Blog

  • THIS AFTERNOON: 9 Visitors From 6 Countries Arrive At PP Blog Within 5 Minutes; All Pull Exact Same September 2010 Story About MPB Today Multilevel Marketing Program, Then Vanish

    In a highly unusual — and statistically improbable occurrence — nine visitors from six countries arrived on the PP Blog within five minutes today and sought unsuccessfully to pull the exact same story on the MPB Today multilevel marketing program. With the apparent aid of a script, all of the visitors also attempted unsuccessfully to pull a story about an alleged Ponzi caper in New Jersey.

    The MPB Today story was nearly six months old, and the New Jersey story was nearly seven months old. The visitors left as quickly as they came, and appear not to have sought to pull any other stories.  Although it is common for individual visitors to pull “old” stories, it is decidedly uncommon for multiple visitors to attempt to pull the same “old” stories from the Blog’s archives of nearly 1,100 stories virtually simultaneously.

    Because the pattern suddenly ceased and no other individual reader outside the subset of “sudden” visitors sought to pull the same stories, it does not appear likely that the URLs for the stories appeared on a common website today through which visitors all sought to load the same pages virtually simultaneously.

    Readers routinely post links to the PP Blog on forums. But as the forum posts age and are buried by new posts, the Blog receives fewer and fewer visits from the older links.

    MPB Today is based in Florida. It purportedly operates a “grocery” program, and the U.S. Department of Agriculture said last year that it was investigating certain claims made about the firm.

    The circumstances and motives surrounding the visits were not immediately clear. The Blog recorded visits from IPs in the United States, Russia, Brazil, Spain, Thailand and South Korea. Logs suggest a script of some sort was used, and that the visitors sought to pull an MPB Today story that was published Sept. 25.

    Logs also suggest that the same visitors sought to pull  a story that appeared Aug. 12 about Eli Weinstein. Weinstein was charged in an alleged Ponzi caper that may involve $200 million or more.

    The PP Blog’s Weinstein story included a reference to Nevin Shapiro, who was arrested in New Jersey in April 2010 on charges of running an $880 million Ponzi scheme involving a bogus wholesale grocery business.

    In October and November, the PP Blog experienced sustained DDoS attacks. During one three-hour window, the Blog received more than 6 million “hits.” The attacks were reported to law enforcement, and coincided with the Blog’s reporting on MPB Today and Ponzi scheme and criminals’ forums.

    The PP Blog also has been subjected to email spoofing, virtually relentless spamming, YouTube attacks, threats of “war” and threats to start “fires” because of its reporting about the alleged ASD Ponzi scheme, and a false registration to a “program” in which the Blog was referred to as “Rat Bastard.” The “Rat Bastard” reference appears to have been associated with a cash-gifting program.

  • U.S. Marshal John Perry Dies From Gunshot Wounds Sustained After Ambush Attack By St. Louis Fugitive; Attorney General Issues Statement; Perry Is Second Marshal Slain Since Feb. 16

    UPDATED 2:58 P.M. ET (U.S.A.) Deputy U.S. Marshal John Perry, who was critically wounded early yesterday in an ambush in Missouri in which another marshal and a St. Louis police officer were wounded, has died, the U.S. Marshals Service announced.

    Perry, 48, died at 7 p.m. yesterday at Saint Louis University Hospital. He had been a marshal for 10 years.

    Carlos Boles, a fugitive wanted for assaulting a police officer and drug possession, was killed in the exchange of gunfire.

    Deputy Marshal Theodore Abegg, 31, suffered a bullet wound to the leg. Abegg has been with the marshals service for three years.

    The St. Louis police officer, whom authorities did not identify, suffered a wound when a bullet struck his face. He was treated and released from a hospital.

    Abegg remains hospitalized.

    “Our people and our partners are well trained and prepared, but it is impossible to predict when a wanted individual will make a fateful choice that results in the loss of life or injury,” said Stacia A. Hylton, director of the U.S. Marshals Service.

    “When that happens, and the life lost is a law-enforcement officer or other public servant, it is an immeasurable tragedy felt by all,” Hylton said. “Today, unfortunately, we again feel that pain. Our thoughts and prayers are with our fallen deputy as well as the injured and their families.”

    U.S. Attorney General Eric Holder issued a special statement on the death of Perry.

    “Yesterday’s tragic shootings in St. Louis are yet another solemn reminder of the dangers that United States Marshals confront on a daily basis,” Holder said. “These brave men and women routinely put their lives on the line in their work to combat crime and gun violence, to apprehend dangerous criminals, and to help bring fugitives to justice. Yesterday’s actions by two Deputy U.S. Marshals and local police officers in St. Louis reflect the dedication and courage that defines America’s law-enforcement community.

    “Less than a month after Deputy U.S. Marshal Derek Hotsinpiller was killed in the line of duty in Elkins, West Virginia, our thoughts and prayers now are with the families of Deputy U.S. Marshal John Perry, who made the ultimate sacrifice, as well as with Deputy U.S. Marshal Theodore Abegg and the St. Louis police officer who were injured yesterday,” Holder said. “Their service, their courage, and their willingness to risk their own lives to protect the safety of others will not be forgotten. As we mourn this devastating loss, we also reaffirm that the Justice Department’s commitment to supporting our law-enforcement partners — and to ensuring officer safety — will continue to be a top priority.”

