any time.

Connect with Social Media

  • Email
  • Facebook
  • RSS
  • Twitter
Follow @expatcostarica

Search Articles and News Reports

Articles by Publication Date

July 2025
M T W T F S S
 123456
78910111213
14151617181920
21222324252627
28293031  
« Apr    

News Summary

U.S. President Orders Navy Task Force to Caribbean to Counter Venezuela Threat

Costa Rica Government Silent on Travel Ban with Just 13 Days Left

News Summary

Legislators approve moratorium for registration of shareholders

President confirms gasoline give away for ethanol pilot project

Chinese company sells low cost smart phones in Costa Rica

Search continues for small plane missing in Drake

Farmers will march to the Ministry of Agriculture

IMN warns of dangerous UV radiation this Friday

Copyright © 2010 to 2025 · Link to Legal Notices and Privacy Policy