Federal authorities said Friday they charged Fat Brands and its chair, Andy Wiederhorn, of committing a brazen scheme that netted him $47 million in bogus loans from the restaurant company that owns Fatburger, Johnny Rockets and Twin Peaks.
Fat Brands, Wiederhorn and a few other people were criminally indicted by a federal grand jury in Los Angeles for wire fraud, tax evasion and other counts related to the alleged scheme.
In a separate civil complaint, the Securities and Exchange Commission accused the company and Wiederhorn of violations related to the same conduct.
“These charges are unprecedented, unwarranted, unsubstantiated and unjust,â€� Fat Brands counsel Brian Hennigan said in a statement. “They are based on conduct that ended over three years ago and ignore the Companyâ€
Wiederhorn, who was convicted two decades ago in a criminal case that involved similar conduct, was separately criminally charged in an indictment in Los Angeles of being a federal felon in possession of a handgun and ammunition.
“We look forward to making clear in court that this is an unfortunate example of government overreach — and a case with no victims, no losses and no crimes,â€� Wiederhornâ€
As chief executive of Fat Brands, Wiederhorn, 58, allegedly directed the company to loan its own funds to him, with no intention of ever paying the “sham� loans back, according to the indictment.
The SEC alleges that Wiederhorn then used the cash to pay for private jets, first-class airfare, luxury vacations, mortgage and rent payments, and nearly $700,000 in “shopping and jewelry.�
Wiederhorn stepped down as CEO last year, following the companyâ€
Wiederhornâ€
Fat Brands never disclosed the cash transfers as related party transactions to investors. In 2020, the cash transfers were written off after the companyâ€
Ron Roe, the companyâ€
Additionally, as far back as 2006, Wiederhorn has owed taxes for his personal income to the IRS. He also didnâ€
Twenty years ago, he pleaded guilty to filing a false tax return and paying an illegal gratuity to an associate while leading Fog Cutter Capital. He paid a $2 million fine and spent more than a year in federal prison in Oregon. During his time in prison, Fog Cutterâ€