By Frank Wood | Framingham Unfiltered | July 3 2025
“I heard some hammering into the foundation… a pile of nails stuck through cardboard, which appeared consistent with using them as a chisel to break away the concrete.” – HSI affidavit, quoting Victim 1
The Accusations
Federal prosecutors say John Paul O’Brien, 28, an Irish national who settled in MetroWest, ran a roaming masonry scam so brazen that his crew literally carved fresh gouges into sound foundations to justify six-figure repair bills.
“OBRIEN entered the country on July 22, 2021 … He overstayed his visa and is in the country illegally and ineligible for employment.”
Working under the name Traditional Masonry & Construction, O’Brien allegedly canvassed neighborhoods in Rhode Island and Massachusetts, targeting elderly homeowners with flyers and on-the-spot inspections:
- A Warwick octogenarian paid $9,500 after O’Brien pointed to “cracks” he said he saw from the street, only to be told two days later that the job now required $80,000 more.
- A Pawtucket couple signed four contracts—one as high as $94,000—after O’Brien flagged “urgent” foundation issues.
- A Providence homeowner started with an $800 stair repair that ballooned into a $205,700 trench-and-concrete project around three sides of her house.
Investigators say the damage was staged. An inspector hired by the U.S. Attorney “found no evidence of a need for these extensive foundation repairs.”
The Framingham Connection
The case stretches straight into the suburbs of Boston:
- Pickup registered at 50 Edgewater Dr., Framingham – The dark Chevy Silverado O’Brien drove to the Warwick job is registered to that R-1-zoned address, currently owned by Thomas P. McMahon, according to city assessing records.
- Inside the truck agents seized:
- Hundreds of “Traditional Masonry” flyers
- Four binders of contracts worth $1,987,650 dated April 2024–March 2025
- $5,565 cash in a TD Bank envelope
- Two smartphones chiming with WhatsApp alerts from a group labeled “Rolexs Group” – a nod, investigators say, to how “luxury items such as Rolex watches are used to transport proceeds across borders without alerting law enforcement.”
O’Brien’s Massachusetts Registry paperwork lists the Framingham address as his legal residence, weaving the Bay State directly into what agents call the “Traveling Conman Fraud Group” – Irish and U.K. nationals who overstay visas, solicit quick repairs, then jack up prices once walls are open.
Courtroom Status – “No Condition of Release”
At his April 3 initial appearance in Providence federal court, Magistrate Judge Patricia A. Sullivan found:
“No condition or combination of conditions of release will reasonably assure the economic safety of other persons and the community or Defendant’s appearance.” – Order of Detention
The judge ticked off O’Brien’s lack of U.S. status, ties abroad, and the government’s claim of strong evidence. The defendant did not argue for bail and remains at Wyatt Detention Facility in Central Falls.
Case Progress
| Date | Event |
|---|---|
| Mar 28 ’25 | Arrested by Homeland Security Investigations after surveillance on Gillooly Dr., Warwick |
| Apr 3 | Complaint unsealed; charged with Wire Fraud (18 U.S.C. § 1343) and Conspiracy (18 U.S.C. § 1349) |
| Apr 18 | Waived preliminary hearing; case transferred to grand-jury phase |
| July 1 | Judge John J. McConnell granted a second “Speedy Trial” extension – prosecutors now have until Aug 1, 2025 to seek an indictment |
Defense attorney Kensley Barrett declined comment, but the docket shows the defense has “assented” to each extension, suggesting plea talks or ongoing document review.
What’s Next
- Grand-Jury Indictment Deadline – Aug 1
If the U.S. Attorney’s Office secures an indictment, the file will move to a district-court judge for arraignment and, likely, plea negotiations or trial scheduling. - Asset Tracing
Agents are still untangling cash deposits, wire transfers—including an $8,500 wire to an Irish bank—and WhatsApp chatter about luxury watches. - Victim Outreach
ICE-HSI urges anyone approached by door-to-door masonry crews to email HSINewEnglandVictimAssistance@hsi.dhs.gov.
A Pattern of “Fresh Cracks”
The 36-page affidavit paints a vivid picture of how the crew allegedly manufactured crises:
“He believes OBRIEN’s crew chipped away the foundation outside to create the illusion of water damage… he heard what he believed to be hammering and chiseling.”
Agents even photographed nails driven through scraps of cardboard—crude homemade chisels found in O’Brien’s trench.
Bottom Line
From a quiet cul-de-sac in Framingham to living-room floors across Rhode Island, investigators say John O’Brien perfected a traveling construction hustle worth at least $1 million—and nearly $2 million in signed contracts. With the indictment clock now ticking, prosecutors have one month to lock in their case. For homeowners nursing mysteriously widening cracks, the message is equally urgent: check the license, call for permits, and keep an ear out for chisels where none should be.