  • BULLETIN: SEC Charges Jason Bo-Alan Beckman In Trevor Cook Ponzi Scheme; Judge Freezes Assets; Agency Says Investors’ Cash Used To Make Child-Support Payments And Puchase ‘Luxury Homes’ And Cars

    BULLETIN: Jason Bo-Alan “Bo” Beckman has been charged civilly by the SEC in the Trevor Cook Ponzi scheme in Minnesota and named a “leading” figure, according to court filings. The case against Beckman was brought as an action separate from the civil action against Cook, who also was charged criminally and is in federal prison serving 25 years after pleading guilty last year.

    The SEC’s complaint suggests other defendants may follow.

    “His fraud was part of a bigger scheme orchestrated by and with Trevor Cook and several associates,” the agency said, alleging that Beckman raised about $47.3 million of the $194 million gathered in the overall fraud — roughly 25 percent of the overall total. Former radio host Pat Kiley previously was charged civilly.

    Chief U.S. District Judge Michael J. Davis has frozen Beckman’s assets.

    One individual — a 41-year old nurse — submitted a sworn affidavit to Davis that Beckman promised him “guaranteed” annual returns of “12% or greater.”

    The nurse, an inexperienced investor who put $130,000 into the scheme, asserted he learned about the purported currency-trading program from Hollie Beckman, Beckman’s wife. Hollie Beckman has been named a relief defendant amid assertions she received ill-gotten gains. Her assets also have been frozen.

    Another inexperienced investor — a 60-year-old man who previously was retired but has returned to work because his life savings of nearly $750,000 were wiped out in the scheme — said in a sworn affidavit that Beckman promised him a “guaranteed”  return of 10.5 percent. Like the nurse, the man was given a tour of the Van Dusen Mansion, the landmark Minneapolis estate from which Beckman and Cook conducted business.

    This man rolled over his 401K account and liquidated his pension fund to become an investor, according to an affidavit.

    Yet-another inexperienced investor — a 62-year-old man who works as a water-plant operator — said he put $99,300 into the scheme by liquidating an account at Bear Stearns. Beckman promised him that his “fixed” account would generate about 13 percent annually, according to a sworn affidavit.

    All told, the SEC charged, “Beckman’s investors ultimately lost over $39 million by investing in the Currency Program and putting their money in his hands.” About 143 investors gave Beckman their money.

    Luz M. Aguilar, an SEC investigator, said that $85 million of the $194 million “was never invested in any type of foreign currency trading.”

    And Aguilar alleged that “the Beckmans deposited approximately $7.7 million into their personal joint accounts.” The funds originated “from accounts containing funds of investors,” according to Aguilar.

    More than $61,000 was used to make child-support payments, Aguilar alleged.

    But most of the money went to fuel an extravagant life-stlye, according to Aguilar. Here is a list of some of the spending:

    • $210,828 for automobile payments. The fleet allegedly included a 2010 Jaguar, a 2008 Land Rover, a 2006 Land Rover, a 2008 Mercedes, a 2008 Suzuki and a 2000 Mercedes.
    • $1.49 million for payments “toward the purchase” of luxury homes in Minneapolis, Texas and Florida.
    • $695,000 for credit-card payments.
    • $180,000 for a suite to watch hockey games.
    • $36,000 to “resorts.”
    • $76,000 to a country club.
    • $108,000 for cash withdrawals.
    • $224,000 for construction and repairs.
    • $997,000 for payments to seven law firms.
    • $223,000 for taxes.

    “Beckman was in a position to know the truth about the Currency Program,” the SEC charged. “He worked side-by-side with Trevor Cook at the Van Dusen mansion. Red flags waved all around him. For example, he knew — by April 2008, over a year before the scheme collapsed — that investors’ funds were pooled and were not in segregated accounts at all. He also learned from Trevor Cook that the location of investors’ funds was ‘not a black and white situation.’ The warning signs were glaring. Yet Beckman kept [quiet] — and kept taking tens of millions of dollars from investors . . .

    “Now that the Currency Program is over — and the money flow has stopped — the Beckmans apparently are struggling to make ends meet. Their expansive home in the Minneapolis suburbs is in foreclosure,” the SEC said.

    The SEC asked Davis to halt a sheriff’s sale set for March 14, and the judge issued an order blocking it.

    Even though Beckman had serious doubts about Cook, he kept them to himself, not sharing with investors information they needed to make informed decisions, the SEC charged.

  • URGENT >> BULLETIN >> MOVING: Feds, SEC Say Connecticut Ponzi Scheme With International Reach Involved ‘Hundreds Of Millions Of Dollars’; 2 Arrests Made By FBI In Florida

    BULLETIN: A Connecticut hedge-fund operator not registered with the SEC “in any capacity” and two other men — both Venezuelan nationals — have been charged in a spectacular Ponzi caper that allegedly involved hundreds of millions of dollars and a derailed plot to thwart an SEC investigation.

