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FRAUD IN B.C.: Millions vanished from roadbuilder at centre of lengthy fraud investigation

A drive-by shooting, accusations of Hells Angels involvement, and investors never paid back
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Contracts between convicted fraud artist Matthew Brooks and Florida businessman Brad Muller. Brooks confirmed the contracts, some written by hand on hotel stationary, were genuine. (Heather Colpitts/Langley Advance Times)

This is the third in a series of stories delving into large-scale cases of suspected fraud and how they go unresolved, and sometimes even uninvestigated, in B.C. and a few specific to Langley.

91裸聊视频淔ollow the money.91裸聊视频

Two men offered that advice when asked what happened to cash that vanished in one of the biggest scams in Langley history.

Brad Muller was one. He says he lost millions in business deals with Matthew Brooks, a man Muller didn91裸聊视频檛 know was under investigation for fraud when their business partnership began.

He repeatedly went to the police in B.C. to complain, but says there has been no investigation of his case.

The other was Brooks himself, who after stealing $6 million, went to prison destitute a decade later.

The fate of the missing $6 million in the Aggressive Road Building scam has never been cleared up by the courts or B.C. police. Civil court records and interviews conducted over the last several years with former business associates of Brooks reveal that millions more possibly passed through Brooks91裸聊视频 hands between 2008 and 2012, only to also vanish.

No one now can or will say exactly what happened to the money in a case that involved fraud, a six-year police investigation, a drive-by shooting, and accusations of Hells Angels involvement.

The Aggressive fraud

Matthew Brooks came from a family that was already prominent in the construction industry, and Aggressive Road Builders was originally founded by his father and a business partner.

91裸聊视频淚 took over when my dad went back to Imperial Paving,91裸聊视频 Brooks told the Langley Advance Times last year. 91裸聊视频淚t grew over time and for many years did very well.91裸聊视频

Aggressive had a full-time staff of about 60 people, and worked around the Lower Mainland, building and upgrading roads in Surrey, Langley, Abbotsford, and Burnaby.

But it unravelled and crashed into bankruptcy in 2008.

When the company91裸聊视频檚 main lender, ScotiaBank, became suspicious about Aggressive, audits discovered that the bank had extended millions of dollars in loans to Aggressive based on forged documents. Brooks and his co-accused, Kirk Roberts, would both eventually plead guilty to falsifying their own records to make it appear that municipal governments owed Aggressive significant amounts of money for paving work that was already completed.

In fact, those numbers were wildly exaggerated. At one point, Aggressive was telling their bank that they were owed $21 million for completed work, when the true amount was $3.4 million.

91裸聊视频淚 fought against it,91裸聊视频 Brooks said. 91裸聊视频淏ut I was declared bankrupt, and Aggressive Roadbuilders was seized and locked up.91裸聊视频

The police investigation began in early 2009, but it was lengthy.

After police seized computers and files from the Aggressive offices, it wasn91裸聊视频檛 until May 1, 2012, that a forensic accounting report was completed.

During the investigation Brooks and Roberts got back into the construction business with a new firm, Blackrete, which Roberts would eventually take over, continuing to work for local municipal governments.

Charges against the two men weren91裸聊视频檛 laid until Nov. 21, 2014, and weren91裸聊视频檛 announced by the RCMP until the following year.

Legal proceedings ended for Brooks in 2017, when he pleaded guilty and was sentenced to three and a half years in prison 91裸聊视频 he has since served his sentence.

His co-accused and former employee Roberts wasn91裸聊视频檛 convicted until a guilty plea in 2019; he was sentenced to a year and a half of strict house arrest and probation. An appeal of his conviction was rejected in November 2020.

What the courts never heard was what happened to the cash. Nor did the judges ever hear about the other people who had gone into business with Brooks in the years between the start of the investigation, and the laying of charges, or the potential millions that were lost.

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Bad investments

In late 2008, Brad Muller was a Florida hotel owner and manager who was looking for new investment opportunities.

The two men recall their business partnership differently, but both Muller and Brooks agree that it started with a small web startup.

91裸聊视频淏rad Muller and I were kind of the money behind a company that went public, that we both tried to finance,91裸聊视频 said Brooks. 91裸聊视频淎nd at the end of the day, both our monies were long gone.91裸聊视频

Brooks said his mistake was 91裸聊视频渢o tell him that I was very confident in the company, and thought it would do well.91裸聊视频

Muller recalls that even their first financial transaction went poorly.

