A Florida man has pleaded guilty for fraudulently obtaining nearly $4 million in Paycheck Protection Program loans and using the money to buy a Lamborghini sports car, authorities said.
The Department of Justice announced Wednesday that David Hines, 29, of Miami pleaded guilty to one count of wire fraud and is scheduled to be sentenced on April 14.
MORE: Rapper who bragged about defrauding government in music video gets arrested for actually doing itFederal authorities seized the 2020 Lamborghini Huracan Hines purchased for $318,000 as well as some $3.4 million from his bank accounts at the time of his arrest. Hines admitted that he purchased the vehicle within days of receiving the fraudulent PPP funds, according to the DOJ.
Hines also admitted that he fraudulently sought millions of dollars in PPP loans through applications to a financial institution on behalf of different companies as part of his plea deal. In the applications, he made numerous false and misleading claims about the companies' payroll expenses, the DOJ said, and the unnamed financial institution approved his application and provided him with $3.9 million in PPP loans.
The PPP loans program, which originated as part of the CARES Act last March, provided emergency forgivable loans to small businesses amid the pandemic that has forced swaths of businesses to close.
The program has courted controversy as reports emerged that Kanye West's fashion brand, the Church of Scientology and businesses with ties to the Trump family were among a long list of eyebrow-raising recipients of the loans.
MORE: The inequities of PPP: Megachurches, large corporations receive money ahead of small businessesHines' guilty plea also comes as lawmakers mull over additional coronavirus relief aid.
The DOJ said its fraud section has prosecuted more than 100 defendants since the CARES Act was passed and seized more than $60 million in cash proceeds derived from fraudulently obtained PPP loans.
The agency is urging anyone with allegations of attempted COVID-19 relief-related fraud to report it to its hotline or through its website.