    FBI agents have arrested Juan Carlos Guillen Zerpa, and Juan Carlos Horna Napolitano in Florida. They are charged with conspiracy to obstruct justice, to obstruct an official proceeding and to defraud the SEC.

    Guillen Zerpa, 43, is an accountant and a citizen of Venezuela. Horna Napolitano is a Venezuelan citizen living in Pembroke Pines, Fla. Pembroke Pines is a city in Broward County.

    The principal defendant in the case — Francisco Illarramendi, 42, of New Canaan, Conn. — already has pleaded guilty to criminal charges, according to U.S. Attorney David B. Fein of the District of Connecticut. He was accused by the SEC in its civil case of misappropriating at least $53 million in investor assets.

    “As a result of the scheme, the investors and creditors of Illarramendi’s funds face potential losses of hundreds of millions of dollars,” the FBI said in a statement.

    The SEC today upgraded civil charges filed against Illarramendi in January, saying he “attempted to hide the fact that his hedge funds were missing assets by providing the SEC staff with a false letter from an accountant in Venezuela that purported to verify the existence of approximately $275 million in assets held by one of the funds.

    “Those assets do not exist,” the agency alleged.

    “Illarramendi knew that the SEC was onto his scheme and compounded his fraud by attempting to mislead the Commission’s staff,” said David P. Bergers, director of the SEC’s regional office in Boston.

    Fein said the scheme may prove to be the largest in Connecticut’s history.

    “This investigation has revealed that Francisco Illarramendi operated a massive Ponzi scheme that has defrauded foreign investors of hundreds of millions of dollars,” Fein said. “While the precise dollar losses will not be known for some time, based on this fast-moving investigation, we believe this case represents the largest white-collar prosecution ever brought by this office.”

    Both the FBI and the SEC pursued the case forcefully, Fein said. The agencies are part of the newly formed Connecticut Securities, Commodities and Investor Fraud Task Force, which Fein said was “actively investigating this and other financial fraud schemes.”

    A veteran FBI agent said criminals domestic and “overseas” should expect to get caught.

    “This investigation should serve as fair warning to those, whether in Connecticut, elsewhere in the United States, or overseas, who would attempt to victimize an increasing number of American and foreign investors,” said Kimberly K. Mertz, special agent in charge.

    “The Connecticut Securities, Commodities, and Investor Fraud Task Force will continue to aggressively investigate these criminals and protect the rights of the investing public,” Mertz said.

    Charging documents in the case allege a spectacular fraud that relied on self-dealing and an elaborate maze of deceit.

    Illarramendi pleaded guilty to two counts of wire fraud, one count of securities fraud, one count of investment adviser fraud and one count of conspiracy to obstruct justice, to obstruct an official proceeding and to defraud the SEC.

    He faces up to 70 years in federal prison.

    “Illarramendi has admitted that he agreed to pay Guillen [Zerpa] and Horna [Napolitano] more than $3 million for fabricating” a letter and creating false support for $275 million in loans, the FBI said.

    Read the statement from the FBI and Fein.

    Read the SEC complaint.

  • Judges Across United States Hammer Forex Ponzi-Schemers And Commodities Fraudsters; Nearly $100 Million In Penalties Announced Last Week Alone

    Federal judges in California, New York, Tennessee and Arizona last week ordered spectacular financial penalties against Forex and commodities fraudsters.

    Dennis R. Bolze was assessed a penalty of more than $36.6 million and ordered to pay restitution of more than $13 million to investors he scammed. The orders were entered by Chief U.S. District Judge Curtis L. Collier of the Eastern District of Tennessee.

    Bolze was sentenced last year to more than 27 years in federal prison by U.S. District Judge Thomas A. Varlan, also of the Eastern District of Tennessee.

    Meanwhile, Robert D. Bame was assessed restitution and a financial penalty totaling $46.9 million by U.S. District Judge R. Gary Klausner of the Central District of California.

    In May 2009, Bame was sentenced to 97 months in federal prison for wire fraud and engaging in monetary transactions with property derived from specified unlawful activity.

    The cases against Bame and Bolze alone resulted in monetary sanctions of more than $96.6 million.

    Separately, a restitution order and penalty totaling more than $1.1 million was entered against Helmut H. Weber by U.S. District Judge David G. Campbell of the District of Arizona. Weber was indicted in October 2008 by state authorities for fraud and the misappropriation of customer funds.

    In New York, meanwhile, Jeffrey Shalhoub was ordered to pay more than $700,000 in restitution and penalties. Those orders were entered by U.S. District Judge Joanna Seybert of the Eastern District of New York.

    The CFTC, which brought the civil cases against each of the defendants referenced in this story, said Shalhoub ran a Ponzi scheme, using customers’ money to “pay for computer and golfing equipment, clothing, car payments on a Land Rover and a $3,500 tab at a Manhattan restaurant.”

    Bolze, one of the earliest of the so-called “mini-Madoffs,” also ran a Ponzi scheme. Bolze bolted from Tennessee in December 2008, the same month the Madoff Ponzi was exposed.

    After his arrest in Pennsylvania, Bolze asked for an opportunity to recoup the money he had fleeced from victims. All he needed, he argued to a federal judge, was the Internet, a computerized program — and a little time.

