• Skip to primary navigation
  • Skip to main content
  • Skip to primary sidebar
Digital News Updates
  • Home
  • News
  • Politics
  • Business

San Francisco man with $2.4 million house got subsidized rent

September 26, 2024

(The Center Square) – Gregory Finkelson received a one-year prison sentence for theft of government property because of his fraudulent receipt of hundreds of thousands of dollars in low-income housing benefits in San Francisco, according to the U.S. Attorney for the Northern District of California.

The Honorable James Donato, United States District Judge, imposed the sentence last week.

The Section 8 Certificate Program is a HUD-funded rent subsidy program; the San Francisco Housing Authority administers the program in San Francisco, California.

“The program is intended to help low- and moderate-income families afford housing, and it has income limits and other eligibility requirements that applicants must meet to qualify for assistance,” a release explained

As a part of his plea agreement, the 64-year-old Finkelson admitted that from August 2006 to February 2020, he wrongfully claimed $341,455 worth of Section 8 Program subsidies because he lied and said he did not own his San Francisco residence; he bought the property via a straw purchaser and claimed he was an employee of a company that he owned and operated out of the home.

Finkelson admitted to using the name of a Russian national living in Russia to buy his San Francisco home. He also claimed that this Russian was the landlord and that he paid rent to her. Plus, Finkelson admitted to operating several bank accounts, including one in the Russian’s name. He confessed to using these accounts to conceal the Section 8 subsidies he obtained. He used this money to fund his business, pay off credit card bills, and make payments on a Hawaiian timeshare.

His San Francisco home is now worth $2.4 million.

In a memorandum for the sentencing, the government said that Finkelson kept up his fraudulent conduct even after SFHA acted to kill his Section 8 subsidies. The government contended that his conduct deprived families in need of housing. It also said that his actions hurt public trust, including trust in the government handling people’s tax dollars.

Judge Donato also sentenced Finkelson to three years of supervision following his one-year prison sentence, plus $341,455 in restitution; that is the amount he admitted to stealing from the government.

 

By Tom Joyce | The Center Square contributor

Filed Under: Featured, Home Featured, News

Related Articles:

  • Treasury to Take Over Defaulted Student Loans in Major Federal Shift
  • Daines Champions Katie Lane for Federal Judgeship at Senate Hearing
  • Micron Tops Expectations, but Shares Slip as Spending Plans Take Center Stage
  • Microsoft, OpenAI Alliance Faces New Strain
  • Trump Signs Executive Order Targeting DEI Practices in Federal Contracting
  • Tiger Woods Arrested After Florida Rollover Crash

Primary Sidebar

— Advertisement —

Digital News Updates Logo

Recent News Posts

  • Department of War Announces New Audit Strategy Aimed at Clean Opinion by 2028
  • White House Launches Official Mobile App
  • Census Data Shows Sharp Drop in Migration Across U.S. Metro Areas
  • Montana State recognized as No. 1 military-friendly university in the country

Recent Politics Posts

  • Trump Signs Executive Order Targeting DEI Practices in Federal Contracting
  • Daines Champions Katie Lane for Federal Judgeship at Senate Hearing
  • Advocates call on U.S. Supreme Court to clarify climate laws
  • Gov. Rhoden Signs Five Bills Aimed at Supporting Rural South Dakota

Recent Business Posts

  • Fed and Central Banks Flag Energy Shock Risks to Inflation and Growth
  • U.S. Appeals Court Overturns $16 Billion Judgment in Argentina YPF Case
  • Public Invited to Weigh In on Montana Workforce Strategy Overhaul
  • Stocks End Week Mixed as Tech Strength Offsets Broader Market Weakness

Copyright © 2026 Digital News Updates, All Rights Reserved.