v. CASE NO:
Defendants.
COMPLAINT
Plaintiffs Joseph A. Cartagena (p/k/a Fat Joe), Terror Squad Productions, Inc., Slate, Inc.,
Slate, LLC, Azzy’s Way, LLC, Beleeedat, LLC, R4 So Valid, LLC, Wooo, LLC, and Sneaker
Addict Touring, LLC, by and through their attorneys Quinn Emanuel Urquhart & Sullivan, LLP,
bring this action against Defendants BDO USA, LLP (“BDO”), Andre N. Chammas, CPA
(“Chammas”), and Vanessa Rodriguez (a/k/a Vanessa Rodriguez Sanudo) (“Rodriguez”), and
hereby allege upon personal knowledge as to themselves and as to their own conduct, and upon
1. The clock is ticking. A decade ago, Cartagena, on behalf of himself and the other
Plaintiffs—various business entities that he owns—began using BDO and Chammas to provide
tax preparation, bookkeeping, and bill payment services.1 Rodriguez directly assisted Chammas
and worked for BDO as a Senior Client Services Representative and account executive. Recently,
Cartagena learned that there have been a slew of irregularities and fraudulent activity with regard
to those services: for example, numerous delinquent and unpaid mortgage and bill payments; the
booking of revenues that were never deposited into Plaintiffs’ accounts; discrepancies in the
amount of money that Plaintiffs have paid to BDO for services rendered; payments to unauthorized
American Express accounts that are not Cartagena’s and payments to Cartagena’s American
Express account from unrecognized bank accounts, both hallmarks of a Ponzi scheme; payments
for a car Cartagena no longer owns; and identity theft perpetrated by Rodriguez, who opened the
unauthorized credit cards and was so brazen that she used the ATM located in BDO’s building to
obtain cash advances from the cards and used the cards to pay her child’s school tuition. To further
investigate these issues, Cartagena requested that BDO and Chammas immediately provide him
2. But rather than cooperate with a longtime client and offer to lend assistance, BDO
and Chammas have employed a different strategy: stonewall and delay. For example, Cartagena
repeatedly requested the login information for Bill.com—a centralized platform for sending,
receiving, processing, and paying bills, invoices, and the like—but BDO and Chammas either
ignored his pleas or made up stories to cover their trail. In an August 25, 2022 letter to Cartagena,
BDO even claimed that it “is not aware that . . . Cartagena has a Bill.com account.” But BDO has
been forwarding emails from Bill.com to Cartagena for the duration of their relationship. Notably,
1 Around 2012, Cartagena hired Chammas, then with Morrison, Brown, Argiz & Farra, LLC
(“MBAF”), to provide accounting services. In 2021, BDO acquired MBAF and made Chammas
a partner. Unless otherwise specified, references to BDO include MBAF.
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on August 24 (the day before BDO sent its letter), BDO forwarded an email from Bill.com to
3. Now Plaintiffs know why BDO and Chammas have been trying to obstruct their
investigation: Plaintiffs are the target of a fraudulent scheme that BDO and Chammas—with
Rodriguez’s assistance—have been orchestrating for years and that has resulted in millions of
dollars in damages. And Plaintiffs are not alone. Other famous clients of BDO, Chammas, and
Rodriguez, including several professional baseball players, have also been victimized. The bottom
line is that, by executing and reaping the benefits of their money-making scheme, BDO and
Chammas have committed malpractice and professional negligence, breached the fiduciary duties
they owe to Plaintiffs, misappropriated millions of dollars, defrauded Plaintiffs, and been unjustly
enriched. Rodriguez has also committed conversion and been unjustly enriched.
4. As a remedy, the Court should order BDO and Chammas to immediately turn over
all documents and information to which Plaintiffs are legally entitled, as well as award damages,
legal costs and fees, and all other appropriate relief against BDO, Chammas, and Rodriguez.
THE PARTIES
6. Terror Squad Productions, Inc., Slate, Inc. and Slate, LLC (together “Slate”),
Azzy’s Way, LLC, Beleeedat, LLC, R4 So Valid, LLC, Wooo, LLC, and Sneaker Addict Touring,
LLC are Florida limited liability companies. Cartagena owns these business entities.
Chicago, Illinois and organized as a limited liability partnership under Delaware law. BDO is the
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largest accounting firm in the state of Florida, with offices in Miami, Tampa, Orlando, Fort
located at 1450 Brickell Avenue, Miami, Florida. That office is also the former headquarters of
MBAF, where Chammas worked as a partner from 2012 until MBAF’s merger with BDO.
9. BDO and Chammas are registered and licensed to practice accounting in Florida.
10. Rodriguez worked for BDO as a Senior Client Services Representative and account
executive in the office at 1450 Brickell Avenue. She also worked at that address as an employee
at MBAF, where she worked from around 2016 until the merger with BDO. Rodriguez is a resident
of Florida.