91裸聊视频淗e told me he had a cash flow problem for one week,91裸聊视频 Muller said, saying Brooks asked him to put up some money with a promise it would be paid back in a week. It didn91裸聊视频檛 happen.

91裸聊视频淭hat91裸聊视频檚 when I should have walked,91裸聊视频 Muller said now, with the benefit of hindsight.

Instead, after that initial investment, Muller came to B.C., and Brooks took him on a trip to Whistler, where he pitched another, different business opportunity.

91裸聊视频淗e was just wining and dining me,91裸聊视频 recounted Muller, who didn91裸聊视频檛 know the man he was in business with had gone bankrupt and was soon to be under investigation by the RCMP Commercial Crime Section.

Brooks91裸聊视频檚 pitch to Muller was the purchase of 650,000 tonnes of gravel for use in the local construction market. He was told it had to happen within 24 to 48 hours, Muller recalled, and it would be a $1 million investment, with an eventual profit of $3.2 million.

He contacted his bankers and made the arrangements, sending US$1 million, (about $1.2 million CA) in February of 2009.

Muller provided the Langley Advance Times with a hand-written breakdown of expenses and projected profits, apparently faxed from Blackcrete Contracting, Brooks91裸聊视频檚 new company, sent on March 20, 2009. He also showed the Advance Times a funds transfer form authorizing the transfer of $1 million to Blackcrete, dated March 27 of that year.

91裸聊视频淚n essence, it was a handshake deal,91裸聊视频 said Muller, who indicated he was promised a contract would be written up later.

The investment was the biggest single part of what would become a drawn-out, years-long relationship in which Muller says he sent more and more money to Brooks 91裸聊视频 sometimes because Brooks claimed he feared for his life.

By July 2009, a handwritten contract drawn up by Muller on White Rock hotel stationery showed Blackrete and Brooks owed US$1.525 million to Muller.

Another contract, dated to Oct. 27, 2009, shows the amount owed had risen as high at $4.1 million, including interest.

Copies of the contracts were shown to Brooks, and he acknowledged recognizing them as genuine.

91裸聊视频淚 guess we both lost a lot,91裸聊视频 he said of the business ventures.

Muller wasn91裸聊视频檛 the only person who lost a large sum of money to Brooks in the aftermath of the Aggressive bankruptcy.

Strato Malamas loaned $1.1 million to Brooks, specifically to a company called M. Brooks Enterprises (MBE) in 2007 and 2008, just before Brooks declared bankruptcy. The Aggressive fraud was underway by then, but it had not yet been discovered by the auditors.

After a first loan of $570,000 was largely paid off in the latter half of 2007, Brooks reportedly came back and asked for more money, this time a further $950,000, for three months at a 55-per-cent interest rate.

91裸聊视频淗e had a big presentation, glossy pics,91裸聊视频 Malamas recalled of Brooks91裸聊视频 pitch.

The plan was straightforward 91裸聊视频 Brooks said he was buying a gravel pit with the money, a deal similar to the one Muller said he was pitched.

91裸聊视频淗e comes across like he91裸聊视频檚 a pretty good guy,91裸聊视频 Malamas said of Brooks.

But there was never any return on this investment.

91裸聊视频淗e never made one payment,91裸聊视频 Malamas said, but he wasn91裸聊视频檛 initially worried about getting his investment back.

91裸聊视频淚t was all secured by real estate,91裸聊视频 he noted.

The properties securing the loan were an industrial property in Surrey and a vacation home in Whistler.

Malamas sued to get his money back, but the case dragged on. It turned out some of the land Brooks had used as collateral didn91裸聊视频檛 belong to him 91裸聊视频 the vacation home was a condo belonging to AKS Trucking, a firm owned by Dave Shokar, a long-time contractor for Brooks91裸聊视频 paving businesses.

When Brooks defaulted on Malamas91裸聊视频檚 loan, Shokar was pulled into litigation with Malamas. Brooks couldn91裸聊视频檛 be sued, as he was bankrupt by that time. Shokar eventually won in court and kept the condo. Malamas recovered $242,000 from a foreclosure against another building, but lost everything else.

91裸聊视频淚 just would rather have never met the guy,91裸聊视频 Malamas said of Brooks.

Malamas said police never contacted him, and he never contacted police.

The industrial building that Malamas targeted in his lawsuit was the centre of another dispute that year, too.

Court records show that while Brooks was borrowing money from Malamas, he also arranged a deal with Shokar, his longtime contractor, to buy the Surrey industrial shop from which AKS Trucking operated.

For a $100,000 down payment and some trucking company stock, Shokar transferred the ownership of the shop to Brooks91裸聊视频 MBS corporation.