    Bame, the CFTC said, “diverted about $19 million of investors’ money either to pay off other investors or for his personal use, such as purchasing automobiles or traveling in private jets.”

    In the case of Weber, the CFTC said, “the majority of the funds were misappropriated to pay for [his] lavish lifestyle.”

  • EDITORIAL: Salt Lake Tribune Publishes Series On MLM; Reader Claims Reporter A ‘Broke’ Purveyor Of ‘Negativity’; Separately, Len Clements (IQ-155) ‘Assumes’ Reporter Was ‘Duped’ By The ‘Flimflam’ Of MLM Critics

    We highly recommend an even-handed series the Salt Lake Tribune published on the subject of multilevel marketing in Utah. (Link appears at bottom of post.) The series includes comments from MLM enthusiasts, the Direct Selling Association, attorneys for well-known MLM companies, MLM critics and the FTC.

    Meanwhile, the series shows that MLM has some political clout, and points out that Utah has more MLM firms per capita than any other place in the United States. It also publishes data supplied by a number of companies.

    The series is accessible through a “State of the Debate” Blog entry by George Pyle, a longtime journalist who was a finalist in 1998 for the Pulitzer Prize in Editorial Writing. Don’t miss the cartoon that accompanies Pyle’s presentation of the links to the stories. The cartoon pokes fun at the ready supply of over-the-top MLM sales pitches.

    Pyle’s Blog entry does not hold forth on the subject of MLM; it simply introduces the series. Readers can draw their own conclusions after clicking on the links and reading the stories

    The series consists of articles by Tribune reporters Steven Oberbeck, Matt Canham, Tom Harvey and Kirsten Stewart.

    MLM Fans (Again) Demonstrate Lack Of PR Savvy

    As often is the case when media outlets tackle the subject of MLM, the post-publication opinions of the Tribune’s readers were strongly divided. MLM perhaps always will be a “scam” to one side in the long-running debate — and a marvelous thing to the other. One of the best things about the series is the comments submitted by readers. The PP Blog believes the comments submitted by MLM enthusiasts are the most instructive.

    Although the PP Blog publishes relatively few stories about MLM, the ones it has published have been met with organized (and bizarre) resistance. After publishing a series of stories on the MPB Today “grocery” MLM last summer and fall, supporters of the firm arrived on the Blog to call MPB Today’s critics  “roaches,” “IDIOTS,” “clowns,” “terrible” people, “misleading” people, people who have led a “sheltered life,” people who have been “chained up in a basement,” people who have “chips” on their shoulders, spewers of “hot air,” “naysayers,” “complainers,” “trouble maker[s]” and “crybabies.” (See this editorial.)

    They were doing this on behalf of a business that had any number of reps who apparently licensed themselves to film commercials inside Walmart stores and to use Walmart’s intellectual property to drive dollars to MPB Today. At least two reps declared it best to do business with them because other MPB Today affiliates were lying scammers. Meanwhile, another MPB rep sought to drive business to the firm by creating a script that depicted President Obama and Michelle Obama as welfare recipients aspiring to eat dog food. The President and Secretary of State Hillary Clinton were cast as Nazis, with Obama subordinate to Clinton, who also was cast as a drunk.

    One thing that continues to drive criticism of MLM is the bizarre  behavior of some of its supporters. This behavior can be described fairly as cult-like, Stepfordian, incongruous, supremely awkward and monumentally ham-handed. It is utterly predictable, and the lack of PR savvy contributes to the industry’s poor reputation.

    In response to Oberbeck’s story, which referenced the disclosure statements of a number of well-known companies and reported that “nearly all” distributors “will fail,” one reader surmised in a Comments thread that the Tribune reporter was “broke” and driven by “negativity.” It was a familiar refrain.

    Naturally the comment precluded the possibility that the reporter had any pure motives such as enlightening the Tribune’s readership about some of the realities of MLM. How the industry ever could hope to elevate the debate by attacking the messenger — in this case, Oberbeck — is left to the imagination.

    What happened at the Tribune, however, is hardly unique.

    After the U.S. Secret Service seized tens of millions of dollars in the AdSurfDaily Ponzi MLM case in 2008, some ASD affiliates advanced theories that the agency’s work was the work of “Satan” and that a Florida television station should be charged with Deceptive Trade Practices for carrying news unflattering to the company. They later complained that reporters seemed disinclined to put much stock in their point of view.

    Prosecutors said ASD created as many as 40,000 victims while gathering at least $110 million in a classic Ponzi scheme put together by Andy Bowdoin, a recidivist felon. Rather than distancing themselves from Bowdoin, some ASD members reportedly sent him brownies and delicious baked goods. Others signed a petition calling for the prosecutors to be investigated. Still others advanced a theory that the U.S. Secret Service was guilty of interference with commerce. The key prong of the theory was that all commerce is legal as long as both parties to a contract agree it is legal, a position that would legalize (and legitimize) Ponzi schemes, slavery, human trafficking and narcotics trafficking, among other crimes.

    Len Clements Lectures Tribune Reporter

    Well-known MLM aficionado Len Clements, who advertises his IQ of 155, apparently believed that Oberbeck’s story in the Tribune deserved a response in the form of a five-page “open Response Letter.”