11. At all relevant times, BDO was responsible for the actions and conduct of Chammas
and Rodriguez, who were acting as employees of BDO and within the scope of their employment
12. The Court has subject matter jurisdiction because Plaintiffs seek injunctive relief
and, thus, this is a “case in equity.” Fla. Stat. § 26.012(2)(c), (3). The Court also has jurisdiction
because this is a case at law and the matter in controversy exceeds the sum of $30,000, not
13. The Court has personal jurisdiction over BDO, Chammas, and Rodriguez. This
action arises out of BDO’s operating, conducting, engaging in, and carrying on its business in this
state, where it also has several offices. Id. § 48.193(1)(a)(1). Specifically, Chammas (the BDO
partner responsible for handling Plaintiffs’ accounts) and Rodriguez (the person who assisted him)
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are in the Miami-Brickell office. This action also arises out of tortious acts that BDO, Chammas,
and Rodriguez committed—and are still committing—in this state. Id. § 48.193(1)(a)(2).
Moreover, as explained in more detail below, BDO and Chammas refuse to produce records and
data to which Plaintiffs are lawfully entitled. Most, if not all, of that property is located in Florida.
Finally, BDO, Chammas, and Rodriguez are engaged in “substantial and not isolated activity
14. This Court is the proper venue because BDO, Chammas, and Rodriguez “reside”
in Miami-Dade County; the causes of action accrued and are continuing to accrue here; and the
15. This case is subject to mandatory assignment to the Complex Business Litigation
Section of the Eleventh Judicial Circuit Court in and for Miami-Dade County, Florida because the
amount in controversy exceeds $750,000 and the case involves, among other things, “Professional
FACTUAL ALLEGATIONS
his career, he must rely on others to manage major aspects of his life, including his finances. On
a daily basis, he and his businesses receive bills, invoices, payments, etc. and have significant sums
of money moving in and out of their accounts. Cartagena cannot manage those activities alone, so
he entrusts accountants, lawyers, and advisers to protect his and his businesses’ financial well-
being.
17. For the past ten years, one of those confidants was BDO partner Chammas, who
was assisted by Rodriguez beginning around 2016. In 2012, Cartagena began using Chammas,
who was then a partner at MBAF, to provide accounting services for him and his businesses. Since
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then, Plaintiffs have relied on and trusted Chammas to file tax returns, pay bills, prepare financial
statements, and provide other bookkeeping services. Indeed, until July 2022, when Cartagena first
learned of the fraudulent activity described in this complaint, Chammas, Rodriguez, and BDO had
exclusive access (including online access) to Plaintiffs’ bank accounts, American Express and
other credit card accounts, insurance accounts, and other recurring accounts. Plaintiffs had no
18. In January 2021, BDO acquired MBAF, including all partners and employees. Thus,
Chammas became a BDO partner and Rodriguez a BDO employee. Plaintiffs’ MBAF client file
containing years of records and data to which they are lawfully entitled is now in BDO’s possession.
19. After the merger, BDO and Chammas (assisted by Rodriguez) continued to provide
the same accounting services to Plaintiffs as before. They (i) did Plaintiffs’ taxes; (ii) paid their
bills; (iii) processed checks, payments, and other income; (iv) maintained a QuickBooks ledger
tracking all financial activity associated with Plaintiffs’ accounts; (v) reconciled Plaintiffs’ bank
and credit card accounts; (vi) created financial statements and other work product summarizing
Plaintiffs’ financial status; and (vii) maintained an online repository of all work product,
20. BDO and Chammas charged Plaintiffs a significant amount of money for these
services. For example, from January 1 to July 5, 2022, Plaintiffs paid $116,100, or nearly $20,000
per month.
21. On July 14, 2022, BDO fired Rodriguez, who had helped manage Plaintiffs’
Cartagena that she had voluntarily quit her position at BDO. Notably, on July 15, 2022, Chammas
spoke to Cartagena about Rodriguez, but did not indicate that Rodriguez had been terminated or
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that there was any cause for concern. On the contrary, he recommended Rodriguez as an asset and
suggested that Cartagena hire her to continue helping with Plaintiffs’ finances. Fortunately,
Cartagena declined. As Plaintiffs would later discover, Rodriguez was known by BDO partners
as being unreliable, she had been terminated from her position, and BDO subsequently opened an
22. Chammas never revealed that Rodriguez had been terminated. Nor did he or BDO
ever cut off Rodriguez’s access to Plaintiffs’ accounts following her firing. Rather, as further
explained below, Rodriguez continued to access and manipulate Plaintiffs’ accounts for weeks,
until Cartagena realized what was happening and removed her from the accounts himself.
23. On July 25, ten days after Rodriguez’s termination, Cartagena learned of
concerning accounting misconduct associated with his home mortgage payments. The bank that
owns his mortgage contacted his representatives concerning “a large problem” with his account:
every single one of his 2022 mortgage payments was seriously delinquent when posted. His
“[o]verall payment history . . . always teetered around the 30-day late threshold,” the bank
explained. Two payments—in January and July 2022—were more than 30 days late.
24. Examples of the delinquent payments are reflected in the following table:
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25. Significantly, on January 28, 2022, a payment was posted 38 days late that was
subsequent payment was made on February 7 that the bank applied to cover the January payment.
