Day: August 17, 2012

  • URGENT >> BULLETIN >> MOVING: SEC Calls Zeek ‘$600 Million Online Pyramid And Ponzi Scheme’

    URGENT >> BULLETIN >> MOVING: (UPDATED 6:25 P.M. EDT (U.S.A.) The SEC has filed an emergency action in federal court in Charlotte, N.C., that alleges Zeek Rewards is a $600 million Ponzi and pyramid scheme.

    “The obligations to investors drastically exceed the company’s cash on hand, which is why we need to step in quickly, salvage whatever funds remain and ensure an orderly and fair payout to investors,” said Stephen Cohen, an associate director in the SEC’s Division of Enforcement. “ZeekRewards misused the power of the Internet and lured investors by making them believe they were getting an opportunity to cash in on the next big thing. In reality, their cash was just going to the earlier investor.”

    In its emergency filing, the SEC described Zeek as a classic Ponzi scheme. The agency charged that “approximately 98% of ZeekRewards’ total revenues, and correspondingly the purported share of ‘net profits’ paid to current investors, are comprised of funds received from new investors.”

    Records show that the AdSurfDaily Ponzi scheme which, like Zeek, suggested that investors would receive a return on the order of 1 percent a day, also received only about 2 percent of its revenue from sources other than members. Zeek had members in common with ASD.

    Zeek, the SEC alleged, “is teetering on collapse.”

    Zeek CEO Paul R. Burks has been charged with selling unregistered securities as investment contracts, the SEC said. Burks presided over Rex Venture Group LLC, Zeek’s purported parent company. Rex Venture also has been charged. The SEC said it was aided in the probe by the Quebec Autorite des Marches Financiers and the Ontario Securities Commission.

    Burks’ program holds “approximately $225 million in investor funds in approximately 15 foreign and domestic financial institutions, and those funds are at risk of imminent dissipation and depletion,” the SEC charged, noting that the Ponzi potentially could affect more than 1 million people globally.

    A federal judge has ordered an emergency asset freeze and a receiver will the appointed, the SEC said.

    “Through the ZeekRewards program, Defendants offer affiliates several ways to earn money, two of which involve the offer and sale of securities in the form of investment contracts: the ““Retail Profit Pool” and the “Matrix,” the SEC charged.

    And, the agency said, the “compounding” effect has created a condition under which 3 billion Zeek “Profit Points” are outstanding.

    “Based on the ZeekRewards current outstanding Profit Point balance, the company would be obligated to pay out approximately $45 million per day if all Qualified Affiliates elected to receive their daily award in cash,” the agency charged.

    Amid Zeek claims that it paid out 50 percent of its daily net and that its business model was “proprietary,” investigators discovered that Zeek delivered an unusually consistent return of about 1.5 percent a day.

    “In fact, the dividend bears no relation to the company’s net profits,” the SEC charged. “Instead, Burks unilaterally and arbitrarily determines the daily dividend rate so that it averages approximately 1.5% per day, giving investors the false impression that the business is profitable.

    Similar allegations were made in 2008 against ASD operator Andy Bowdoin.

    Zeek’s fabled Zeekler “bids” were described by the SEC as smoke-and-mirrors. From the complaint (italics added):

    Despite encouraging affiliates to purchase and give away VIP Bids to promote and drive traffic to the Zeekler penny auction website, Defendants fail to disclose that almost none of the VIP Bids given away by Qualified investors are actually used on the Zeekler penny auction website. Of approximately 10 billion VIP Bids purchased by or awarded to investors, less than one-quarter of one percent have been actually used in auctions on the Zeekler penny auction website. Thus, the VIP Bids do little or nothing to actually promote the retail business.

    Zeek operator Burks, meanwhile, “has withdrawn approximately $11 million while operating Rex Venture and ZeekRewards, of which approximately $4 million remains in his possession, custody or control.

    Burks “distributed approximately $1 million of the funds garnered from ZeekRewards to family members,” the SEC said.

    Amid high drama and confusing website reports from Zeek yesterday, including the virtual abandonment of its office in Lexington, N.C., and petition drives by Zeek affiliates to demand the return of Zeek, it turns out that “Burks has agreed to settle the SEC’s charges against him without admitting or denying the allegations, and agreed to cooperate with a court-appointed receiver,” the SEC said.

