$40K Settlement for Florida Company Impersonating PA State Agency
Summary
Pennsylvania Attorney General Dave Sunday announced a $40,000 settlement with Florida-based PA Corporate Certificates, LLC and its owners (Brian Capobiano, Dean Marshlack, and David Marshlack) for allegedly impersonating the Pennsylvania Department of State to solicit inflated-priced Subsistence Certificates from approximately 2,000 newly registered Pennsylvania business owners. The settlement, filed as a Consent Petition in Dauphin County Court of Common Pleas, requires $40,000 in total restitution to affected business owners and bars the company and individuals from operating or soliciting in Pennsylvania.
“The company will pay $40,000 in total restitution to impacted business owners.”
The impersonation scheme described here — disguising mail to resemble official government correspondence and exploiting a low-priced legitimate document ($40) at a heavily inflated rate ($102.50) — is a recurring pattern targeting newly registered businesses in Pennsylvania. Companies that handle business formation services, registered agent work, or routine regulatory filings should monitor for similar schemes and advise new-venture clients to verify any solicitation against official agency sources before payment.
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GovPing monitors AG: Pennsylvania Press Releases for new courts & legal regulatory changes. Every update since tracking began is archived, classified, and available as free RSS or email alerts — 24 changes logged to date.
What changed
The Pennsylvania Attorney General's office reached a $40,000 settlement with PA Corporate Certificates, LLC and its three owners for sending letters that appeared to originate from the Pennsylvania Department of State, misrepresenting the purpose of a Subsistence Certificate, inflating the price from $40 to $102.50, and collecting payment from approximately 2,000 Pennsylvania business owners — many of whom did not need the certificate. The Consent Petition bars the company and individuals from operating or soliciting in Pennsylvania. The settlement is pending approval of the Dauphin County Court of Common Pleas. Business owners who were contacted by this company should retain documentation of any payments made, as restitution distribution is coordinated through the Department of State.
Penalties
$40,000 in total restitution to affected Pennsylvania business owners
Archived snapshot
Apr 23, 2026GovPing captured this document from the original source. If the source has since changed or been removed, this is the text as it existed at that time.
HARRISBURG – Attorney General Dave Sunday announced a settlement with a Florida-based company and its owners for allegedly impersonating a Commonwealth agency as part of efforts to get money from owners of newly-registered Pennsylvania businesses.
The company will pay $40,000 in total restitution to impacted business owners.
PA Corporate Certificates, LLC, contacted Pennsylvania-based business owners to solicit purchases of a Subsistence Certificate, which is a legitimate document offered by the Pennsylvania Department of State (that costs $40), but it is often not necessary for many businesses.
PA Corporate Certificates inflated the price to $102.50 and collected payment from nearly 2,000 Pennsylvania business owners. To perpetrate the alleged scam, PA Corporate Certificates sent letters that appeared to be from the Pennsylvania Department of State and misrepresented the purpose or benefit of a Subsistence Certificate. Not all businesses who paid for a certificate actually received the certificate.
“Today’s settlement will return thousands of dollars to Pennsylvania business owners who paid for documentation they likely did not need,” Attorney General Sunday said. “New businesses and entrepreneurs are the backbone of our local economies and communities, and my Office will continue to take seriously any attempts to exploit them.”
The settlement, in the form of a Consent Petition, resolves a lawsuit against PA Corporate Certificates, LLC, and its owners – Brian Capobiano, Dean Marshlack, and David Marshlack.
PA Corporate Certificates has ceased operations in Pennsylvania and the settlement prevents the business or the individuals from operating in Pennsylvania, including soliciting for and/or engaging in the sale of certificates of subsistence.
“We thank the Attorney General for investigating and resolving this matter,” Secretary of the Commonwealth Al Schmidt said. “When the Department of State became aware of this issue, we immediately forwarded the information to the Office of Attorney General. We also alerted Pennsylvania businesses with a message on our website.
“Our Department has already supplied the Attorney General with the list of business owners who deserve restitution,” Schmidt added.
The Consent Petition was filed in the Dauphin County Court of Common Pleas and is pending approval of the Court.
Under its terms, this settlement agreement shall not be considered as an admission of violation of the law.
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