LOS ANGELES
A former Long Beach resident was sentenced Monday to 10 years in federal prison for leading a telemarketing scheme in which boiler room tactics were used to scam dozens of timeshare owners out of more than $5 million by giving them false promises of financial relief, officials stated.
U.S. District Judge David O. Carter sentenced Michael McDonagh, 43, who is currently a resident of Cohasset, Massachusetts, and required him to pay $5.4 million in restitution.
McDonagh pleaded guilty in May 2023 to one count of wire fraud.
This criminal case’s lead defendant, McDonagh, founded and/or controlled several telemarketing companies—Irish-based Global Transfer Inc., Costa Mesa-based Global Transfer SoCal Inc., Santa Ana-based Nationwide Transfer Inc., and Signal Hill-based Nationwide Exit Specialist Inc.—that purported to offer timeshare relief.
According to authorities, once one telemarketing company became inundated with consumer complaints, McDonagh formed a new company to perpetuate the fraud.
From 2015 to May 2019, “openers” who worked for the McDonagh-controlled telemarketing companies contacted owners and offered to help them terminate their timeshare interest for a fixed fee. If the timeshare owner expressed interest in the telemarketing companies’ services, the call was transferred to a “closer,” who convinced victims to sign contracts with the telemarketing companies to get them out of their timeshare for a “one-time fee.”
Within weeks of the victim paying the fee, the victims were contacted and told a series of lies to induce them to pay more money.
For example, some victims were falsely told that they would obtain a large settlement payment for an additional fee based on purported litigation against the victim’s timeshare company.
McDonagh and his co-schemers also made false promises of securing, for an additional fee, a large “restitution” payment from the victim’s timeshare company because the timeshare company had purportedly rented out the victim’s timeshare property without the victim’s permission.
McDonagh or his co-schemers, whom he employed at his telemarketing companies, were responsible for actual losses of more than $5 million.
The other four defendants charged, along with McDonagh, have also pleaded guilty to one count of wire fraud and await sentencing.
“[McDonagh] and those who operated in the scheme he orchestrated defrauded over 500 victims, robbing many of them of significant savings—and some of over $100,000,” prosecutors argued in a sentencing memorandum. “During the multi-year scheme, [McDonagh] exhibited callousness to the plight of his victims, including telling his co-schemers to take ‘no prisoners’ and have ‘[n]o remorse.’”
The United States Secret Service and the Huntington Beach Police Department investigated this matter.
Assistant U.S. Attorneys Thomas F. Rybarczyk of the Public Corruption and Civil Rights Section and Ian V. Yanniello of the General Crimes Section prosecuted this case.