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Flagship National Bank

Defaults: This data is from judgements and foreclosure filings and was collected through county clerk’s offices. It includes every judgement for more than $1 million or the five largest at each bank.
2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012
Flagship National Bank
SPAN
May 1999-October 2009

HEADQUARTERS
Bradenton

REGULATORS
OFR/FDIC

TOTAL ASSETS AT FAILURE
$190 million

COST TO FDIC
$64 million

DIRECTORS
Piero Rivolta
Steve Jonsson
Frederick M. Derr
Michael Moulton
Charles E. Robbins
Micheline Silverman
A bank the size of Flagship National Bank is not supposed to lend more than $5 million to one customer — but that did not stop the Bradenton institution from extending $9 million to an influential Manatee County businessman.

A real estate investor and former Manatee Republican Party chairman, Paul Sharff once sat on the airport board and is a close friend of former Sheriff Charlie Wells.

Sharff received more money from Flagship than any other customer despite his past financial problems. In 1987, he filed for bankruptcy in West Virginia and listed gambling debts in court filings.

After moving to Florida, Sharff made no secret of his continued affinity for games of chance and chartered private planes to fly friends down to the Atlantis casino in the Bahamas.

When he filed for bankruptcy again in 2009, he listed $200,000 in debt to Atlantis and $190,000 to a casino in Atlantic City, N.J.

Sharff later sued Flagship and accused it of breaking the law by giving him too much money.

Sharff said the bank suggested he pretend to transfer properties to friends and relatives and take out loans in their names in order to keep borrowing above the $5 million limit.

Flagship's attorneys denied the accusations in U.S. District Court; the case was dismissed a year after it was filed.

According to federal regulators, the loans to Sharff were not the only ones that defied safe lending standards.

The U.S. Treasury Department's Office of the Inspector General said in its May 2011 report that Flagship regularly approved loans to borrowers who were known to have severe financial weaknesses.

The report said developers got loans without having to prove they had secured enough tenants or buyers to make their projects viable. 

Loans were processed "without sufficient documentation or thorough evaluation of borrowers' loan repayment abilities," the report said.


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