Residents Speak Out as HOA President Pleads Guilty in $11 Million Scam: ‘People Were Terrified of Her’
What began as homeowner complaints about neglected landscaping in a Miami community has unfolded into perhaps the largest fraud case ever involving HOA leadership.
Prosecutors say corrupt officers of the Hammocks Community Association pilfered more than $11 million over several years through sham vendors, inflated contracts, and misappropriated funds.
Last week, former Hammocks HOA President Marglli Gallego and her husband, Jose Antonio Gonzalez, pleaded guilty in connection with the scheme that authorities say impacted roughly 18,000 residents.
Now, Hammocks resident Ana Danton tells Realtor.com®: “People were terrified of her. It was horrible.”
Gallego pleaded guilty to racketeering and grand theft, and was sentenced to seven years in prison and seven years of probation, according to the office of Miami-Dade State Attorney Katherine Fernandez Rundle.
At a news conference, Fernandez Rundle called this case “one of the largest homeowner association frauds in U.S. history.”
She said, “The now-convicted thieves ran the Hammocks HOA like an organized crime syndicate only to benefit themselves, their family, and their friends. Their victims were each of the homeowners.”
Realtor.com reached out to Gallego's attorney and did not hear back.
Gallego's husband Gonzalez pleaded guilty to one count of money laundering and was sentenced to seven years of probation.
As part of his plea agreement, Gonzalez agreed to turn over a Homestead, FL, property valued at approximately $1.2 million to the Hammocks HOA. According to Fernandez Rundle, that property was purchased with funds misappropriated from the HOA. Gonzalez also provided a $50,000 restitution check to the homeowners association.
Gonzalez's attorney, Jude Faccidomo, shared the following statement with Realtor.com: "Mr. Gonzalez is pleased to put this matter behind him. We thank the State Attorney for taking the time to meet with our team and ultimately acknowledging Mr. Gonzalez’s limited culpability which is reflected by the agreement for probation.”
Gallego has been in prison since November 2022—and, as part of her plea agreement, she'll get credit for time served toward her seven-year sentence.
She is also banned from setting foot in the Hammocks community, and prohibited from working in any HOA in the United States for the remainder of her natural life.

Inside the alleged scheme
According to prosecutor Fernandez Rundle, Gallego had purchased a 1% share in a condominium in the Hammocks HOA to qualify to run for the board.
Gallego was elected to the board in 2015, and she served as Hammocks president from 2017 to 2021.
Gallego and Gonzalez were among eight individuals—including former board members and Gallego’s relatives—whom the Miami-Dade State Attorney’s Office accused of participating in a scheme that used sham companies and vendors to divert HOA funds.
According to WFOR, two other people have been sentenced, while four additional cases are pending.
In a 2022 arrest affidavit, Emiliano Tamayo, the chief investigator for the Miami-Dade State Attorney’s Office, said that former board members hired sham vendors who performed little or no work for the Hammocks, then redirected HOA payments to those vendors for their own benefit, including payments to Gallego and Gonzalez.
Tamayo said in the affidavit that certain employees were kept on the payroll despite not performing any work for the HOA. Additionally, some vendors allegedly completed limited work but received inflated payments so they could funnel kickbacks to Gallego and others.
Tamayo also stated in the affidavit that some vendors were operated by relatives or associates of the former board members.
Hammocks homeowner reacts
Danton—who is a Miami real estate agent—has lived in the Hammocks community since 1993.
She tells Realtor.com that she and her neighbors believe Gallego and Gonzalez got off far too easy, despite Gallego's multiyear prison sentence.
"Seven years in jail for $11 million? We all think it was not nearly enough," she says.
Danton served on the Hammocks Community Association from 2001 to 2007 in several different capacities, and at one time was board president. She says she was shocked by the subsequent corruption of HOA officials who later joined the board.
"This is the third time the Hammocks has been in the news for corruption," she says. "This time, we all suspected something was off."
According to Danton, the first red flag was the deteriorating condition of the neighborhood's landscaping, which appeared to be going unmaintained.
"The first thing that lady [Gallego] did was fire our landscapers," she says. "She replaced them with friends and family who didn't have the right equipment, and everything was a mess."
Danton says Gallego fired the security staff next, and replaced some of those positions with individuals who were not properly licensed or qualified.
"Then she fired the personnel in the office, and brought in friends and family who got benefits and became aggressive toward homeowners," recalls Danton. "That's when homeowners began waking up."
Danton says that while Gallego was in charge, many residents were hit with arbitrary liens, fines, and in some cases even lost their homes to foreclosure.
"They didn't accept payments from people, just so they could say they didn't pay," she says. "It was awful. I'm just happy they're not going to be able to do this to someone ever again."
One lawyer's take on the situation
Florida attorney Chad D. Cummings of Cummings & Cummings Law, who is not involved in the case but has reviewed the situation, tells Realtor.com that the Hammocks case reflects a failure of enforcement rather than a gap in the law.
“Florida Statute Section 720 already requires HOAs to maintain proper financial records and make them available to members on request,” he says. “The provisions existed the entire time Gallego was allegedly running the Hammocks like a personal checking account.”
Cummings argues that homeowners should have acted faster to enforce their own rights, and that state oversight came too late. “The state attorney did not get involved until 2022, years into the scheme,” he says.
He adds that HOA governance depends heavily on homeowner participation. “Attend meetings, ask questions, and if necessary, hire an attorney to investigate suspected misconduct,” he advises.
Cummings also describes the case as a breakdown in “internal controls,” where financial oversight is too centralized. “These controls fail whenever too much power is concentrated in a single person,” he says.
Cummings notes that Florida law already gives homeowners the right to inspect financial records, but says many are unaware of it. “Most people pay their assessment and never ask a single question,” he says. “Gallego counted on that.”
Categories
Recent Posts









GET MORE INFORMATION

