Daniel L. Gregg, 40, of Boynton Beach, FL, was sentenced to 27 months in prison, 3 years supervised release, and ordered to pay a $375 file and a $100 special assessment fee, Stephen R. Wigginton, United States Attorney for the Southern District of Illinois, announced today. Gregg pled guilty to one count of conspiracy to commit mail fraud and wire fraud. The indictment alleged that Gregg and others were involved in a telemarketing scam under the names Universal Marketing Solutions and Creative Vacation Solutions. The fraudulent companies, which operated in Florida and bilked over 22,000 victims of $30 million dollars, victimized consumers in all fifty states, the District of Columbia and Puerto Rico, all ten Canadian provinces and the Northwest Territory of Canada. There were at least 54 victims in twenty eight (28) of the thirty eight (38) counties comprising the Southern District of Illinois.
The criminal indictment alleged that Gregg was employed by a Universal Marketing Solutions and Creative Vacation Solutions franchise office. Beginning in October 2007, and continuing through at least January 2010, telemarketers for Universal Marketing Solutions and Creative Vacation Solutions placed cold calls to timeshare owners and then falsely represented that their company had actual buyers for the owners’ timeshare property. Gregg solicited advanced fees of up to several thousand dollars from each victim in purported closing costs - fees they promised would be refunded to the owner once the closing on the property occurred. Many timeshare owners were told that their closings were scheduled within the next 60 to 90 days. Despite collecting fees from 22,000 victims, not a single timeshare unit was ever sold. Gregg and his co-conspirators simply pocketed the closing costs.
Approximately twenty-four others have been charged in connection with the Creative Vacation Solutions telemarketing scam. The company’s former chief executive, Jennifer Kirk, pled guilty to a criminal Information on June 30, 2011. She was sentenced on January 9, 2012 to over 16 years in prison and five years’ supervised release. More than a dozen others have also been sentenced, receiving prison terms that range from 1 to 14 years.
The prosecution follows an investigation by the St. Louis Field Office of the Chicago Division of the United States Postal Inspection Service, the Florida Attorney General’s Office, the Florida Department of Agriculture and Consumer Services, and the Boynton Beach Florida Police Department. The prosecution of the case was handled by Special Assistant U.S. Attorney Katherine Lewis and Assistant U.S. Attorney Bruce Reppert.
Source: U.S. Department of Justice, Office of the United States Attorneys