Maryland Accountant Sentenced to Three Years and $24.8M Restitution for Defrauding COVID Relief Programs


Follow America's fastest-growing news aggregator, Spreely News, and stay informed. You can find all of our articles plus information from your favorite Conservative voices. 

Maryland accountant gets three years for $24 million COVID relief fraud

U.S. District Judge Richard Bennett handed down a three-year federal prison sentence to Harold Dotson, 54, of Gaithersburg, Maryland, after convicting him in a sweeping COVID relief fraud case. The sentence was followed by six months of home confinement and a restitution order for $24,807,432. The case centers on bogus CARES Act applications filed between 2020 and 2022.

Published: October 3, 2025 1:01pm. The judge’s order closes a chapter on a scheme prosecutors say turned pandemic aid into an organized money stream for sham businesses. The court record paints a picture of methodical falsification, leveraging professional know-how to inflate loan applications.

The scheme, the sums and the sentence

Prosecutors say Dotson used his accounting skills to prepare and submit false Economic Injury Disaster Loan and Paycheck Protection Program paperwork for businesses that existed only on paper. The official description quoted in court filings states he “used his accountant expertise to assist with preparing numerous false and fraudulent [Economic Injury Disaster Loan] and [Paycheck Protection Program] applications for purported businesses that did not exist in any legitimate capacity.”

Investigators say the applications routinely overstated employee counts, payroll figures and revenue to qualify for larger disbursements. In some conspiracies, the fraud produced millions in funds: more than $14 million tied to over 85 fraudulent PPP loans with one co-conspirator, and another conspiracy responsible for over $6 million in bogus PPP payouts. Separately, more than $3.5 million is alleged to have been obtained via fraudulent EIDL applications.

Judge Bennett’s restitution figure, $24,807,432, tracks closely with the total alleged losses and returned funds sought by prosecutors. The court emphasized deterrence and the public interest in protecting emergency programs designed to help struggling, legitimate businesses. The combination of imprisonment and home confinement reflects both punitive and supervisory aims.

Dotson pleaded guilty, and his plea agreement and court documents were central to the government’s case. Those filings detail how sham documentation was created and submitted, and how phony IRS forms were routinely fabricated to support the false claims. The role of an accountant in producing credible-looking paperwork is a focal point of the prosecutors’ narrative.

Defense filings offered a different frame, focusing on Dotson’s personal vulnerabilities rather than a cold, calculated criminal mastermind. His lawyer described a gambling addiction that intensified during the pandemic, and argued that desperate family finances left Dotson susceptible to bad choices. In those filings the attorney wrote, “The influx from the fraud was like gasoline on the fire of his addiction,” wrote Dotson’s attorney.

Court records also name co-conspirators who allegedly recruited or coordinated with Dotson, including an individual identified as Ahmed Sary, 47, of Brooklyn, Maryland, who operated a credit repair business. According to defense statements, Dotson initially believed he was helping legitimate small businesses obtain relief and only later recognized that paperwork represented entities that did not exist or that wildly overstated payroll and assets. The shifting perception of wrongdoing is presented in the defense narrative as a factor in sentencing.

Prosecutors countered that professional training gave Dotson the ability to manufacture convincing claims and that he used that expertise knowingly to secure funds. They documented repeated transactions and detailed patterns of submission that, in their view, go beyond a one-time lapse of judgment. The government sought a sentence to reflect the scale of the fraud and the need to protect relief programs from similar abuse.

Beyond prison time and home confinement, the court required Dotson to repay the full restitution amount, which will bind him financially for years. Restitution orders in federal fraud cases often follow lengthy enforcement processes that can include asset seizure and future garnishments. That reality means the sentence includes both immediate custody and long-term financial accountability.

The case highlights vulnerabilities in emergency assistance systems and the role of intermediaries who can amplify fraud risks. Accountants, consultants and other third parties who prepared and submitted applications remain a focus for both prosecutors and program administrators aiming to tighten oversight. Officials have said that lessons learned from pandemic-era programs should inform future safeguards for any emergency relief.

Court observers note that the mix of addiction, financial pressure and professional capability is a recurring theme in white-collar cases where otherwise skilled professionals cross legal lines. Sentencing often balances individual circumstances with the broader message courts want to send about deterrence. In Dotson’s case, the judge’s choices reflect an attempt to weigh those competing concerns.

As restitution and post-release supervision take effect, the case will likely be cited in training and enforcement discussions about fraud prevention. For victims and legitimate businesses that relied on those programs, the outcome can feel like a partial restoration of justice. For policymakers, the file offers data and cautionary examples as they consider how to structure future relief with stronger controls.

Share:

GET MORE STORIES LIKE THIS

IN YOUR INBOX!

Sign up for our daily email and get the stories everyone is talking about.

Discover more from Liberty One News

Subscribe now to keep reading and get access to the full archive.

Continue reading