From fake heiress to fugitive: Former employees detail alleged scam blamed on TV producer
- - From fake heiress to fugitive: Former employees detail alleged scam blamed on TV producer
Minyvonne BurkeDecember 29, 2025 at 2:00 AM
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When the television production company Jeff Nimoy worked for began falling behind on payroll in 2017, the Los Angeles showrunner wasnât alarmed.
Bellum Entertainment was a âmachine,â he said, producing a steady slate of true crime shows, childrenâs TV and documentaries. At one point, the company had upward of 30 shows on air or in development, including âIt Takes a Killer.â
Like his colleagues, Nimoy also believed the companyâs CEO, Mary Carole McDonnell, was a wealthy aviation heiress with access to millions of dollars.
âI was like, thereâs no way this thingâs going down, theyâve got too much capital,â said Nimoy, who believed at one point that he would spend the next 20 years of his career at Bellum.
Mary Carole McDonnell. (FBI)
But that dream vanished when his paychecks stopped and Bellum Entertainment abruptly shut down. Nearly a decade later, Nimoy is still waiting to be paid over $16,000 â and McDonnell is a fugitive sought by the FBI after, it says, she falsely posed as the heir to the McDonnell aircraft family to defraud California banks out of nearly $30 million total.
âEverybody was right, and I was wrong,â Nimoy said.
This month, the FBI released a most-wanted bulletin seeking information about McDonnell, 73, who was federally indicted in 2018 on charges of bank fraud and aggravated identity theft. Investigators allege that from July 2017 to May 2018, McDonnell used forged documents and claimed she had access to a secret $80 million trust fund as part of her scheme.
Federal investigators believe McDonnell is in Dubai.
While McDonnell faces criminal charges that she duped banks, former Bellum employees, family members and court records describe what they say was her fall from being a prolific television producer to an alleged con artist who left a long trail of victims.
âWe have been seeking her whereabouts,â FBI spokesperson Laura Eimiller told NBC News, noting that new information about allegations of continued misdeeds abroad has prompted the FBI to ask the public for help.
The McDonnell aircraft family eventually sold the corporation. The James S. McDonnell Foundation didnât immediately respond to a request for comment.
An alleged false legacy
The only biographical detail in McDonnellâs aviation dynasty story that a relative knew to be accurate was her ties to St. Louis. The relative asked not to be identified to protect other family members.
McDonnell was born in Michigan and has ties to Alabama, the FBI said. But the relative said McDonnell grew up in the St. Louis area, where the McDonnell Douglas aircraft company was founded.
The relative said that while McDonnellâs father was âwell offâ and owned a successful grocery store, she would âinflate her valueâ and make up stories about being connected to McDonnell Douglas Corp. The company was known for producing airplane parts during World War II, developing the Navyâs first carrier-based jet fighter and shaping space exploration and aviation.
âI talked directly with her dad ... and he laughed and said, âNo, thereâs no connection there,ââ the relative said. âI was silly enough not to challenge her on that. But she would continue to tout that connection, adamant that she would inherit this huge sum of money.â
Details of McDonnellâs early career and when she relocated to California arenât immediately clear. According to former Bellum Entertainment employees, McDonnell continued to claim she was a dynasty scion.
âI had a lot of bounced checks,â ex-Bellum worker says
Brian Testa was hired as a producer and director for Bellum Entertainmentâs Burbank location in July 2016. He initially saw the opportunity to work on true crime re-enactment shows like âMurderous Affairsâ and âDeep Undercoverâ as a new adventure.
âI came from a lot of reality [television]. So scripted, while keeping the story true to the person who was the victim, usually it was murder, I would tell that story as visually entertaining as I could,â he said. âIt was a challenge.â
Testa said his crew often worked 12-hour days scouting locations, filming and getting the props needed for shows. McDonnell was always in and out of the office, he said.
Testa said McDonnell projected wealth â driving a Porsche, working out of an office with ârich wood everywhereâ and carrying herself like someone who would enjoy âfive-star hotels and definitely the lavish lifestyle.â
âShe dressed nice ... but always seemed slightly disheveled,â he said, adding that the office rumors suggested she came from money. âI definitely heard two different stories while I was there. One was the McDonnell Douglas heiress, and then the other was that there was a family trust set up for her.â
When the checks started bouncing and the facade of generational wealth began to crumble, Testa said, McDonnell always had an explanation for the late payments. Sometimes she would blame them on a line of credit that didnât come through, and other times sheâd tell her employees that there was âsignificant bank fraudâ affecting company finances, Testa said.
When people did get paid, Testa said, there was a rush to cash the checks.
âThere would be a mad dash out the door to get them to the banks before the banks would close so you could cash them, because they would move money around,â he said. âI had a lot of bounced checks.â
For Carlos Franco, doubts about Bellum Entertainment began almost as soon as he was hired as a production assistant at the companyâs New Orleans office in 2016.
