Fraud Roundup

December 10, 2006

Former Conseco founder’s Indiana home to be sold at auction

Conseco Inc. founder Stephen Hilbert’s sprawling French-style mansion, which has been on the market for months, will be sold at a sheriff’s auction next month.

Conseco put the 23,000-square-foot home on the market in July for $20 million to help recover millions of dollars a court ruled its former CEO owes it. But some potential buyers have been wary of being drawn into the legal dispute between the insurer and Hilbert.

The U.S. Supreme Court refused to hear Hilbert’s appeal of a judge’s order that he repay the company $84 million in stock loans.

The sheriff’s sale of the mansion in the northern Indianapolis suburb of Carmel, set for Dec. 28, would make Conseco’s claim more clear to the property, which is situated on a 40-acre estate and includes a full-size replica of Indiana University’s Assembly Hall basketball court.

The Indiana Court of Appeals in 2004 unanimously upheld a decision by Hamilton Circuit Judge Judith S. Proffitt ordering Hilbert to repay the stock loan money. The debt stems from company-backed loans Hilbert received in the late 1990s to buy Conseco stock, which became worthless during its bankruptcy reorganization in 2003.

Proffitt ordered Hilbert to pay an amount equal to the interest that Conseco had paid on Hilbert’s behalf on more than $162 million he borrowed to buy company stock.

The loan program was created in 1996 at Hilbert’s direction, and more than 150 employees participated in it, with Hilbert the largest borrower. The loans are now prohibited by federal law. Since emerging from bankruptcy, Conseco has tried to recover the full debt of the largest 11 borrowers.

Hilbert has said he is effectively broke, but Conseco attorneys have argued that he sought to avoid repaying the debt by transferring assets to others, including his wife, Tomisue Hilbert.

Hilbert founded the Carmel-based insurance company and was the company’s chairman and chief executive until 2000.

Copyright 2006 Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistribute.

Mo. man sentenced to prison in Medicare fraud scam

The owner of two Kansas City-area medical supply businesses was sentenced to three years in prison without parole for his part in a scheme that bilked Medicare out of millions of dollars.

U.S. District Judge Gary A. Fenner also ordered Godwin Iloka, 39, of Lee’s Summit, to forfeit his home, three vehicles and all the funds in two bank accounts. The sentence includes two years for Medicare fraud and a consecutive one-year term for a revocation of Iloka’s supervised release in an unrelated federal case.

On Aug. 9, 2004, Iloka pleaded guilty to credit card fraud and was sentenced to five years of probation. His involvement in the Medicare scheme violated the terms of that supervised release.