There was also not a single mortgage payment made for the month of April. The bank thus had to
retroactively apply a payment made in May to cover April. These payments were so troubling that
the bank’s president pulled Cartagena’s file, highlighted the transactions, and forwarded it to him:
26. The delinquent payments resulted in late fees and were twice reported to a credit
27. Seeking answers, on July 26, 2022, the day after learning his mortgage had been
seriously mismanaged, Cartagena contacted BDO and Chammas, his trusted accountants on whom
he had relied for years to manage his bills, taxes, loans, and mortgage; to create financial reports;
and to take care of Plaintiffs’ other financial obligations. He sought an explanation for the
delinquent payments and requested that BDO provide certain of Plaintiffs’ accounting records and
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information. But BDO and Chammas refused to cooperate. Instead, they delayed; produced partial,
unresponsive, and faulty data; denied responsibility; and eventually went AWOL.
28. Sometime between July 26 and August 1, 2022, after Cartagena alerted BDO to the
delinquent mortgage payments, BDO commenced an investigation into Rodriguez and the
suspicious activities in Plaintiffs’ accounts. On August 1, after Plaintiffs first learned of the inquiry,
counsel for Plaintiffs contacted BDO’s associate general counsel, Steven DeGeorge, seeking
confirmation that BDO would provide the results of its investigation into Rodriguez. About five
hours later, DeGeorge responded by falsely suggesting that just one “mortgage payment . . . may
have been made late” (emphasis added), and denying any awareness of irregularities associated
with “the accounting and bill payment services BDO provided to” Plaintiffs. When Plaintiffs’
counsel followed up by asking for a simple yes-or-no confirmation that an investigation and audit
was in fact being performed, it took DeGeorge almost a full day to muster one sentence: “We do
Cartagena’s mortgage had been seriously mishandled, Rodriguez had been terminated just days
earlier, and BDO had launched an internal investigation, and yet rather than communicate with
Cartagena to help correct the situation, BDO elected to downplay the events and refused to address
even the most superficial of inquiries. Confused and alarmed, Cartagena decided to take matters
into his own hands and investigate Plaintiffs’ accounts himself. But his efforts to uncover the truth
30. For example, on August 8, 2022, Plaintiffs’ counsel sent a letter to DeGeorge
generally reiterating requests for records and information that Plaintiffs had been seeking for
weeks. Among other things, he requested copies of any engagement letters and agreements
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between the parties to confirm Plaintiffs’ understanding that they had never executed an
engagement letter with BDO and had not executed an engagement letter with Chammas/MBAF
since 2018. BDO and Chammas failed to provide any agreements covering the period from 2012
through August 2021. But to Plaintiffs’ shock, they produced contracts purportedly executed by
Cartagena covering August 2021-2024. While those documents seemed to bear Cartagena’s
DocuSign signature, he had never received or signed the agreements. Consistent with that fact,
the purported engagement letters refer to Megan Pete (p/k/a Megan Thee Stallion), who was a
former BDO client who subsequently terminated BDO. Had Cartagena ever seen these documents,
he would have noted that they referred to a completely different client. What is more, in an attempt
to cover its tracks, and knowing that Cartagena had not actually signed the prior engagement letters,
on July 26, 2022, BDO and Chammas sent Cartagena a new statement of work that referenced one
of the unsigned engagement letters, hoping to get a real signature from Cartagena on a document
recognizing at least one of the prior agreements. But Cartagena refused to sign.
31. Plaintiffs also requested a “complete QuickBooks transfer” of the master ledger
that BDO and Chammas had long maintained to track Plaintiffs’ finances and reconcile their
accounts. BDO claimed to have fulfilled that request just two days later. But that was not true.
In reality, BDO had provided Excel spreadsheets generated from QuickBooks that were useless to
Plaintiffs. Rather than solving the problem, moreover, BDO instead provided a broken link to a
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32. Even after fixing the broken link, Cartagena still could not access the database.
BDO had restricted its contents and failed to grant Cartagena access. And when BDO sent
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33. It was not until August 23—over two weeks after Plaintiffs’ August 8 request—
that BDO provided Plaintiffs with unrestricted working access to their QuickBooks accounts,
including the correct login information. A QuickBooks transfer is a simple process that major
accounting firms like BDO perform all the time. It could have been performed in minutes and
certainly should not have taken two weeks. Notably, as discussed below, since gaining access to
the accounts, Cartagena has uncovered significant evidence of BDO and Chammas’s fraudulent
34. Even more egregious has been BDO’s correspondence concerning Plaintiffs’
Bill.com accounts. BDO and Chammas (with Rodriguez’s assistance) have long used the site to
manage much of Plaintiffs’ accounts payable and receivable activity. Accordingly, on August 12,
Plaintiffs requested that BDO provide their Bill.com login credentials, which Plaintiffs lacked. In
response, on August 25, BDO claimed that it was “not aware that Cartagena had a Bill.com
account,” which was flatly undermined by the fact that BDO and Chammas had been forwarding
emails from Bill.com to Cartagena for the duration of their relationship. For example, on August
24 (the day before BDO sent its response), Bill.com (account-services@hq.bill.com) emailed
addition, numerous other bill-related communications for Plaintiffs are sent to MBAF Bill Pay
(mbafbillpay@bdo.com). Yet, BDO has refused to provide any information related to these
accounts.