The two men had a handshake deal in which 75 per cent of the ownership was to be kept 91裸聊视频渋n trust91裸聊视频 for Shokar.

But Brooks turned around and used his interest in the shop to get a $2.07-million loan from Envision Financial.

Shokar used some of the money to invest in his trucking company and pay off a mortgage on the property, but a judge found that $830,000 went to Brooks.

Court records do not shed any light on what happened to those funds.As with the loan from Malamas, Brooks never made a single payment to Envision on the $2.07-million loan, which was issued on Jan. 15, 2008.

The credit union foreclosed on the shop and the land was ordered sold by the courts in July of 2008.

Shokar, according to court records, was left holding a $3-million promissory note against the now-bankrupt Brooks.

A spokesperson for Envision Financial said records that old were hard to access, and it was unknown if police had ever contacted the credit union about the incident.

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Gunfire in Langley

Another unknown that was brought up during the sentencing hearings of Brooks and Roberts was the drive-by shooting of a home where Brooks was living in Langley on Dec. 9, 2011.

According to local RCMP, the shots were reported by neighbours immediately, but responding officers couldn91裸聊视频檛 locate the house that had been shot.

It was only weeks after the 9-1-1 calls that the house91裸聊视频檚 landlord discovered bullet holes in the building where Brooks was living, and the landlord called the RCMP.

Local RCMP looked into the incident, but charges were never laid.

Brad Muller also recalled seeing the bullet holes on one of his trips to Canada.

91裸聊视频淚 don91裸聊视频檛 know,91裸聊视频 Brooks said, when asked who shot at his house.

91裸聊视频淭here were a lot of people who had invested in the public entities that we were trying to get up, and it could have [been] any, a number of, a hundred people,91裸聊视频 Brooks said. 91裸聊视频淚 don91裸聊视频檛 know.91裸聊视频

Hells Angels ties

When Roberts was sentenced, he accused Brooks of being an associate of the Hells Angels.

Brooks acknowledged that a confirmed member of the Hells Angels, Courtney Vasseur of the Nomads chapter, worked for Aggressive before it went bankrupt, but he vehemently denied that the man ever received any money from the fraud.

91裸聊视频淗e doesn91裸聊视频檛 have any of that money,91裸聊视频 Brooks said of the defrauded $6 million. 91裸聊视频淗e was working with Aggressive at the time we were doing things, he worked at Blackrete afterwards, but no, he91裸聊视频檚 got nothing to do with it.91裸聊视频

Brooks admitted he was aware of Vasseur91裸聊视频檚 Hells Angels membership at the time.

91裸聊视频淵es, but I don91裸聊视频檛 think he had any benefit of anything I was doing other than getting a paycheque for the work he did,91裸聊视频 Brooks said.

91裸聊视频淚 can91裸聊视频檛 speak to what happened going forward,91裸聊视频 he added.

Muller was aware that Vasseur had a business connection to Brooks, and one he says continued after the Aggressive bankruptcy. Muller encountered Vasseur with Brooks in B.C. between 2009 and 2011.

91裸聊视频淚 was aware that he was a Hells Angels person almost from the outset,91裸聊视频 said Muller. 91裸聊视频淢att told me.91裸聊视频

On several occasions, Muller said he told Canadian authorities about Vasseur91裸聊视频檚 involvement in Brooks91裸聊视频 business.

The first time was when he was still financially entangled with Brooks. Muller had told his wife about some of the things that were going on, and she feared he was in danger. She phoned the RCMP, and officers knocked on Muller91裸聊视频檚 hotel room door.

He gave them a statement that mentioned Vasseur.

Later, back in Florida after he had cut ties with Brooks, Muller would contact the FBI. The issue was out of their jurisdiction, but they put him in touch with the RCMP, and again he told them about his issues with Brooks, and mentioned Vasseur.

91裸聊视频淭hey knew what was going on,91裸聊视频 Muller said.

Yet he says there was no follow up by police with him at any point.

Sgt. Kris Clark, spokesperson for FSOC, couldn91裸聊视频檛 say if a file was opened based on Muller91裸聊视频檚 complaints.

91裸聊视频淲e typically don91裸聊视频檛 confirm or deny when an investigation has begun on anybody,91裸聊视频 he said, explaining that it91裸聊视频檚 an issue of privacy law.

In April, Vasseur was one of 10 people charged by the U.S. Department of Justice, accused of alleged involvement in a global pump-and-dump stock fraud scheme that netted its participants more than $100 million in profits.

