ROCHESTER – The Rochester couple lived modestly, making do with linoleum kitchen floors, old countertops, a spotless but '70s love seat.
Little did they know that their next-door neighbor, Carolyn J. Cassar, was adding "hardwood floors, marble countertops, skylights, custom cabinetry and new roofing," a court filing said.
She paid for it all — plus a European vacation — with the couple's life savings.
Cassar admitted to a judge that she befriended and then bilked her elderly next-door neighbors out of more than $800,000 with elaborate lies involving a dead daughter in Washington, D.C., and an ex-husband being accused overseas of killing her sister.
She pleaded guilty Thursday in federal court in Minneapolis to wire fraud in a scheme that spanned more than six years, funded international trips and financed her unrealized dream of a multimillion-dollar Italian-style villa that she envisioned on an expansive piece of land in Rochester.
In all, Cassar, 61, collected $840,000 in 375 transactions with the couple, who are in their early 90s and who "despite modest education and jobs … accumulated a life savings of nearly $1 million through their diligence and frugality," according to a court filing.
The husband, who asked that his name not be used, worked in maintenance for nearly four decades, reinvesting every cent of interest, "like the old-timers taught me," he said. "We saved so we wouldn't be a burden to our children."
After a lifetime of scrimping, "to lose all you've got at the tail end," he said, sitting Friday afternoon in the living room of the house they've owned since 1946. "It's hard to accept. It's damn hard to accept."