35. To add insult to injury, on August 11, just three days after Plaintiffs’ first letter,
BDO and Chammas unilaterally and without warning gave Plaintiffs formal notice of their
intention to terminate their accounting relationship of ten years. As discussed below, this came
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just two months before the October 15 tax deadline that BDO and Chammas knew Plaintiffs had
to meet. And Defendants failed to provide past tax returns and work product necessary for another
accountant to file returns on Plaintiffs’ behalf. Indeed, to date, Plaintiffs have not received any
documents for any accounts belonging to Wooo LLC, Azzy’s Way LLC, Beleedat LLC, R4 So
Valid LLC, and Slate. Nor have they received any documents for several of Cartagena’s and
36. At present, despite Plaintiffs’ repeated requests and despite representations from
BDO’s attorneys to the contrary, BDO and Chammas have failed to provide the vast majority of
the contents of Plaintiffs’ client files, including most of their records, data, and the critical working
papers and supporting documentation that should be in BDO and Chammas’s possession.
37. Although Plaintiffs have only glimpsed their financial situation based on the partial
information BDO and Chammas have provided, Plaintiffs have nevertheless uncovered numerous
instances of fraudulent activity and improper accounting practices. Plaintiffs need access to their
records to further investigate these illegal activities and to ensure that BDO, Chammas, and
A. Missing Funds
38. Based on a comparison between BDO’s QuickBooks and Plaintiffs’ actual bank
statements, BDO and Chammas recorded hundreds of thousands of dollars in deposited revenues
39. For Azzy’s Way, LLC, for example, BDO and Chammas recorded $831,038 in
revenue between January and June 2022, but corresponding bank statements for the same period
reflect only $537,993 in deposits. In other words, BDO and Chammas failed to deposit $293,045
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that they represented had in fact been deposited. Likewise, for Sneaker Addict Touring, LLC,
BDO and Chammas failed to deposit $305,474 in revenues that they recorded as deposited. On
the other hand, for both Slate, Inc. and R4 So Valid, LLC, BDO and Chammas appear to have
booked less revenue than what the relevant bank accounts reflect.
41. For the Azzy’s Way discrepancy of $293,045, the following are the specific entries
that BDO and Chammas recorded in BDO’s QuickBooks that are not, in fact, reflected as deposited
2 In the table, “Client” is what actually was deposited into Plaintiffs’ bank accounts; “BDO” is
the revenue booked.
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42. For the Sneaker Addict discrepancy of $305,474.04, the missing funds comprise
three categories: (1) $137,499.96 of revenue from Market America that BDO and Chammas falsely
recorded as deposited; (2) $193,201.65 of revenue from performances that BDO and Chammas
falsely recorded as deposited; and (3) a returned mortgage payment of $25,225.57 that BDO and
43. Plaintiffs’ accounts also reflected tens of thousands of dollars in revenue that BDO
and Chammas did not record at all. In particular, for R4 So Valid, LLC they did not record $90,000
in revenues and for Slate, Inc. they did not record $71,000 in royalties.
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44. To get to the bottom of these issues, and to see what other issues exist, Plaintiffs
need access to all the documents that BDO and Chammas rely on for bookkeeping, as well as any
45. Cartagena has identified discrepancies concerning the amount of money he paid to
BDO for services rendered this calendar year. According to Cartagena’s credit card records, from
January 1 through July 5, 2022, he paid approximately $116,100 to BDO. But according to
Chammas, the total “Payments Received from Joseph A. Cartagena and Related Entities” for the
same period was only $101,600. The $14,500 discrepancy is attributable to Chammas’s omission
of two payments to BDO on July 5: one for $6,000 and the other for $8,500. While those same
payments were captured in a different transaction report, also provided by BDO, that purportedly
covers the same period, the second report reflects only $76,000 in charges, omitting several other
payments that the Chammas report captures. Plaintiffs do not have an explanation for these
discrepancies or for what BDO and Chammas actually did with the missing funds. Plaintiffs need
46. As one might expect to find in an operation set up as a Ponzi scheme, Cartagena’s
American Express records reflect at least two bank accounts that do not belong to him : one
associated with City National Bank (account ending in -1535) and the other associated with UMB
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47. The UMB -7495 account is particularly troubling. There are $119,228.03 in
unauthorized payments from that account that were used to cover Cartagena’s American Express
bills: one payment on May 11, 2022, for $63,862.00 and another on February 2, 2022, for
$55,366.03. Further investigation has revealed that the -7495 account belongs to another client of
BDO and Chammas who also worked with Rodriguez: professional baseball player Dayan Viciedo
(former Chicago White Sox). And the scheme does not end there. That same BDO-managed
account was used to pay for American Express accounts opened under the names of other famous
clients of BDO and Chammas who worked with Rodriguez. These additional victims include
Major League Baseball players Jose Iglesias (Colorado Rockies) and Luis Garcia (Houston Astros).
48. But of all the foregoing evidence of wrongdoing, perhaps most damning is the fact
that in the QuickBooks ledger prepared by BDO and Chammas, the two payments from the -7495
account are falsely recorded to conceal their origin: both are booked as coming from Slate’s
account at First Horizon Bank, Cartagena’s only legitimate bank. One such booking is shown
below:
49. Of course, that booking does not reconcile with Plaintiffs’ bank statements, since
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50. This is likely just the tip of the iceberg. Plaintiffs have requested information
concerning the -7495 and -1535 accounts multiple times, but BDO has denied any knowledge of
them. Indeed, BDO and Chammas represented that the only bank accounts belonging to Plaintiffs
are at First Horizon. But BDO and Chammas were responsible for reconciling Cartagena’s credit
card and bank statements and must have known about the foreign accounts and the unauthorized
payments. That is made clear in BDO’s own QuickBooks records, which reflect that BDO and
51. Also typical of what one might find in a Ponzi scheme, Cartagena has identified
over one million dollars in payments to American Express accounts that are not his.
