EAST ST. LOUIS, Ill. - The former bass player for the rock band, The Ataris – best known for their 2003 hit cover of Don Henley’s “The Boys of Summer” – pleaded guilty earlier Friday (September 28) to a charge of conspiracy to commit mail and wire fraud.
Michael S. Davenport, 50, of Santa Barbara, California, appeared at the federal district courthouse in East St. Louis, Illinois, and admitted to owning and operating a telemarketing business that defrauded thousands of would-be renters and home-buyers throughout the United States from 2009 to 2016. Davenport’s Santa Barbara-based business changed names several times but was known variously as MDSQ Productions LLC, Housing Standard LLC, Anchor House Financial, American Standard, American Standard Online, and Your American Standard. Court documents simply refer to the business as “American Standard.”
After consumers paid the $199 fee, they learned that the houses on American Standard’s list were not actually available for purchase. A substantial number of the addresses contained on the list were fictional, or there were simply no houses at those locations. In numerous other instances, the houses were not in pre-foreclosure or any financial distress and were not available to be purchased at below-market prices. If an American Standard customer asked for more information about a specific house advertised on Craigslist, the company’s customer service department always told them that the house was no longer available.
Davenport acknowledged in court that his conspiracy and scheme to defraud operated from approximately January 2009 through at least October 5, 2016, over which time American Standard defrauded more than 100,000 people. The victims were located in all 50 states and the District of Columbia. Over 100 victims of the scam were located within the Southern District of Illinois, spread across 22 counties, with multiple victims in both St. Clair and Madison counties.
Earlier this year, three of Davenport’s former employees also pleaded guilty in the Southern District of Illinois to participating in the American Standard fraud conspiracy. Mark A. Phillips (50) and Semjase E. Santana (37) were salespersons at American Standard’s headquarters in Santa Barbara, California. Carlynne L. Davis (33) was a salesperson in the company’s Lompoc, California branch office. All three are currently awaiting sentencing. Criminal charges are also still pending against Cynthia L. Rawlinson, 51, of Santa Barbara, who is named as a co-defendant in Davenport’s indictment. Rawlinson allegedly started out as a salesperson but was later promoted to the sales manager position for American Standard’s Santa Barbara office. Rawlinson’s trial is set to begin on November 5, 2018, at the federal courthouse in East St. Louis, Illinois.
Davenport’s sentencing is set for December 28, 2018, at 10:00 a.m., in East St. Louis. Under the federal SCAMS Act, because the crimes involved telemarketing and victimized ten or more people over the age of 55, Davenport could receive as much as 30 years imprisonment and a fine of up to $250,000. He may also be ordered to pay restitution to his victims. Davenport’s plea agreement requires him to forfeit $853,210.11 taken from his merchant processing accounts, as well as $79,000 in cash that was seized from him last July as he was boarding a plane in Little Rock, Arkansas.
This case is part of an ongoing investigation by the St. Louis Field Office of the Chicago Division of the United States Postal Inspection Service. The Office of the Honorable Joyce E. Dudley, District Attorney for Santa Barbara County, and the Santa Maria Office of the FBI have provided substantial assistance in the investigation. The case is being prosecuted by Assistant United States Attorney Scott A. Verseman.