Executives of Tricolor Auto Indicted in Billion Dollar Fraud after Company Collapse

Executives of Tricolor Auto Indicted in Billion Dollar Fraud after Company Collapse

Daniel Chu — the Founder and CEO of Tricolor — and Three Other Executives, have been charged with systematically Defrauding Tricolor’s Lenders after the company collapsed into Bankruptcy earlier this year.

An Indictment has been unsealed charging DANIEL CHU, the founder and former CEO of Tricolor Holdings LLC, with orchestrating a years-long financial crimes enterprise that defrauded multiple banks and other private credit providers. 

CHU and DAVID GOODGAME, Tricolor’s former COO, are also charged with bank fraud and wire fraud offenses in connection with schemes to fraudulently double-pledge collateral to multiple lenders and manipulate the characteristics of collateral to make ineligible, near-worthless assets appear to meet lender requirements.  Both defendants were arrested Wednesday.  CHU was presented Wednesday in the Southern District of Florida, and GOODGAME will be presented today (Thursday) in the Northern District of Texas. 

Also were the guilty pleas of JEROME KOLLAR, Tricolor’s former CFO, and AMERYN SEIBOLD, a former finance executive at Tricolor, in connection with their participation in the conspiracy.  KOLLAR and SEIBOLD pled guilty to fraud charges before U.S. District Judge Lewis J. Liman on December 16, 2025.  Both are cooperating with the Government.

United States Attorney for the Southern District of New York, Jay Clayton, Assistant Director in Charge of the New York Field Office of the Federal Bureau of Investigation (“FBI”), Christopher G. Raia, and Special Agent in Charge of the New York Regional Office of the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation’s Office of Inspector General (“FDIC-OIG”), Patricia Tarasca, announced the unsealing of the  Indictment.

“These four executives allegedly conspired to defraud lenders based on bogus collateral,” said FBI Assistant Director in Charge Christopher G. Raia.  “The defendants’ alleged manipulation not only ripped off multiple banks but also violated the integrity of our credit markets.  The FBI will never tolerate any company that makes fraud part of its business.”

“As alleged, the defendants in this case participated in a years-long fraudulent scheme that deceived the lenders of Tricolor,” said FDIC-OIG Special Agent in Charge Patricia Tarasca.  “The FDIC-OIG stands firm in its commitment to working with our law enforcement partners to investigate all allegations of fraud that target financial institutions, as we seek to preserve the integrity of our Nation’s financial system.”

From in or about 2018 through in or about 2025, CHU, GOODGAME, KOLLAR, and SEIBOLD conspired to defraud the lenders and asset-backed securities investors of Tricolor Holdings, LLC and its affiliates (“Tricolor”), a subprime auto retailer and financing company. 

CHU, Tricolor’s founder and chief executive officer; GOODGAME, Tricolor’s chief operating officer; and others operated Tricolor through systematic fraud. 

At CHU’s direction, multiple Tricolor executives repeatedly double-pledged collateral to multiple lenders and manipulated the characteristics of collateral to make ineligible, near-worthless assets appear to meet lender requirements. 

By in or about August 2025, Tricolor had pledged approximately $2.2 billion of collateral to lenders and investors, but Tricolor had only approximately $1.4 billion of real collateral. 

The difference—consisting of approximately $800 million in bogus collateral—resulted from the series of schemes and the conspiracy in which CHU, GOODGAME, KOLLAR, SEIBOLD, and others participated.

Over time, this series of fraudulent schemes had a profound effect on Tricolor, which obtained hundreds of millions of dollars in cash advances; on CHU, who used a portion of the funds to enrich himself; and on Tricolor’s lenders, who extended billions in loans based on fabricated data and false statements. 

In or about the summer of 2025, lenders confronted CHU and others at Tricolor about problems with Tricolor’s collateral.  In a series of secretly recorded phone calls, CHU and his conspirators concocted plans to conceal or explain away the fraud.  For example, on or about August 17, 2025, CHU proposed blaming certain loan data discrepancies on fictitious deferment policies.  CHU acknowledged, however, that “where we would have an issue is if, if they sent an auditor and they said, pull this up on your screen, right, that would be a problem.”  KOLLAR agreed, stating, “Yes. That would be bad.”  These efforts to conceal failed. 

Unable to explain or excuse Tricolor’s fraud, CHU turned his sights on blaming others.  On another recorded phone call, CHU compared Tricolor’s circumstances to the circumstances of Enron, the energy trading firm that collapsed into bankruptcy following the discovery of accounting fraud and other misconduct. 

Specifically, CHU and others discussed the possibility that they could blame the banks for ignoring red flags and use that threat as leverage to extract a favorable settlement. 

CHU proposed using artificial intelligence tools to search for key words that GOODGAME could use in a discussion with a lender.  After another participant described an Enron-related litigation, CHU stated: “Enron obviously has a nice ring to it, right? <laugh>, I mean, Enron, Enron raises the blood pressure of the lender when they see that <laugh>.  It, it has to, right? I’m not— […] Cause who wants to be thrown in the category?”  CHU later said, “That Enron case is fucking perfect, I think.”

