Bloomington man charged with fraud on PPP loan after receiving a Paycheck Protection Program loan that was later forgiven.

A Bloomington man has been indicted by a McLean County grand jury for theft and fraud

Wesley A. Fullerlove, 21, is accused of burglary of somewhere in the range of $10,000 and $100,000 of government property, a Class 1 crime, robbery of somewhere in the range of $10,000 and $100,000, a Class 2 lawful offense, credit extortion, a Class 2 crime, and two counts of wire misrepresentation, a Class 3 crime.


ProPublica's PPP data set shows Fullerlove got a PPP credit of $20,833 in April 2021, the principal round of PPP. It was pardoned in October of that year. He professed to have a business in the development, mining, and ranger service hardware and gear rental and renting industry, the records show, and mentioned the credit to cover finance.


Partner State's Attorney Lewis Liu said in court that an examination by Bloomington police persuaded them to think the business was not genuine and that thusly Fullerlove had lied on his credit application.


The warrant for Fullerlove had mentioned a 10% obligation of $100,000, yet Judge Scott Black diminished the sum to $50,000, meaning Fullerlove needs to present $5,000 in addition to expenses on be delivered.

Last month, Fullerlove was accused of having a gun as a criminal and having a weapon as a road gangster. Those offenses are said to have occurred in March of this current year.





Comments