A HERALD-TRIBUNE INVESTIGATION - STORIES | VIEW BANK DATA:
BREAKING
THE BANKS
LandMark 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
LandMark Bank
SPAN
February 2000-July 2011

HEADQUARTERS
Sarasota

REGULATORS
OFR/FDIC

TOTAL ASSETS AT FAILURE
$275 million

COST TO FDIC
$34 million

DIRECTORS
Frank J. Ingrassia
Thomas G. Quale
John M. Steele
Robert W. Brown
Thomas G. Dabney II
Steven E. Greenfield
Robert J. Lane
T. Raymond Suplee
LandMark Bank was one of nine Southwest Florida community banks launched in the late 1990s and early 2000s.

Its history in the crowded market was characterized by intense competition and a reliance on loans to a small group of property investors and developers.

Among those who received multiple loans from LandMark were investor Marvin Kaplan and real estate broker W. Howard Rooks.

Companies managed by Kaplan received 20 loans totaling more than $13.5 million over nine years and defaulted on two of them.

Companies controlled by Rooks, who filed for bankruptcy protection in Virginia in 1991, received six loans totaling $4.6 million. He also defaulted on two loans.

Three other borrowers obtained large loans despite past bankruptcies.

Gary Moyer filed for bankruptcy in 1994 and emerged a decade later as a developer in Manatee County.

Moyer helped put together the San Marco shopping center in Lakewood Ranch. He then transferred 7,400 square feet of unsold space in San Marco to one of his companies at well above market value and got an $830,000 loan from LandMark. The company defaulted two years later.

Another customer who received a loan from LandMark was Chris Moody, the former partner of convicted Ponzi schemer Arthur G. Nadel. Two weeks after a hedge fund controlled by those two men collapsed, LandMark gave Moody a $2 million loan.

LandMark got none of that money back.

The receiver in charge of the SEC's civil fraud case against the Ponzi schemer seized the collateral from that loan to repay Nadel's victims.

An attorney for the bank's former board members would not comment.


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