Touring, LLC revealed payments totaling $1,843,612 that were made to three American Express
accounts that do not belong to Cartagena or his entities, from a bank account at Sabadell United
53. Plaintiffs also identified payments to unauthorized credit cards recorded in BDO’s
QuickBooks ledger for Cartagena. Transactions recorded in this account include hundreds of
thousands of dollars of payments to various fraudulently obtained credit cards (American Express,
54. Plaintiffs have also identified troubling evidence of identity fraud. Specifically,
Cartagena uncovered American Express accounts opened by Rodriguez under his wife’s name,
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Lorena Rios. But Rios never received or used these credit cards. Instead, it was Rodriguez who
used the accounts to make unauthorized purchases of approximately $40,000, including Uber rides
and UberEats deliveries to Rodriguez’s house and payments for Rodriguez’s daughter’s tuition:
55. The American Express accounts were also used to make unauthorized ATM cash
Chammas at 1450 Brickell Ave., the address of the BDO office where Chammas currently works,
where Rodriguez once worked, and where both Chammas and Rodriguez worked for years when
MBAF was headquartered there. Specific examples of such withdrawals are below:
Express accounts, but BDO and Chammas have refused to cooperate. Most recently, BDO
misrepresented that it “does not have access to Cartagena’s American Express account.” But BDO
was responsible for reconciling the payments and charges related to Cartagena’s American Express
cards. In fact, Plaintiffs only discovered the fraudulent activity related to the credit card accounts
after being forced to call American Express to change the account address, issue new cards, and
send past statements. In doing so, Plaintiffs learned that BDO and Chammas had failed to record
or pay the balances associated with these accounts, which had been accruing interest at a rate of
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29%. Then, on July 27, 2022, the day after Cartagena first complained to BDO and Chammas
about the delinquent mortgage payments, the full balance on one of the American Express accounts
was paid in full for approximately $29,000. Remarkably, and true to form, that payment was made
from the -7495 bank account belonging to Viciedo, consistent with the broader fraudulent Ponzi
scheme outlined above. Knowing that the charges had been illegally incurred, BDO, Chammas,
and Rodriguez were now attempting to cover up their tracks. But they’ve been caught red -handed.
57. Cartagena has also identified approximately $30,000 in payments ostensibly for a
Cadillac Escalade he once owned, but the payments were made after Cartagena had already sold—
and therefore no longer needed to pay for—the vehicle. BDO itself has admitted “that monthly
payments were made . . . in connection with a Cadillac Escalade that Cartagena financed, but later
sold,” but it has yet to explain why it continued to make such payments from Cartagena’s accounts
58. BDO and Chammas recorded many transactions to a general account ledger called
“MBAF Exchange,” which they treated as a miscellaneous expense account. But BDO and
Chammas falsely recorded hundreds of thousands of dollars to this purported expense account.
For example, BDO booked as a debit to the MBAF Exchange almost $150,000 that was in fact a
59. The MBAF Exchange account is a “black box” to Plaintiffs, who lack any insight
into the way it was used. In particular, Plaintiffs lack the underlying documentation, such as
invoices and bills, that BDO and Chammas used to assign transactions to the MBAF Exchange.
And without that documentation, Plaintiffs have been prevented from comprehensively checking
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BDO and Chammas’s work that, upon even a superficial review, has revealed evidence of their
fraudulent scheme.
60. In addition to the delinquent mortgage payments discussed above, BDO and
Chammas have paid late or failed to pay entirely almost every recurring payment for which they
were responsible. Such additional missed or late payments include, for example, payments owed
to the caretakers for Cartagena’s disabled son and elderly parents, who BDO and Chammas failed
to pay for months at a time, as well as accounts payable for Plaintiffs’ employees and car payments,
Chammas’s accounting and bill payment practices, Plaintiffs must file their federal tax returns on
October 15, 2022, just a few weeks from today. To date, despite repeated requests, BDO and
Chammas have failed to provide the necessary records and associated working papers required for
a new accountant to step in at this late date and file Plaintiffs’ returns in time. Such missing records
include Plaintiffs’ tax returns for the past five years, among other items.
62. BDO and Chammas are, and at all relevant times have been, subject to Florida’s
certified public accounting laws and regulations. See Fla. Admin. Code r. 61H1-20.001(1), (4).
accountant and a licensed accounting firm, “shall furnish to a client or former client upon request
(a) Any accounting or other records belonging to, or obtained from or on behalf
of, the client that were provided to the certified public accountant; . . .
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(b) Any accounting or other records . . . related to an issued work product of
the certified public accountant . . . otherwise not available to the client, with the result that the
(c) A copy of any deliverable as set forth in the terms of the engagement that
64. BDO and Chammas should have maintained Plaintiffs’ client files (i.e., their tax
returns, work papers, and all other files, records, information, and data), including for the period
before the merger with MBAF. In light of these obligations and Plaintiffs’ repeated requests over
the past two months, there is no justification for BDO and Chammas’s failure to supply the
requested documents in a timely manner. And BDO and Chammas, by their failure to provide
Plaintiffs with all of their work product generated on behalf of and paid for by Plaintiffs, have
engaged in misconduct.