    The U.S. Secret Service also is investigating Zeek, as is the office of North Carolina Attorney General Roy Cooper.

    Read the SEC complaint.

  • URGENT >> BULLETIN >> MOVING: U.S. Secret Service Confirms Probe Of Zeek Under Way

    URGENT >> BULLETIN >> MOVING: Zeek Rewards, the multilevel marketing program married to the penny-auction site Zeekler, is under investigation by the U.S. Secret Service and the Securities and Exchange Commission, the Secret Service confirmed at 4:14 p.m. EDT today.

    “There will be no further comment,” said Max Milien, a spokesman for the U.S. Secret Service in Washington.

    The Secret Service leads a multiagency electronic crimes Task Force in Charlotte, N.C. The Charlotte Task Force is known by the acronym CMECTF.

    Zeek, part of Rex Venture Group LLC, is based in Lexington, N.C. Paul R. Burks is Zeek’s chief executive officer.

    The Zeek probe is not the first investigation of its sort in which the Secret Service and the SEC looked into the business practices of online schemes that suggest or promise outsize investment returns. A probe of the Legisi HYIP began in 2007 with an undercover investigation by the Secret Service and state securities regulators in Michigan.

    That probe later led to civil charges brought by the SEC and criminal charges brought by the Secret Service.

    Legisi operator Gregory McKnight pleaded guilty to wire fraud earlier this year. He is scheduled to be sentenced next month. Legisi gathered more than $72 million.

    The Secret Service also led the AdSurfDaily Ponzi probe. ASD President Andy Bowdoin is scheduled to be sentenced Aug. 29.

    ASD was a 1-percent-a-day Ponzi scheme that gathered at least $110 million. Zeek Rewards has a similar business model.

    See earlier story.

  • UPDATE: North Carolina Investigators Demanded Info From Zeek On July 6; State Says It Has Not Taken Shutdown Action

    UPDATED 10:58 A.M. EDT (U.S.A.) Two new details have emerged in the mysterious shutdown yesterday of the office and websites of Zeekler/Zeek Rewards: The office of North Carolina Attorney General Roy Cooper told the PP Blog this morning that it has taken no action to shut down Zeek, the operator of an MLM and a penny-auction site.

    “We have not taken action to shut the company down and are currently working to get more information so we can pass that along to consumers who may be impacted by this,” said Noelle Talley, a spokeswoman for Cooper.

    But Cooper’s office did say that it had issued a Civil Investigative Demand (CID) to Zeek on July 6. That’s weeks earlier than initially believed and leads to questions about whether Zeek had known for five weeks that it had been under investigation and did not inform participants.

    Without providing details, Zeek announced on its Blog yesterday that it had canceled its Aug. 22 “Red Carpet” event. By early evening, the Zeek Rewards and Zeekler sites began to publish this message: “Zeek Rewards is currently unavailable. More information will be available shortly on this website.”

    Earlier in the week, Zeek announced that “there won’t be any training, recruitment or leadership calls for the next few days while planning is going on.”

    With Zeek leaving affiliates in an information vacuum, many of them took to the Web. At least two petition drives appear to be under way demanding the government to reopen Zeek. As of the time of this post, the PP Blog has been unable to confirm that an action by any government agency — state or federal — was responsible for Zeek’s sudden absence.

    The Blog still is in the process of trying to piece together events in what has emerged as a bizarre and fluid situation. Sensing Zeek affiliates were vulnerable, some MLM opportunists raced to various sites such as The Dispatch newspaper in North Carolina and YouTube with offers to join their “programs.”

    Zeek fans on the MoneyMakerGroup Ponzi forum almost immediately blamed critics for Zeek’s problems, with one poster declaring he’d already mined his profits from Zeek and was confident they could not be attached by prosecutors in the United States.

    The Better Business Bureau said this morning that it was aware of reports that the doors at Zeek’s office in Lexington, N.C., were closed. The BBB added that it would publish more information as it became available.

    Zeek is a purported arm of Rex Venture Group LLC, led by Paul R. Burks.