Former Business Partner of Robbins of USG Sued and Received $28M - and Warns RI

GoLocalProv News Team and Kate Nagle

Former Business Partner of Robbins of USG Sued and Received $28M - and Warns RI

Frank Gamwell, a former business partner of Lance Robbins of Urban Smart Growth (USG), has said that he would "never do business with him again" after suing Robbins for $28 million and ultimately receiving the amount in arbitration.

Now, Gamwell is warning that Rhode Island should be doing its "due diligence" in dealing with Robbins. 

On Monday, USG was awarded $3.6 million in tax credits from Governor Gina Raimondo and the Rhode Island Commerce Corporation to develop lofts at Hope Artiste Village. 

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Gamwell, who had been involved in business deals with Robbins in California as well as on the East Coast before suing him, is the CEO of PCM, a construction management and development firm.

"[Robbins] is out of my life, and I won't do business with Lance Robbins ever again," said Gamwell, when contacted by GoLocalProv.com. 

SLIDES: See Robbins Controversies BELOW

Robbins, who in California was cited with 105 health and building-code violations, piled up 32 convictions, and paid a $1 million fine, is currently facing a lawsuit from the Town of Belville, North Carolina, for not moving forward on an agreed-up waterfront project.

"I would hope that people do their due diligence on Mr. Robbins," Gamwell told GoLocal on Thursday.

Repeated requests by GoLocal to speak with Robbins have gone unanswered. 

Former Business Dispute

In July 2010, the Hartford Advocate wrote "Lawsuits Against Lance Robbins Still Being Pursued," as Robbins was looking to advance a project the Coltsville Historic District in Hartford, Connecticut. 

"Coltsville has already received National Historic Landmark status, the first step toward becoming a national park, but the National Park Service has balked at committing to the park while the complex remains mired in the failed efforts of a string of would-be developers," wrote Daniel D'Ambrosio for the Advocate. "Now it looks like Robbins’ trouble with a former business partner might end up adding his name to that list of failures."

D'Ambrosio reported:

Frank Gamwell won the fraud judgment against Robbins in California Superior Court after proving to an arbitrator that Robbins had cheated him in business dealings they had together. Robbins is appealing the judgment.

The racketeering lawsuit followed when Robbins allegedly drained the assets from the two companies implicated in the fraud judgment, making it impossible for Gamwell to collect the $29 million he is owed. Those two companies — Rehabilitation Associates LLC and Fedeora Investment Corporation — are among dozens of companies Robbins has formed over the years.

Gamwell’s lawsuit claims Robbins used that network of companies to place false liens and foreclose on the assets of Rehab and Fedora, create false debts owed by Rehab and Fedora to other Robbins companies, and to transfer Rehab and Fedora’s “many millions of dollars of cash and real estate” to still other Robbins companies.

Robbins denies it all, and says Rehab and Fedora were victims of the worst economic crisis in recent memory.


Lance Robbins Controversies Through the Years

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