65. Under Florida Administrative Code Rule 61H1-22.001, “[a] certified public
accountant shall comply with” certain “general standards,” including completing all work with
certified public accountant must be in charge of all public accounting services performed by the
firm,” id., and “shall not permit others to carry out on his/her behalf . . . acts which, if carried out
by the certified public accountant[,] would place him/her in violation of Chapters 455 and 473,
well as knowingly “[c]onceal[ing] information relative to violations of this chapter,” id. § 473.322.
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67. BDO and Chammas failed to comply with those laws, rules, regulations, and
standards.
68. Accordingly, Plaintiffs seek damages, attorneys’ fees and costs, and the entirety of
their files, including all work product, tax returns, work papers, supporting documentation, and all
other files, records, information, and data to which they are legally entitled.
69. Plaintiffs incorporate each preceding paragraph as though fully set forth herein.
demonstrate that defendants owed a duty of care which they breached, proximately causing
damages to Plaintiffs.
71. Chammas performed accounting services for Plaintiffs from 2012 to August 2022.
BDO performed accounting services for Plaintiffs from at least 2021 to August 2022. At all
relevant times, BDO and Chammas were subject to Florida laws and regulations governing the
72. As public accountants acting for Plaintiffs, BDO and Chammas thus owed Plaintiffs
duties of “due professional care,” “professional competence,” and adequate supervision in the
performance of their engagements under Florida Administrative Code Rule 61H1 -22.001,
including performing the bookkeeping, bill pay, and tax return services described above in a proper,
73. Chammas and BDO owed Plaintiffs a duty not to commit acts of deceit, negligence,
or misconduct, and to disclose information related to violations of such duties. Fla. Stat.
§§ 473.322, 473.323(1)(g).
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74. Chammas and BDO owed Plaintiffs a duty under Florida Administrative Code Rule
61H1-23.002, to return upon request Plaintiffs’ client files, including all work product, work
papers, client records, and any other records “related” to work produced in the engagement.
75. In performing accounting services for Plaintiffs, BDO and Chammas committed
malpractice and acted negligently, including, but not limited to, by doing the following:
(b) Failing to deliver Plaintiffs’ client files, including all records, information,
(d) Failing to make timely mortgage and other payments without justification;
(f) Using Plaintiffs’ accounts for their own personal and unlawful ends;
(h) Making payments for credit cards, vehicles, and other bills and expenses
that they knew or reasonably should have known were not valid;
LLC, to pay for American Express accounts not belonging to and unknown to Plaintiffs;
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(l) Using the identity of Cartagena’s wife, Rios, to open American Express
accounts without authorization and to accrue tens of thousands in unauthorized charges and ATM
withdrawals;
receiving funds from outside bank accounts belonging to other BDO clients, including the -7495
make payments for a Cadillac Escalade, when no such money was due or payable because that
(o) Failing to record $90,000 in revenues that R4 So Valid, LLC in fact booked
(p) Failing to record $71,000 in royalties that Slate, Inc. in fact booked between
(q) Misrepresenting that between January 1 and July 31, 2022, Plaintiffs had
paid BDO and Chammas either $101,600 or $76,000 for services rendered, when in fact Plaintiffs
were made, when in reality BDO and Chammas were responsible for reconciling and making
of dollars; and
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(t) Violating laws, regulations, rules, and professional standards applicable to
77. Plaintiffs incorporate each preceding paragraph as though fully set forth herein.
78. To establish a breach of fiduciary duty, plaintiffs must prove the existence of a
fiduciary relationship, a breach of that duty, and damages proximately caused by the breach.
79. A fiduciary relationship exists when one party is under a duty to act or to give
advice for the benefit of another upon matters within the scope of the relationship.
80. BDO and Chammas, as Plaintiffs’ accounting firm and accountant, owed fiduciary
duties to Plaintiffs.
81. BDO and Chammas knew or should have known that Plaintiffs placed their trust
and confidence in them to manage Plaintiffs’ accounts in a manner consistent with applicable laws,
82. BDO and Chammas breached their fiduciary duties to Plaintiffs, including, but not
(b) Failing to deliver Plaintiffs’ tax returns, work papers, and all other files,
(c) Taking steps to protect their own interests to the detriment of Plaintiffs;
(d) Failing to make timely mortgage and other payments without justification;
(f) Using Plaintiffs’ accounts for their own personal and unlawful ends;
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(g) Failing to maintain a repository of all work product and supporting
(h) Making payments for credit cards, vehicles, and other bills and expenses
that they knew or reasonably should have known were not valid;
LLC, to pay for American Express accounts not belonging to and unknown to Plaintiffs;
(l) Using the identity of Cartagena’s wife, Rios, to open American Express
accounts without authorization and to accrue tens of thousands in unauthorized charges and ATM
withdrawals;
receiving funds from outside bank accounts belonging to other BDO clients, including the -7495
make payments for a Cadillac Escalade, when no such money was due or payable because that
(o) Failing to record $90,000 in revenues that R4 So Valid, LLC in fact booked
(p) Failing to record $71,000 in royalties that Slate, Inc. in fact booked between
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(q) Misrepresenting that between January 1 and July 31, 2022, Plaintiffs had
paid BDO and Chammas either $101,600 or $76,000 for services rendered, when in fact Plaintiffs
were made, when in reality they were responsible for reconciling and making payments to
of dollars; and
84. Plaintiffs incorporate each preceding paragraph as though fully set forth herein.
inconsistent with ownership. Money can be the subject of conversion where defendan ts have
stolen or embezzled funds entrusted to them by plaintiffs, and defendants had an obligation to keep
intact or deliver the specific money in question, so that such money can be identified.
