SEC Charges Las Vegas REIT Operator With Securities Fraud

The Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) has announced securities fraud charges against recidivist Michael Shustek, the CEO of several Las Vegas REITs, and his wholly-owned investment advisory firm, Vestin Mortgage LLC.

The complaint alleges that since at least 2012, Shustek fraudulently enriched himself and The Parking REIT, at the expense of two publicly traded REITs that he earlier had founded, Vestin Realty Mortgage I (VRTA) and Vestin Realty Mortgage II (VRTB). According to the complaint, Shustek siphoned $29 million from VRTA and VRTB in order to funnel the money into The Parking REIT and later directed VRTA and VRTB to enter into a series of money-losing transactions in which the same six buildings were repeatedly re-sold, all to benefit himself and The Parking REIT. 

The SEC further alleges Shustek deceived the boards of directors of VRTA and VRTB—and violated his fiduciary duties to those companies—in two separate securities transactions to get the companies to pay him almost $10 million. Finally, the complaint alleges Shustek repeatedly misled investors by causing VRTA and VRTB to make false and misleading statements in their public filings, which hid his self-dealing.

“REIT executives have a responsibility to be forthright with investors about how their money is being spent,” said Erin E. Schneider, director of the SEC’s San Francisco Regional Office. “As we allege in our complaint, Shustek deceived the REITs’ boards of directors and shareholders to hide his repeated misuse of their assets to benefit himself.”

The SEC charged Shustek and Vestin Mortgage with violating the antifraud provisions of the Securities Act, Exchange Act, and Advisers Act, and seeks disgorgement plus pre-judgment interest, penalties, permanent injunctions, and industry, penny stock, and officer and director bars against Shustek.



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