    Clements noted in his “open Response Letter” to Oberbeck that he assumed the reporter had been “duped” by MLM critics Robert FitzPatrick and Jon Taylor — and Tracy Coenen before them.

    In his “open Response Letter,” Clements accused Fitzpatrick, Taylor and Coenen, a forensic accountant, of being “anti-MLM antagonists” who were “slathering” the profession with misplaced criticism.

    “Slathering” is a good and powerful word. It doesn’t describe the efforts of FitzPatrick, Taylor and Coenen to educate the public about the perils of endless-chain recruiting schemes, but it’s a good word nonetheless. We’re glad that Clements, who advertises his IQ of 155, used it; it gives us a chance to use the word “unctuous.”

    Indeed, we view Clements’ “open Response Letter” as “unctuous.” It begins with a doozy of a misplaced modifier, but that’s only worth a brief mention — and only because Clements advertises his IQ of 155. Plenty of people with high IQs don’t have command of grammar, which likely bores them to tears.

    The reason we’re using the word “unctuous” to describe Clements’ “open Response Letter” is that it practically drips with stinking, vomitous verbal slime. It’s the sort of passive-aggressive letter in which the insult is deeply embedded in the vomit of the opening lines, with the vomit theoretically neutralized later with softer words that are supposed to demonstrate Clements’ sincere desire to be helpful.

    Any “professional journalist” should be interested in “accurately, fairly and responsibly” presenting the topics they write about, Clements unctuously points out at the top of the letter, setting himself up as a journalism cop. After implying that Oberbeck isn’t a pro and hasn’t done his homework, Clements goes on to trash the story and the MLM-unfriendly sources used in the story.

    The roadmap to professional reporting about MLM as provided by Clements in his “open Response Letter” includes at least 10 footnotes. It was submitted to the newspaper in the form of a link to a  PDF that contains multiple link’s to Clements’ website. The document is unctuously titled “OberbeckResponse” and asserts that Oberbeck’s reporting “seem[s] to betray any objective research and analysis of the subject.”

    Clements, who started out by lecturing Oberbeck on what constitutes professional journalism, eventually positions himself as the sincere cure for what purportedly had dragged down the quality of the reporter’s work.

    “Should you ever need assistance in researching any topic related to the field of multilevel marketing I sincerely hope you will contact me,” Clements un-vomits to Oberbeck at the conclusion of the “open Response Letter,” after earlier coming out of the gate with embedded slime, a lecture on professionalism and an attack on sources used by the reporter as “remarkably ignorant” people and the purveyors of “flimflam.”

    At least Clements didn’t summon his advertised IQ of 155 to call them “roaches” or to declare that Oberbeck was “broke.” He merely relied on his unctuousness. In doing so, he demonstrated once again that MLM often is its own worst enemy.

    A five-page, de facto letter to the editor — one filled with slime reimagined as a sincere effort to be helpful and 10 footnotes? This is supposed to beneficial to the trade?

    Little wonder that MLM finds itself the topic of constant criticism.

    Access the Tribune’s MLM series at this gateway page.

  • FEDS: Illegal Money-Transmitting Businesse Operating In ‘Shadows’ Funneled $172 Million Offshore For ‘Shell’ Companies; Murky Enterprises Blocked From Using Oregon Banks ‘Like The Corner ATM’

    Tigard, a small city in Oregon, was home to Victor Kaganov. Kaganov has pleaded guilty to operating an unlicensed money-transmitting business that funneled $172 million to at least 50 countries. Prosecutors said he established "shell companies" for Russian clients. PHOTO: Wikipedia

    An Oregon man living in a small town set up “numerous” shell companies for Russian clients and funneled more than $172 million to at least 50 countries, prosecutors said.

    Victor Kaganov, 69, of Tigard, has pleaded guilty to charges of operating an unlicensed money-transmitting business. Tigard is small city whose population is about 47,000.

    Kaganov was born in Russia. He moved to the United States in 1998 and became a naturalized citizen, prosecutors said.

    At least one of the shell companies purported to have a tie to Cyprus, according to records. At least three of the companies used the word “Fishing” in their corporate names. Some used the word “Financial.”

    The announcement of the guilty plea was made in Washington by Assistant Attorney General Lanny A. Breuer, the head of the Criminal Division of the U.S. Department of Justice.

    Using stark language, Breuer said U.S. investigators followed the money to expose the crime and were committed to exposing similar crimes. The FBI has repeatedly warned Congress about a “shadow” banking system and shell companies set up to disguise crimes.

    “Now more than ever, we are determined to bring to justice those who attempt to hide funds in U.S. financial institutions,” Breuer said.

    The probe was led by the office of U.S. Attorney Dwight C. Holton of the District of Oregon. Holton, like Breuer, also used stark language when describing the Oregon caper.

    “When shell corporations are illegally manipulated in the shadows to hide the flow of tens of millions dollars overseas, it threatens the integrity of our financial system,” Holton said. “Sunshine kills the stink of corruption — our laws aim to bring the sunshine in, and we will enforce these laws vigorously.”

    Holton and Breuer were backed by Oregon’s top FBI agent, who also used stark language.