86. BDO and Chammas have refused to provide Plaintiffs access to their accounting
files and information, wrongfully asserting that Plaintiffs have no right to those records.
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87. BDO, Chammas, and Rodriguez have wrongfully asserted dominion over specific
funds, inconsistent with Plaintiffs’ ownership over the same, including, but not limited to, the
following:
(a) Intentionally receiving, but failing to deposit into Plaintiffs’ bank accounts,
(b) Intentionally receiving, but failing to deposit into Plaintiffs’ bank accounts,
LLC, to pay for American Express accounts not belonging to and unknown to Plaintiffs;
(d) Using the identity of Cartagena’s wife, Rios, to open American Express
accounts without authorization and to accrue tens of thousands in unauthorized charges —including,
for example, food deliveries to Rodriguez’s house and payment for the tuition of Rodriguez’s
receiving funds from outside bank accounts belonging to other BDO clients, including the -7495
make payments for a Cadillac Escalade, when so such money was due or payable because that
88. BDO, Chammas, and Rodriguez have retained these missing funds and have thus
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FOURTH CLAIM FOR RELIEF
(FRAUDULENT MISREPRESENTATION & CONCEALMENT)
(Against BDO and Chammas)
90. Plaintiffs incorporate each preceding paragraph as though fully set forth herein.
material fact made by defendants with knowledge of its falsity, an intent to defraud, and
detrimental reliance.
disclose a material fact that they had a duty to disclose; defendants had reason to know the
undisclosed fact should be disclosed; defendants intended that the omission would induce plaintiffs
to act; and plaintiffs detrimentally relied on the omission. Defendants’ silence may be actionable
where they had an independent duty of disclosure, such as in a fiduciary or confidential relationship.
94. BDO and Chammas have had numerous communications with Plaintiffs regarding
their services. During those communications, BDO and Chammas were under a duty to disclose
95. BDO and Chammas falsely and fraudulently, and with intent to deceive and defraud
Plaintiffs, misrepresented and failed to disclose certain material facts, including, but not limited to,
the following:
(a) BDO and Chammas failed to disclose that from 2017 to 2018, payments
totaling $1,843,612 were made without Plaintiffs’ authorization or knowledge from Sneaker
Addict Touring, LLC’s bank account to three American Express accounts that Plaintiffs did not
own;
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(b) BDO and Chammas failed to disclose that beginning in 2018 and through
August 2022, the identity of Cartagena’s wife, Rios, had been stolen to open American Express
accounts without authorization and to accrue tens of thousands in unauthorized charges and ATM
withdrawals;
(c) BDO and Chammas failed to disclose that beginning in 2017, Plaintiffs’
credit card accounts had been misappropriated and used to further a Ponzi scheme, by receiving
funds from outside bank accounts belonging to other BDO clients, including the -7495 account
$30,000 of Plaintiffs’ funds had been used to make legitimate payments for a Cadillac Escalade,
when in fact no such money was due or payable because that vehicle no longer belonged to
Cartagena;
(e) BDO and Chammas omitted and misrepresented around the dates listed
below, that revenues for Azzy’s Way, LLC in the amounts listed below, had been deposited in
Plaintiffs’ bank accounts, when in reality those revenues were never deposited into Plaintiffs’
accounts:
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(f) BDO and Chammas omitted and misrepresented around the dates listed
below, that revenues for Sneaker Addict Touring, LLC in the amounts listed below, had been
deposited in Plaintiffs’ bank accounts, when in reality those revenues were never deposited into
Plaintiffs’ accounts:
(g) BDO and Chammas failed to disclose $90,000 in revenues that R4 So Valid,
(h) BDO and Chammas failed to disclose $71,000 in royalties that Slate, Inc. in
(i) BDO and Chammas misrepresented that between January 1 and July 31,
2022, Plaintiffs had paid BDO and Chammas either $101,600 or $76,000 for services rendered,
(j) BDO and Chammas failed to disclose that hundreds of thousands of dollars
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96. The facts misrepresented and omitted were and are material because Plaintiffs
would not have continued to engage BDO and Chammas as their accountants, giving them access
to and power over Plaintiffs’ finances, and continuing to pay the substantial fees for their services,
97. BDO and Chammas knew that the information above concerning fraud, conversion,
theft, negligence, and other misconduct should have been disclosed to Plaintiffs.
98. BDO and Chammas knew when the above representations and omissions were
made to and hidden from Plaintiffs that they were false or materially misleading in the ways
described above.
