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Contractor accused of defrauding Ontario cottage owners pleads guilty to 7 of 13 charges

A contractor who allegedly took hundreds of thousands of dollars from multiple Ontario cottage owners for renovation projects but left major jobs unfinished has pleaded guilty to seven of 13 fraud-related charges against him.

The judge-alone criminal trial of Scott Eisemann, 54, got underway Thursday at the Ontario Court of Justice in Orillia, Ont. The charges against Eisemann included nine counts of fraud over $5,000, three counts of false pretence and one count of mischief to property.

Five days had been set aside for the trial, but the court heard that late Wednesday that an arrangement was reached in which Eisemann would plead guilty to the specific charges for which the Crown and defence could agree on the facts.

Defence lawyer Emily Dyer said she anticipates the remaining charges will be withdrawn as part of the arrangement. 

Eisemann’s next court date is scheduled for Feb. 8. It is expected that a finalized agreed statement of facts will be read into the court record and the judge will address sentencing. Crown prosecutor Neil Riley has proposed a “significant penitentiary sentence” and several restitution orders.

The charges were laid after multiple Ontario Provincial Police (OPP) investigations stemming from complaints from cottage owners in Parry Sound, Georgian Bay, Orillia and elsewhere in the Muskoka region. The cottagers alleged they hired Eisemann and his company, Cottage Life Construction, for renovation or construction work, but that he failed to start or complete the work.

Liz Saunders says she paid Eisemann and Cottage Life Construction $64,000 to raise her cottage, build a new foundation and lower it back down. Instead, her cottage was left perched precariously on wooden blocks for months. (John Lancaster/CBC)

Eisemann declined to take any questions from media on Thursday, but Dyer said her client has decided to “take responsibility for everything that went on in the past” by entering guilty pleas. 

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CBC Toronto has reported on a number of his projects, including one at a family’s cherished Muskoka getaway near Bracebridge, Ont. 

Liz Saunders said she paid Eisemann $64,000 to raise her cottage, build a new foundation and lower it back down. In the court documents, that figure was revised to $59,000.

Instead of completing the job, Eisemann is accused of taking Saunders’s money, walking away from the job and leaving the modest cabin perched on wooden blocks, two metres off the ground.

Saunders, who is ready to testify in person, said she was anxious about the start of the trial.

“I started this process not because I had any intention of getting any of my money back, because I knew that was not [in] the cards, but to stop him from doing this,” she said.

A man holds up a contract.
Rene Langevin holds the contract he signed with Cottage Life Construction. He paid them $14 000 to renovate a washroom. He says he got nothing in return. (John Lancaster/CBC)

In another case CBC Toronto reported on, Rene Langevin said his family paid $14,000 to Eisemann and his company to renovate the bathroom of their cottage near Parry Sound. The work was never completed.

“I think Scottie needs to be in jail,” Lagenvin said. “Hopefully justice is served.”

In total, CBC Toronto spoke with at least seven cottage owners who say they handed over tens of thousands of dollars to Eisemann and Cottage Life Construction. They accuse Eisemann, who has also used the names Scott Evan and Scott Daniels, of abandoning the projects he was paid to do.

Eisemann convicted of fraud in 2014

The OPP arrested Eisemann in November 2020, one day after CBC Toronto reported on Saunders’s story, although the fraud and possession of property obtained by crime charges he was charged with at that time were connected to two different property owners.

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Eisemann was arrested again in May of 2021, and the OPP filed more fraud charges against him. His alleged victims were from a number of cottage country municipalities, the OPP said at the time.

The next month he was arrested and charged for a third time, this time for allegedly bilking Saunders, who originally blew the whistle on him.

Eisemann has been convicted before.

In 2014, he pleaded guilty to defrauding a 92-year-old, legally blind Toronto woman out of her life savings, totalling $132,000.

He was sentenced to two years in prison after the judge determined Eisemann had taken the money from the victim for “needless renovations” on her home.

Not long after serving his sentence, in September 2016, Eisemann opened Cottage Life Construction.

The company filed for bankruptcy in 2020, owing clients and contractors more than $300,000.  

The court has set aside five days for the trial. 

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