Did this Texan falsely file for PPP loans only to buy crypto with the funds?

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Did‌ ‌this‌ ‌Texan‌ ‌falsely‌ ‌file‌ ‌for‌ ‌PPP‌ ‌loans‌ ‌only‌ ‌to‌ ‌buy‌ ‌crypto‌ ‌with‌ ‌the‌ ‌funds?
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A 29-year-old Houston man is facing charges of falsifying applications for a PPP loan and attempting to buy cryptocurrency with the funds.

Joshua Thomas Argires is being accused of taking more than $1.1 million in Paycheck Protection Program loans to pay employees that never even existed.

The Small Business Association’s Paycheck Protection Program is intended to provide incentives for small business owners to keep their workers on the payroll. During the Covid-19 crises, these loans are meant to save small businesses. But Argires allegedly made up a business entirely just to get his hands on some of the funds.

According to the criminal complaint, Argires does not fit the bill of a criminal mastermind. Instead, he clumsily managed to secure a hefty sum in loans but left a long trail of clues that point to his guilt. He is now being charged with wire fraud, making false statements to a financial institution, bank fraud and engaging in prohibited monetary transfers.

The two loans added up to more than $1.1 million. One of which, for “Texas Barbecue” was for $956,600.

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Prosecutors claim Argires fabricated the restaurant he called “Texas Barbecue” and another company called “Houston Landscaping.”

They say the funds went to a Coinbase account and generated profit instead of being filed out to employees as the loan was intended.

“The funds received on behalf of Texas Barbecue were invested in a cryptocurrency account, while the funds obtained for Houston Landscaping were held in a bank account and slowly depleted via ATM withdrawals.”

The charges also allege that Argires claimed both companies had “numerous employees and hundreds of thousands of dollars in payroll expenses.” But investigators found that both companies had exactly 0 employees.

Argires told investigators that he was only involved in the financial end of the companies and that cryptocurrency was used to pay employees. But the investigators were able to figure out that the employees were totally made up after some digging. Little to no presence online was a quick sign that Texas Barbecue was just fiction. Investigators also unsuccessfully tried to purchase some food online.

After more drilling, the investigators realized that Texas Barbecue did not even have a bank account at the time Argires filed the application for the PPP loan.