    “We will not allow Oregon to be used like the corner ATM for people in foreign countries,” said Arthur Balizan, special agent in charge. “Crimes like these eat away at the stability and prosperity of the American financial system.”

    Agents determined that Kaganov made at least 4,200 illegal wire transfers.

    “In order to move money in and out of the United States, Kaganov created various shell corporations under Oregon law, and then opened bank accounts into which he deposited money he received from his Russian clients,” prosecutors said. “Kaganov admitted he would then wire the money out of the accounts based on wire instructions he received from his clients.”

    Kaganov’s operation complied with neither Oregon law nor U.S. law, prosecutors said.

  • SEC Charges Rajat K. Gupta, One Of World’s Top Business Consultants, In Insider Trading Case Involving Raj Rajaratnam, One Of America’s Richest Men

    In a case apt to plague Wall Street with questions about whether people on Main Street should trust it,  the SEC has accused one of the world’s foremost business consultants with providing illegal “insider trading” tips that lined the corporate pockets of one of the richest men in the world.

    Rajat K. Gupta is accused of providing confidential information about the earnings reports of Goldman Sachs and Procter & Gamble to Raj Rajaratnam and also disclosing to Rajaratnam a plan by Warren Buffett’s Berkshire Hathaway to invest $5 billion in Goldman.

    Gupta allegedly gleaned the information while serving on the boards of Goldman Sachs and Procter & Gamble. Rajaratnam, the head of Galleon Management, used it virtually immediately either to generate illegal trading profits of millions of dollars or to avoid losing millions of dollars, the SEC charged.

    Rajaratnam, who is facing a criminal trial in the Galleon insider-trading case, was listed as No. 236 on the 2009 Forbes magazine list of the 400 richest Americans. Forbes reported that Rajaratnam had assets of $7 billion in 2009.

    Gupta, meanwhile, is the chairman of the International Chamber of Commerce, a special adviser to the United Nations, an adviser to the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation, an adviser to prominent academic institutions in the United States and India  — and a board member or former board member of some of the most famous companies in the world. By virtually all accounts, he built a stunningly successful international business career after starting out at McKinsey & Co. in 1973.

    Today, though, the SEC accused him of betraying the trust he had built up over decades.

    “Gupta was honored with the highest trust of leading public companies, and he betrayed that trust by disclosing their most sensitive and valuable secrets,” said Robert Khuzami, director of the SEC’s Division of Enforcement. “Directors who violate the sanctity of board room confidences for private gain will be held to account for their illegal actions.”

    Gupta “voluntarily resigned” from P&G’s board today, the company said in a statement. He left the board of Goldman Sachs last year.

    One of the problems with illegal insider trading is that it undermines the public’s confidence in the fairness and integrity of securities markets, the SEC says. It is illegal to trade on material, nonpublic information about a security and to breach a fiduciary duty.

    Read the stunning allegations against Gupta, who denies them.

  • Florida Serves Up Another Bizarre One: CFTC Files Emergency Action To Halt Alleged Ponzi Scheme; David L. Ortiz Charged Amid Allegations ‘Holistic’ Health Firm Was Collecting Forex Funds

    A Florida man who operated a website known as “Forex Futures Trader” to drive business to his Ponzi scheme has been sued for fraud in an emergency action, the CFTC said.

    Some of the cash was routed through a firm that continued to do business despite the fact it was dissolved by the state in 2005, the CFTC said. At the same time, the agency alleged, customers were told to send money to a firm in the holistic health business, not in the Forex business.

    Named defendants were David L. Ortiz of Vero Beach, Goyep International Inc. of Vero Beach, and Royal Returns Inc. of Hollywood. Neither Ortiz nor the firms was registered with the CFTC, and a federal judge has frozen their assets, the agency said.

    Royal Returns was “involuntarily dissolved” by the state of Florida in 2005 after being operational for less than a year, but continued to do business after the dissolution, the CFTC said.

    In May 2008, after Royal Returns had been dissolved for nearly three years, it began soliciting money for a Forex program, the CFTC said. Despite advertising the Forex program, Ortiz told some customers to send their money to a company known as Natural Health Matters LLC, which purported to be in the business of “holistic health care and freelance services.”

    Natural Health Matters has been named a relief defendant in the case because it allegedly received ill-gotten gains. Loredana Ortiz also was named a relief defendant.

    At least 10 investors plowed at least $420,000 into the scheme, which the CFTC described as a Ponzi in which at least $232,000 was misappropriated for things such as shopping trips, travel, resort hotels, restaurants, utility bills, car payments and making payments on personal credit cards.

    Investors were lured by promises of guaranteed returns of 10 percent a month, the CFTC said.

    One customer tried to close her account and be reimbursed in August 2009, but met resistance from David Ortiz, who explained reimbursement was not possible “due to multiple factors beyond his control,” the CFTC charged.

    Ortiz then ignored the woman’s “repeated” emails and calls for weeks, but eventually sent her a bad check. After that, the CFTC said, Ortiz “wired a refund to this customer from funds from another investor.”

    Another customer was paid purported “profits” on his investment, but the funds came from the man’s own investment principal, the CFTC alleged.

    Other customers falsely were told not to withdraw principal or profits because doing so “would result in significant trading losses due to a premature liquidation of open trading positions,” the CFTC alleged.

