Trial delayed for Greenwood horse farm owner indicted on federal charges

The trial for a Greenwood horse farm owner who was indicted last year on nearly 20 federal charges is delayed a second time.

The trial for Daniel R. Fruits, 46, was initially set for July, but was moved to moved to Monday. Now, the trial has been pushed back again to Mar. 8, following a request from Fruits. The trial will take place at the federal courthouse in Indianapolis, according to online court records.

Fruits was indicted last December on 10 counts of wire fraud, six counts of money laundering, two counts of making false statements to a federally insured bank and a count of mail fraud, according to a grand jury indictment filed in the U.S. District Court for the Southern District of Indiana.

Kloiber Management Services LLC, which is controlled by the Kloiber family of Lexington, Kentucky, hired Fruits in January 2015 to launch and operate Secure Transit.

In 2017, Fruits became a 10% owner of the business. Between January 2015 and June 2019, the Kloiber family made 16 investments totaling $14.3 million in Secure Transit, according to court documents.

Throughout that time, Fruits repeatedly lied about the company’s financial health, who its customers were and what the money invested was being used for. He allegedly sent the investor fake customer sales contracts and falsified financial statements. Fruits would often ask for additional investments — sometimes in the millions of dollars — to buy trucks or other business-related expenses.

Fruits used most of the investor’s money on personal items. He allegedly spent $880,000 to buy the horse farm, Travis Creek Stables, on Stones Crossing Road in Greenwood, and his personal home, where he used the investor’s money for renovations and a pool, court documents said.

He spent $55,000 on a horse, $33,000 on a seven-horse trailer, $560,000 on an RV and trailer, more than $111,000 on a Corvette, about $120,000 on four Rolex watches, $23,000 on payments for two Ferraris and $30,000 on payments for two escorts. He also bought 10 guns, court documents show.

Additionally, Fruits attempted a mortgage fraud scheme on Fifth Third Bank. In late 2018, Fruits made false statements to Fifth Third Bank to secure a $432,000 mortgage. He submitted falsified paperwork twice to show that loans from another bank had been paid off, when they had not been, according to court documents.

Also in 2018, Fruits attempted a title-washing scheme to remove a bank’s lien from the title of a truck he purchased. He financed the truck with a loan from Ally Financial for more than $69,000, court documents show.

Several months later, he sent the Indiana Bureau of Motor Vehicles a falsified letter pretending to be Ally Financial stating the loan had been paid off, according to court documents.

Fruits was placed on supervised release until his trial began, with conditions. However, in August, Fruits was arrested for violating the conditions of his release. He remains in federal custody while awaiting his trial, online court documents show.