Friday, March 27, 2009

If the newsflow this week was any indication, those warnings might be more than merely hyperbolic.

TO BE NOTED: From Alphaville:

"
The week in securities litigation

Last week, US regulators warned of “rampant Ponzimonium“, and said they were investigating “hundreds” of possible scams in the aftermath of Madoff.

If the newsflow this week was any indication, those warnings might be more than merely hyperbolic.

The SEC Actions blog, run by a former senior counsel to the regulator - one Thomas Gorman - has been keeping tabs on the latest alleged Ponzi-paloozas (emphasis and links FT Alphaville’s):
SEC v. Millennium Bank, Civil Action 7:09-cv-0050 (N.D. Tex. Filed March 26, 2009) - another action in which the SEC alleged the defendants were conducting a Ponzi scheme. The Commission’s complaint alleged that defendants William Wise and Kristi Hoegel used an offshore bank, its Swiss based affiliate and their U.S. affiliates to raise over $68 million from investors. Investors were solicited to purchase certificates of deposit which defendants claimed paid extraordinary returns. In fact, the defendants simply took the investor funds according to the complaint. The SEC obtained an emergency asset freeze order in this case.

In SEC v. Donnelly, Civil Action No. 03-09CV0015 (W.D. Va. Filed March 11, 2009), the SEC obtained a preliminary injunction on March 25, 2009, by consent, freezing all assets and prohibiting future violations of the federal securities laws. The SEC’s complaint alleged that Mr. Donnelly obtained over $11 million from as many as 31 investors through a fraudulent offering scheme in which he sold limited partnership interests in three entities. To solicit investors, Mr. Donnelly claimed that he generated annual returns as high as 22%. In fact, virtually none of the money raised from the public was invested. Rather, it was used to repay other investors and Mr. Donnelly’s salary. At the time the action was brought, Mr. Donnelly was soliciting investor money for a new fund based on his claimed returns in the securities markets.

In SEC v. James, Case No. 08-61516-CIV (S.D. Fla.), the court entered a final judgment against defendant Anthony James in a Ponzi scheme case. The court ordered Mr. James, who earlier had consented to the entry of a permanent injunction, to pay approximately $2.3 million in disgorgement along with prejudgment interest and a $130,000 civil penalty. The SEC’s complaint claimed that over a seven-year period Mr. James and his investment advisory firm obtained about $5.2 million for 44 investors. Rather than invest the money, Mr. James misappropriated about half of it.

But wait, there’s more.

In Manhattan on Thursday, art dealer Lawrence Salander was arrested after a grand jury charged him with 100 counts including fraud, forgery and falsifying business records, the Guardian reported:
In a case that has been dubbed as the art world’s equivalent of the so-called Ponzi scheme operated by Bernie Madoff, Salander is accused of running an elaborate scam spanning 13 years.

Investors were also defrauded of millions. Salander is alleged to have invited investors to join him in pre-sale deals of art works on a promise of substantial returns, but it was later discovered that he did not own the work of art on offer or had misrepresented it.

The victims on this side include John McEnroe, the tennis celebrity, who says he gave the Salander gallery $162,500 on a pledge that he would double his investment. McEnroe is also suing.

Sir Allen Stanford, who stands accused of operating an $8bn Ponzi scheme, this week denied (through high-profile lawyer Dick DeGuerin) doing any such thing. Invoking Star Wars, DeGuerin told Bloomberg:

This isn’t a Ponzi scheme. He was able to pay back every investor until the regulators came in like storm troopers, caused a panic, and his banks got nationalized in Venezuela and Antigua

DeGuerin said the SEC sued Stanford to divert attention from its failure to uncover a $60 billion Ponzi scheme run by New York financier Bernard Madoff.

“The SEC has cremated the Stanford companies and Stanford, partly to get over the embarrassment at their lack of oversight in the Madoff case,'’ DeGuerin said. “But this isn’t anything like Madoff.'’

Sir Allen has at least one other brand evangelist - the Houston Chronicle’s regularly-updated “Stanford Watch” blog reported that golfing pro Vijay Singh is standing by his sponsor, despite not having received his most recent payment.

Don the libertarian Democrat Mar 27 17:59
How long until there's a game or reality tv series called" Ponzimonium"? Maybe a band.

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