    Ortiz also told a lie that he was registered with the SEC and had 30 years’ investment experience, the CFTC said.

    In reality, Ortiz had no SEC registration, had traded Forex for less than three years, had a record of futility — and covered up his losses by providing bogus statements to customers, the CFTC said.

    Read the CFTC complaint.

  • SPECIAL REPORT: U.S. Counter-Terrorism Unit Intercepted Communication From Person With AdSurfDaily Ties In 2009; Intended Recipient Was Imprisoned Felon Associated With Scheme In Which Prospects Were Told They Could Rip Off Government’s Medicaid Program

    EDITOR’S NOTE: Lower in this story, the names of AdSurfDaily President Andy Bowdoin and other individuals appear. They are NOT the individuals referenced in the government communiqué described below.

    UPDATED 12:50 P.M. ET (U.S.A.) The name of a person known to have used at least two names and to have AdSurfDaily ties appears in a law-enforcement communiqué issued in 2009 by the counter-terrorism arm of a U.S. government agency that employs a method of monitoring both domestic extremists and individuals with known links to international terror groups, the PP Blog has learned.

    At least one communication from the person was intercepted by the government and used as part of a raw intelligence report that includes summaries on the actions of dozens of individuals with alleged ties to al-Qaida, Hezbollah or homegrown extremist groups in the United States. The communication does not reference ASD, but includes a reference to a second person known to have an ASD tie.

    The sender of the communication was described as a provider of fraudulent documents typically associated with tax schemes operated by antigovernment extremists. Meanwhile, the intended recipient was an individual known to have promoted various forms of financial fraud, including a scheme in which prospects were told they could qualify for Medicaid by hiding assets and making themselves artificially poor.

    Medicaid is a federal health-services program for low-income Americans. It is administered by the states.

    The PP Blog established the identities of both individuals with ASD ties by examining a variety of public records and other documents.

    ASD's Andy Bowdoin

    Neither person is in state or federal custody, but it is clear that both the federal and state governments are aware of their activities and have worked to disrupt them. The intended recipient of the communication is in federal custody for a crime unrelated to ASD.

    Both individuals with ASD ties have a tie to a third person with ASD links, according to the Blog’s analysis of records.

    Owing to the sensitive nature of the communiqué, the Blog is declining to identify the individuals with ASD links and the agency. It also is declining to publish specific details such as quoted material, dates, times, telephone numbers and addresses. The communiqué demonstrates that the United States has identified particular areas in which it believes terrorism could fester and is monitoring oral, electronic and printed communications in a specific context.

    The communiqué devotes more than a full page to the topic of the communication intercepted from the individual with ASD ties.

    Based on its research, the Blog is reporting today that the person with ASD ties whose communication was intercepted is an American believed to have ties to a network of domestic extremists immersed in a sea of organized corruption. The person has an arrest record for a nonviolent crime, but also has been associated with bids to intimidate people and cause them financial harm. Records show that the person has used at least two names.

    News of the disturbing developments comes even as some ASD members are blindly asserting that ASD was a wholesome enterprise and making broad claims that any ties to terrorism have been ruled out. ASD has been implicated in an alleged international Ponzi scheme that gathered at least $110 million.

    Despite an alleged concession by ASD President Andy Bowdoin that the company was operating illegally and a new assertion by the government that Bowdoin and unnamed “others” ventured to Costa Rica in the spring to 2008 to get the lay of the land for an upstart “autosurf” enterprise, some members are soliciting funds to challenge a U.S. Secret Service affidavit that led to the seizure of tens of millions of dollars from Bowdoin’s personal bank accounts in August 2008.

    Bowdoin’s own bid to challenge the affidavit failed in November 2008, more than two years ago.

    In December 2010, federal prosecutors asserted that ASD had the ability to accept money from e-Bullion, a shuttered California payment processor whose operator — James Fayed — has been charged with arranging the contract murder of his wife.

    Pamela Fayed, who was stabbed to death in a parking garage, was a potential witness against her husband. James Fayed is believed to have used e-Bullion to facilitate multiple Ponzi schemes, including a scheme hatched by a New York man — Abdul Tawala Ibn Ali Alishtari — who later pleaded guilty to financing terrorism.

    Like ASD’s Bowdoin, Ali Alishtari claimed to have received an important award for his business acumen. And Ali Alishtari’s scheme, known as FEDI, was pushed by an individual convicted in a separate Ponzi scheme and sentenced to federal prison. Payments from the scheme were called “rebates,” the same terminology adopted by ASD to describe payments to members.

    “In enriching himself, Alishtari displayed a deliberate disregard for the financial and personal security of others,” U.S. Attorney Preet Bharara of the Southern District of New York said in September 2009.

    e-Bullion’s name also is referenced in court filings in the Gold Quest International (GQI) Ponzi scheme, which gathered up to $29 million, according to U.S. and Canadian regulators. GQI, which operated from Las Vegas, falsely claimed to be immune to U.S. law and to enjoy purported “sovereignty” extended by a North Dakota  “Indian” tribe.

    One of the unusual elements of the GQI case was a claim that the purported sovereignty was portable, shielding the purveyors from prosecution anywhere.

