California Real Estate Investor Charged with $100M Fraud by US

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The US government has criminally charged a California real estate investor at the center of what multiple regional banks allege is a sprawling fraud scheme involving nearly $100 million in losses to Western Alliance Bancorp alone.

The charges stem from allegations that a group of investors, including Gerald Marcil, Andrew Stupin, and Deba Shyam, systematically misled lenders with falsified title documents, misleading collateral information, and diverted loan proceeds.

A tangled web of lawsuits and bankruptcies

Western Alliance Bancorp filed its lawsuit in August 2025, alleging the investor group collectively owes the bank approximately $100 million. The complaint accused the defendants of falsifying documents and improperly handling collateral.

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Zions Bancorporation followed with its own suit around October 15, 2025, targeting guarantors including Marcil and Stupin for more than $60 million in soured loans.

The total troubled debt exposure for this investor group across multiple lenders reaches approximately $270 million, with lawsuits filed between April and August 2025 by additional institutions including Banc of California and Enterprise Bank & Trust.

MOM CA Investco LLC, a company linked to the investors, filed for bankruptcy in February 2025. That filing triggered asset sales and pulled back the curtain on the allegedly deceptive loan structures at the heart of the crisis. The FBI conducted a search of a related Newport Beach real estate firm in late October 2025.

Regional banks feel the heat

Regional bank shares, particularly Western Alliance and Zions, declined sharply in mid-October 2025 after these allegations became public. The stocks have largely recovered since then.

Western Alliance, which has around $80 billion in assets, can likely absorb the $100 million hit without existential consequences.

What this means for investors

The criminal charges represent a meaningful shift. Civil lawsuits are about money. Criminal charges are about prison. The fact that the US government moved from the FBI search in late October to formal charges suggests prosecutors believe they have substantial evidence of intentional fraud rather than mere negligence or bad business decisions.

The $270 million in total troubled exposure across multiple banks raises questions for every mid-size bank with significant commercial real estate exposure about the quality of their loan books, particularly regarding how banks verify collateral and title documentation.

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