People charged with crimes are considered innocent until proven guilty in a court of law.

Vasseur, a Burnaby resident, is awaiting extradition proceedings.

This is only the second major criminal charge for Vasseur, who has never been convicted of a crime in Canada.

On May 15, 2013, Vasseur91裸聊视频檚 Cadillac Escalade, driven by Craig Leonard Retvedt, crashed into the back of a bus at Cambie and 16th in Vancouver. Both men were discovered passed out due to accidental fentanyl overdose 91裸聊视频 an open baggie of the drug was found in a console between the seats. Both men were charged with possession of fentanyl for the purpose of trafficking.

91裸聊视频淥ne of the two men clearly was in possession of at least the powder, and possibly both of them were,91裸聊视频 Justice Heather Holmes noted in her 2017 ruling. But there was not enough evidence to tie it to either man, so both were found not guilty.

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91裸聊视频楩ollow the money91裸聊视频

Muller eventually gave up on ever getting any of his US$2 million back.

During the last few years, he said he has approached RCMP in B.C. multiple times seeking an investigation of his case, but said he has been repeatedly rebuffed.

He said the loss of the money ruined him financially. He has since declared bankruptcy and lost his hotel business. Muller is barely scraping by these days, he said.

91裸聊视频淗e ruined my life,91裸聊视频 Muller said of Brooks.

Muller wants to know what happened to all the money he poured into investments with Brooks over several years, and why the RCMP won91裸聊视频檛 look into it.

91裸聊视频淔ollow the money91裸聊视频 is Muller91裸聊视频檚 mantra. He is intensely frustrated at what he sees as a lack of action by Canadian police.

Whatever happened to the money, from the Aggressive fraud or the loans, or the investments by Muller and Malamas that were never paid back, Brooks did not have any of it by the time he was sentenced in 2018.

Brooks arrived for his sentencing hearing carrying his personal belongings with him in a cloth Walmart shopping bag.

His lawyer told the court that Brooks was working part time as a landscaper, and was living either in a trailer, or with family and friends.

91裸聊视频淭o all intents and purposes, Mr. Brooks has lost everything,91裸聊视频 said Stephanie Head, who represented Brooks at his last few hearings.

91裸聊视频淭he Crown was not able to determine what happened to the money,91裸聊视频 Crown attorney Brian McKinley said at Brooks91裸聊视频 sentencing hearing.

During the sentencing hearing, Brooks lashed out verbally at his former business partner Roberts.

91裸聊视频淎sk [him] where the missing money is, and who his business partners are!91裸聊视频 Brooks said.

In turn, Roberts pointed the finger at Brooks when it came time for his sentencing.

During Roberts91裸聊视频 sentencing arguments, the judge heard that Brooks 91裸聊视频渢reated the business bank account as his own,91裸聊视频 withdrawing money and sometimes depositing money from non-business sources, according to Roberts91裸聊视频 defence lawyer Ian Donaldson.

91裸聊视频淭he best thing that happened to me is that I went to prison,91裸聊视频 Brooks told the Langley Advance Times, during an interview while he was taking a break from his job as a landscaper, spreading soil on new planting beds near a Surrey park in 2022.

91裸聊视频淎t the end of the day, I own a 20-year-old one-ton dump truck, and a few shovels, and wheelbarrows, and I go to work every day,91裸聊视频 he said.

He acknowledged that other people lost money due to his actions.

91裸聊视频淚 made my mistakes, and I believe that everybody that knows me knows that I didn91裸聊视频檛 benefit from any of their losses,91裸聊视频 he said.

Asked what happened to the missing millions, he said to follow the money.

91裸聊视频淒o your job, follow the money. See who has it,91裸聊视频 Brooks said. 91裸聊视频淵ou know, if you open your eyes, you can see it, it91裸聊视频檚 right there.91裸聊视频

Sig

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Brad Muller said he lost millions of dollars he invested with former Langley road builder Matthew Brooks. Muller didn91裸聊视频檛 know that Brooks was under investigation for a $6 million bank fraud when the two met. (Brad Muller/Special to the Langley Advance Times)
32286203_web1_Money1C
In the third part of our series on fraud, we look at Matthew Brooks, convicted of a $6 million bank fraud, whose home was targeted in a drive-by shooting that was never solved. Others lost millions to Brooks just before and during a lengthy RCMP investigation. (Roxanne Hooper/Langley Advance Times)


Matthew Claxton

About the Author: Matthew Claxton

Raised in Langley, as a journalist today I focus on local politics, crime and homelessness.
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