He began hearing complaints from his colleagues about not being paid while he was working on âMurderous Affairs.â Then, his first paycheck was late, and the excuses started.
âIt was always some issue with the bank or the money that they were supposed to be getting wasnât released to them yet, or they had to change banks, or they were getting a loan,â he said.
Unaware of the payroll issues alleged to be plaguing Bellum, Aaron Cadieux began working for the company in 2017 after having been contacted to help with a show, âMysteries of the Unexplained.â
The production company wanted Cadieux as its director of photography for an episode filming in Massachusetts about the Bridgewater Triangle, a roughly 200-square-mile area in the state known for what some people believe is paranormal activity.
Cadieux, who lives in Massachusetts and owns a video production company, had never heard of Bellum â but he jumped at the opportunity. The company paid him $500 upfront, which he said gave him âsome peace of mindâ and even provided him with a camera.
âI think they even provided lunch and all that kind of stuff. I mean, it was a skeleton operation. It wasnât like some huge-budget thing, but I was completely at ease,â he said.
Like the others, Cadieux said he began quickly noticing red flags. While the two-day shoot wrapped in the spring of 2017, he said, he was still waiting to be paid his remaining $2,000 invoice by the end of the summer.
Cadieux said he sent emails and called Bellum for months for updates on his payment.
âI apologize for the delays in payment. We have fallen a bit behind. A payment is being processed and will be sent out this week,â a Bellum employee who worked in accounts payable said in a July 26, 2017, email that Cadieux shared with NBC News.
Cadieux said he never received the July payment. In a Nov. 10, 2017, email, the employee suggested that Cadieuxâs check had been mailed and apologized for the delay. When Cadieux once again didnât receive his money, he told NBC News, he eventually emailed McDonnell and threatened to create a website exposing her for not paying employees.
âThey wired me my money. I got paid, but what about the rest of these people? So I said screw it,â he said, noting that he only briefly launched the website.
Around the same time, Bellumâs troubles began to make headlines, and the company was eventually slapped with dozens of wage claims lawsuits in Los Angeles County. Online court records show that McDonnell has been named in numerous civil cases.
In 2017, the California Labor Commissionerâs Office investigated Bellum after roughly 50 employees filed unpaid wage claims, the entertainment site Deadline reported at the time.
âThe claims mostly allege non-payment of wages and have been filed by actors, producers, crew members, and others,â a spokeswoman for the Labor Commissionerâs Office told Deadline at the time. âSome have settled, and some have not and are in different stages of the wage claim process.â
The Labor Commissionerâs Office didnât immediately respond to NBC Newsâ request for comment but said it was working to obtain information about its investigation of McDonnell.
Facing mounting pressure, the company abruptly shut down after a planned weeklong break to celebrate the Fourth of July holiday in 2017.
Jeff Nimoy during his earliest days, when the only office space was the film vault, which was freezing. (Courtesy Jeff Nimoy)
âThe night before we were supposed to return, it was something like, weâre experiencing some delays, weâre going to extend the break two more weeks,â Nimoy said. âThatâs when I called my boss and said, âWeâre never coming back.â He agreed, and we never heard from them again.â
Testa said that after the company closed, he began protesting outside the office to demand back pay. Days later, he received a check for the $3,000 he said the company owed him.
But other Bellum workers werenât so lucky.
Franco filed a complaint with the California Labor Department in September 2017 and won a judgment of $12,395 â but he says he is still owed $1,250 in unpaid wages. Nimoy said the company owes him $16,650 in back pay.
From allegedly stiffing employees to allegedly swindling banks
The FBI alleged that behind the scenes, McDonnell was running an even bigger con. A 2018 federal indictment accused her of obtaining $14.7 million from Banc of California by falsely claiming she was related to the McDonnell Douglas family and had access to an $80 million trust.
In an amended federal civil complaint filed in December 2018, the bank said that during a meeting with McDonnell and her former lawyer, Barry Rothman, McDonnell said she was the heir to the founder of McDonnell Douglas Corp. and the beneficiary of the family trust. McDonnell said she was set to receive a cash distribution from the trust but needed a loan to tide her over, the complaint alleges.
The bank alleged that the scheme involved her forging documents and falsely claiming that she would repay the loan from the trust. The bank sued her for intentional misrepresentation/fraud, conspiracy to defraud and breach of written contract. Rothman, who died in March 2018, wasnât named as a defendant in the case.
Federal investigators alleged in an indictment that McDonnell used similar tactics to defraud more than $15 million from other financial institutions.
On Dec. 12, 2018, a federal arrest warrant was issued for McDonnell on charges of aggravated identity theft and bank fraud. But by then, federal authorities believe, she had fled to Dubai.
The FBI said it has received information that McDonnell is still alleged to be engaged in fraud abroad.
âPublicity is an investigative tool,â said Eimiller, the FBI spokesperson. âWe were at the point where the case was kind of cold, and we were receiving information that she was continuing to defraud, and we decided that it was the strategic time to go public.â
Source: âAOL Breakingâ