99. Plaintiffs believed and reasonably and detrimentally relied on the representations
and omissions because Plaintiffs continued to engage and pay BDO and Chammas to perform all
of the services discussed above, only BDO and Chammas have access to the information that could
show they were engaged in a fraudulent scheme, and only BDO and Chammas were the financial
100. BDO and Chammas knew and intended that Plaintiffs would rely on the above
misrepresentations and omissions to their detriment by continuing to engage BDO and Chammas
101. Plaintiffs first learned of BDO and Chammas’s fraudulent conduct in July 2022,
after receiving notice from Cartagena’s bank regarding delinquent mortgage payments and
at trial.
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FIFTH CLAIM FOR RELIEF
(UNJUST ENRICHMENT)
(Against BDO, Chammas, and Rodriguez)
103. Plaintiffs incorporate each preceding paragraph as though fully set forth herein.
104. Plaintiffs establish a claim for unjust enrichment by showing that they conferred
payments that defendants accepted and retained, although they were not entitled to them under
105. Plaintiffs paid BDO and Chammas substantial sums for accounting services that
106. Cartagena has had to recreate the financial ledger BDO was supposed to produce
107. BDO and Cartagena have refused to return Plaintiffs’ records and information.
108. Plaintiffs paid for bill payment services to ensure that they did not fall behind on
109. Under the circumstances, BDO and Chammas have substantially failed to provide
any value in return for the significant payments Plaintiffs have made to them over the years. On
the contrary, as detailed above, in exchange for those payments, BDO and Chammas have
defrauded and harmed Plaintiffs. It would therefore be unjust, inequitable, and against good
conscience for BDO or Chammas to retain any of the money that Plaintiffs have paid them or any
110. In addition, BDO, Chammas, and Rodriguez have benefited financially from at
(a) Keeping the $293,045 in revenues associated with Azzy’s Way, LLC;
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(b) Keeping the $305,474.04 in revenues associated with Sneaker Addict
Touring, LLC;
LLC, to pay for American Express accounts not belonging to and unknown to Plaintiffs;
(d) Using the identity of Cartagena’s wife, Rios, to open American Express
for example, food deliveries to Rodriguez’s house and payment for the tuition of Rodriguez’s
Cadillac Escalade, when so such money was due or payable because that vehicle no longer
111. Because the above money was taken as part of BDO, Chammas, and Rodriguez’s
misconduct, it would be unjust, inequitable, and against good conscience for BDO, Chammas, or
113. Plaintiffs incorporate each preceding paragraph as though fully set forth herein.
114. BDO knew and acknowledged that Chammas and Rodriguez worked for it and
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115. BDO controlled the actions of Chammas and Rodriguez, who were both employees
116. At all relevant times, BDO was responsible for the actions and conduct of Chammas
and Rodriguez.
117. At all relevant times, Chammas and Rodriguez were acting as employees of BDO
and within the scope of their employment when they committed the misconduct discussed above.
118. The misconduct committed by Chammas and Rodriguez was done pursuant to the
actions that they were employed to perform at BDO, occurred within the time and space of their
employment at BDO, and was meant to further a purpose and interest of BDO (i.e., to make more
119. BDO had the right, ability, and duty to supervise Chammas and Rodriguez and
120. BDO had the right, ability, and duty to stop Chammas and Rodriguez from
performing the misconduct discussed above, but it failed to do so. On the contrary, BDO profited
122. Plaintiffs incorporate each preceding paragraph as though fully set forth herein.
123. As a result of BDO’s merger with MBAF, BDO is liable as a successor for MBAF’s
124. Under Florida law, a successor entity is liable for the conduct of a predecessor
where, among other things, the acquisition is a de facto merger. A de facto merger occurs when
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one corporation is absorbed by another, i.e., there is a continuity of the selling corporation
evidenced by such things as the same management, personnel, assets, location , and stockholders.
125. Under the terms of the acquisition, BDO acquired all of MBAF’s assets and
126. MBAF Chairman and CEO, Tony Argiz, became the head of BDO’s operations in
the Florida Tri-County area and a member of BDO’s board of directors and its compensation
committee.
127. MBAF name partner Miguel Farra became head of BDO’s South Florida tax
practice. MBAF affiliates WhiteOwl and Fiscal Management Associates LLC (“FMA”) also
joined BDO. WhiteOwl became part of BDO Digital and FMA became BDO-FMA LLC.
128. MBAF’s headquarters at 1450 Brickell Avenue, Miami, Florida became BDO’s
office.
129. The transaction was also characterized as a merger by the parties and the public.
When the deal was announced, for example, Accounting Today declared “BDO merges in MBAF.”
Likewise, BDO CEO Wayne Berson explained that “[w]ith BDO and MBAF combining, . . . two
like-minded firms [will] become a sum much greater than their parts.” And MBAF’s Farra
explained that “[c]ontinuity for our clients and our people remains our top priority as we join forces
with BDO. Our clients will still see the same names and faces they’ve come to trust over the years,
only now with greater resources and capabilities available to all of our practice areas.”
130. In short, BDO’s acquisition of MBAF was one entity being absorbed by another
131. The transaction was therefore a de facto merger through which BDO became liable
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PRAYER FOR RELIEF
(b) An award of all damages to which Plaintiffs are entitled, the specific amount
(c) An award of reasonable attorneys’ fees and costs related to bringing this
action; and
(d) Any such further relief as may be deemed just and proper.
133. Plaintiffs also intend to seek leave from this Court to assert a claim for punitive
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