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Tampilkan postingan dengan label Ponzi. Tampilkan semua postingan

Ponzi Scheme Fugitives Captured

Senin, 07 Mei 2012 0 komentar
According to an AP news story out this morning, US Marshals in Arizona put an end to an Illinois couple's life on the lam, a dozen years after they fled punishment for running a Ponzi scheme that targeted friends, the elderly, and even family members, authorities said.

The two were arrested by deputy marshals Saturday afternoon in Tonopah, a desert community 50 miles west of Phoenix. Officials believe they hid in Arizona for the past couple years. "The 12-year run from justice of the Hallahans, also known as the 'Mini Madoffs,' has come to an end," U.S. Marshal for Arizona David Gonzales said in a statement. "Their investment scams involving family, friends, and the elderly, ruined many lives.

The couple pleaded guilty in Illinois federal court to bank and mail fraud conspiracy charges and money laundering. They didn't show up for their sentencing and began life on the run. The government alleges that while living in Peoria, Ill., the couple promised their victims significant returns on investments,  but they were actually running a Ponzi scheme, repaying earlier investors with proceeds from new ones.

The Marshal Service said the couple netted millions of dollars from victims. As is typical of these cases, where the authorities often overstate the use of the proceeds, the government claims that the couple maintained a lavish lifestyle, buying yachts, luxury vehicles, designer clothes and jewelry.
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SEC Halts Father-Son Ponzi Scheme in Utah Involving Purported Real Estate Investments

Selasa, 20 Desember 2011 0 komentar
The SEC charged a father and son in Utah with securities fraud for selling purported investments in their real estate business that in reality was just a $220 million Ponzi scheme.
It is alleged that the father and son operated from a base in Fountain Green, Utah. They offered investors the opportunity to invest in LLCs to share ownership of large apartment complexes in eight states. The investors were solicited by word of mouth and through religious affiliation. The duo presented plans to buy apartment complexes, renovate and revamp, and then sell for a high profit. The investors were told they would share in the profit from the sales and also from rental income. The truth of the matter was that the investors money was really being depositing into large bank accounts, which were used for company and personal expenses, and to pay other investors. Since the complaint has been filed, the SEC obtained an emergency court order freezing the father and son's assets and companies. The scheme began in 2008 and involved 225 investors and more than $220 million.


SEC Halts Father-Son Ponzi Scheme in Utah Involving Purported Real Estate Investments

SEC Charges Perpetrator of Washington-Area Ponzi Scheme

Rabu, 23 November 2011 0 komentar
The SEC charged a Bethesda, Md. man, several family members and friends with conducting a multi-million dollar Ponzi scheme targeting investors in the Washington D.C. metropolitan area. The SEC alleges that middle-class residents were lured by false pretenses and powerpoint presentations to invest in promissory notes. Many were encouraged to refinance their homes and utilize their personal savings and retirement funds to come up with more to invest. They were promised returns as high as 20 percent per year and told their investments were protected. Instead, the companies issuing the notes were engaged in high-risk, speculative options trading and suffered massive losses. Money from new investors was used to pay the returns to earlier investors and also for personal expenses.

The SEC alleges that the Ponzi scheme defrauded more than $27 million from approximately 130 investors over a five year period. The scheme ultimately collapsed in the fall of 2010. The Bethesda man and five others have been charged.

SEC Charges Perpetrator of Washington-Area Ponzi Scheme

SEC Halts Scam Touting Access to Pre-IPO Shares of Facebook and Groupon

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The SEC filed an emergency enforcement action to stop a fraudulent scheme targeting investors seeking coveted stock in Internet and technology companies like Facebook and Groupon in advance of a public offering.

Several individuals utilized a newly-minted hedge fund (The Praetorian Global Fund) to claim to own shares worth tens of millions of dollars in companies such as Facebook and Groupon. The companies targeted were expected to soon hold an initial public offering. Taking advantage of investor interest in pre-IPO shares that are virtually impossible for company outsiders to obtain, the individuals solicited funds and gave investors a false sense of comfort that their money was protected by telling them that an escrow service was receiving their funds.

Yet in reality the individuals never owned the promised pre-IPO shares in these companies. The escrow service only served to transfer investor funds to personal accounts controlled by two of the involved individuals. The funds were then used for lavish personal expenses (private jets, cars, art) and to pay off other individuals involved.

The U.S. Attorney’s Office for the Southern District of New York, which conducted a parallel investigation of the matter, filed criminal charges against the lead individual, a Florida resident. The Florida resident has been the subject of prior SEC enforcement action and several state criminal actions.
SEC Halts Scam Touting Access to Pre-IPO Shares of Facebook and Groupon

SEC Charges Feeders to Ponzi Scheme

Jumat, 11 November 2011 0 komentar
The SEC charged two Minnesota-based hedge fund managers and their firm for facilitating a multi-billion dollar Ponzi scheme operated by a Minnesota businessman.

The SEC alleges that three parties (two individuals and a business) invested more than $600 million in hedge fund assets with the Minnesota businessman while collecting more than $42 million in fees. The Commission alleges that the three falsely assured investors and potential investors that the flow of their money would be safeguarded by the operation of collateral accounts when in reality the process did not exist as explained. When the Minnesota businessman was unable to make payments on investments held by the funds they managed, the three parties helped to conceal this by entering into secret note extensions with the Minnesota businessman. 

This is the fourth enforcement action that the SEC has brought against hedge fund managers that collectively fed billions of dollars into the Ponzi Scheme.

SEC Charges Feeders to Ponzi Scheme

SEC Files Action to Halt Green-Product Ponzi Scheme

Jumat, 07 Oktober 2011 0 komentar
The SEC’s complaint, filed in U.S. District Court for the Southern District of New York, alleges that a convicted felon and others defrauded investors in PermaPave Companies, a group of firms based on Long Island, N.Y.

About 140 individuals, many working in the construction or landscaping business, invested in the scheme between 2006 and 2010, the SEC alleged. Investors were told that PermaPave Companies had a tremendous backlog of orders for pavers imported from Australia, which could be sold in the U.S. at a substantial mark-up, yielding monthly returns to investors of 7.8% to 33%. In reality, the complaint states that there was little demand for the product, and the cost of the pavers far exceeded the revenue from sales.

The defendant and two other accomplices used new investments to make payments to earlier investors and then siphoned off much of the rest, buying luxury cars, gambling trips to Las Vegas, and jewelry. In addition, the complaint alleges that the defendant used investors’ money to make court-ordered restitution payments to victims of a previous scheme to which he pleaded guilty to conducting in 2000.

The three men were arrested earlier today and criminal charges have been filed.

SEC Files Emergency Action to Halt Green-Product Themed Ponzi Scheme