CHU, recognizing that Tricolor was, in his words, “basically history,” turned his attention to extracting millions of dollars from the company. 

As Tricolor approached collapse, and after CHU observed that the company was “definitely insolvent,” he directed KOLLAR to pay him the final installments of a $15 million bonus. 

On or about August 19 and 20, 2025—roughly three weeks before Tricolor placed more than 1,000 employees on unpaid leaves of absence and before the company filed for bankruptcy—CHU received two payments from Tricolor totaling $6.25 million.  CHU used some of this money to purchase a multimillion-dollar property in Beverly Hills, California on or about August 27, 2025. 

Unable to maintain its access to loans, and unable to sustain its business without substantial cash, Tricolor filed for Chapter 7 bankruptcy on September 10, 2025.  By that time, the company’s largest lenders had advanced and were owed more than $900 million as a result of the fraudulent double-pledging and collateral manipulation schemes that CHU had orchestrated, and in which GOODGAME had knowingly participated as the company’s chief operating officer, for years.

A chart showing each defendant, the crimes they are charged with, and the jail Sentences for each crime, is shown below.  The Charges are merely accusations, and they must be PROVED beyond a reasonable doubt to a Jury.

The Sentences are determined by a Judge and may differ substantially from the maximum shown below:

Defendant,

Age, and

Residence

Charges Maximum Potential Sentence(s)
United States v. Daniel Chu and David Goodgame

CHU,

62,

Miami,

FL

Continuing Financial Crimes Enterprise, 18 U.S.C. § 225 (Count One)

Conspiracy to Commit Bank Fraud and Wire Fraud Affecting a Financial Institution, 18 U.S.C. § 1349 (Count Two)

Bank Fraud, 18 U.S.C. § 1344 (Count Three)

Wire Fraud Affecting a Financial Institution, 18 U.S.C. § 1343 (Count Four)

Life in prison

Mandatory minimum sentence of 10 years in prison

30 years in prison

30 years in prison

30 years in prison

GOODGAME,

49,

Waxahachie,

TX

Conspiracy to Commit Bank Fraud and Wire Fraud Affecting a Financial Institution, 18 U.S.C. § 1349 (Count Two)

Bank Fraud, 18 U.S.C. § 1344 (Count Three)

Wire Fraud Affecting a Financial Institution, 18 U.S.C. § 1343 (Count Four)

30 years in prison

30 years in prison

30 years in prison

United States v. Jerome Kollar

KOLLAR,

62,

Shady Shores,

TX

Conspiracy to Commit Bank Fraud and Wire Fraud Affecting a Financial Institution, 18 U.S.C. § 1349 (Count One)

Bank Fraud, 18 U.S.C. § 1344 (Count Two)

Wire Fraud Affecting a Financial Institution, 18 U.S.C. § 1343 (Count Three)

False Statements to Financial Institutions, 18 U.S.C. § 1014 (Count Four)

Conspiracy to Commit Securities Fraud, 18 U.S.C. § 371 (Count Five)

Securities Fraud, 15 U.S.C. §§ 78j(b) & 78ff (Count Six)

Destruction of Records, 18 U.S.C. § 1519 (Count Seven)

 

30 years in prison

30 years in prison

30 years in prison

30 years in prison

Five years in prison

20 years in prison

20 years in prison

United States v. Ameryn Seibold

SEIBOLD,

31,

Princeton,

TX

Conspiracy to Commit Bank Fraud and Wire Fraud Affecting a Financial Institution, 18 U.S.C. § 1349 (Count One)

Bank Fraud, 18 U.S.C. § 1344 (Count Two)

Wire Fraud Affecting a Financial Institution, 18 U.S.C. § 1343 (Count Three)

False Statements to Financial Institutions, 18 U.S.C. § 1014 (Count Four)

Conspiracy to Commit Securities Fraud, 18 U.S.C. § 371 (Count Five)

Securities Fraud, 15 U.S.C. §§ 78j(b) & 78ff (Count Six)

Destruction of Records, 18 U.S.C. § 1519 (Count Seven)

30 years in prison

30 years in prison

30 years in prison

30 years in prison

Five years in prison

20 years in prison

20 years in prison

 

 

Image

This Site Owned and Published by:

 

Harold C. Turner

1906 Paterson Plank Road

Post Office Box 421

North Bergen, NJ   07047

 

LISTENER ON-AIR CALL-IN NUMBER:

201-771-3013

 

Office Tel: 201-484-0900

Email: Hal.Turner@HalTurnerRadioShow.com

Radio Station Info

The Hal Turner Show airs as follows:

Monday-Friday 9:00PM - 10:00PM Eastern US time (GMT-0400) on:

WRMI (Radio Miami International)

Freq. 5950 kHz, 9455 kHz, 7570 kHz

and 7730 kHz

WWCR (World Wide Christian Radio) Freq. 7520 KHz