    A New Plan To Do Battle With The Government

    ASD member Todd Disner, one of dozens of unsuccessful pro se litigants in the civil portion of the ASD case in U.S. District Court for the District of Columbia, now wants ASD members to come up with money to fund a lawsuit in Florida that would challenge the U.S. Secret Service affidavit in the District of Columbia that led to the seizure of $80 million in the ASD case, according to a recording of a Feb. 22 conference call.

    “We were dragged down the river by our government agents, and the rest is history,” Disner told listeners.

    “There might be an opportunity for us to throw a few punches of our own,” Disner said. “We’ve been on the ropes for three years now, and we’d like to start swinging back if we could.”

    The opportunity to battle back after a fatiguing and demoralizing three years on the ropes would cost ASD members a combined total of about $10,000, according to people who listened to the call.

    After the call, some ASD members received an email that purported that an ASD “terrorism connection has been ruled out.” The email, sent by an ASD member who did not use a full name, did not describe who within the government had ruled out a terrorism link.

    Disner, who claimed he was “excited” about the prospect of suing the government to overturn the ASD forfeiture, also claimed he’d been advised on the complex legal issues by Dwight Schwetizer, whom he described as a fellow ASD member, friend and “very accomplished attorney” who is “not practicing law now.”

    “They’re just going to try and try to keep that money,” Disner asserted. “They seized the money improperly, and if they release it then everybody’s included.”

    The government, however, already has put in place a restitution program that would compensate crime victims from seized funds. An apparent linchpin of the new strategy outlined by Disner is a theory that the government restitution program somehow opens the door for ASD members not only to reverse the judicially declared forfeiture, but also to receive damages for an unwarranted government intrusion. Schweitzer also provided commentary on the call.

    For its part, the government says ASD was engaging in felonious wire fraud and securities fraud by disguising itself as an “advertising” business while operating a $110 million Ponzi scheme from Florida that had affected tens of thousands of people globally. Just last week prosecutors advised a federal judge that Bowdoin, who was arrested in December, had ventured to Costa Rica in the spring of 2008 to look for a way to start an offshore Ponzi scheme.

    Disner’s conference call was held just a few days after the latest damaging claims against ASD became public. The government filed the new claims against ASD on Feb. 18, the same day it announced a major prosecution against an alleged Costa Rican money-laundering operation that was accused of engaging in international securities fraud and siphoning millions of dollars in penny-stock schemes.

    The U.S. government, using its individual agencies and the Financial Fraud Enforcement Task Force created by President Obama in 2009, has been targeting various forms of fraud, including HYIPs, penny-stock capers, Forex schemes, tax schemes and domestic and offshore crime targeted at U.S. citizens.

    In some cases, victims have been counted by the tens of thousands — enough to fill the nation’s largest sports stadiums. ASD was purported to have 120,000 members.

    Some ASD members have called for a “militia” to storm Washington, D.C. Others have called for a federal prosecutor to be placed in a medieval torture rack. Still others have called for prosecutors and investigators to be charged criminally and sued civilly for their efforts to disrupt what the government has described as a classic Ponzi scheme operated by Bowdoin, a recidivist felon.

  • BULLETIN: Man Implicated By Jamaica In Alleged $326 Million Ponzi Known As ‘Cash Plus’ Now Accused By United States Of Orchestrating Separate HYIP Scheme That Funneled Cash To Latvian And Jamaican Accounts

    EDITOR’S NOTE: You might feel a chill after reading the story below about Bertram A. Hill and co-defendants implicated by the SEC in an international fraud scheme that ensnared investors in the United States and Europe. The SEC case includes an allegation that U.S. retail brokers were solicited to push unqualified clients to a murky Massachusetts firm that funneled business to Hill, who was suspended by FINRA in 2002, had an unpaid FINRA fine of $5,000 and yet somehow was operating under the radar. If that’s not shocking enough, Hill already had been implicated by Jamaican authorities in a Ponzi scheme that allegedly gathered hundreds of millions of dollars — and yet allegedly still was able to line up millions of dollars from new investors more than two years after being charged criminally with fraud in Jamaica. Records show the case in Jamaica was brought in April 2008. The new scheme, according to the SEC, began in December 2010, about two months ago. Accounts from Jamaican media in 2008 noted that “heavily armed police officers” were patrolling the grounds during a court appearance by Hill and his brother, Carlos Hill, in 2008. A “handful” of protesters unhappy that arrests had been made demanded that Carlos Hill, the alleged mastermind of the Jamaican scheme, be set free, according to the Jamaica Observer. (See link at bottom of story.) Among the victims in the later-to-emerge scheme, which the SEC alleged was unrelated to the Jamaican scheme, were a “boarding school for boys” in Brandon, Fla., a retired school teacher from California, an unidentified U.S. investor who plowed about $250,000 into the scheme, an investor in the United Kingdom who plowed at least $1.3 million into the scheme and an investor in Switzerland who plowed more than $1.8 million into the scheme.

    “[T]hese securities were fictitious and nearly $3 million of investor funds were quickly wired out of the country to accounts in Latvia and Jamaica,” the SEC charged.

    BULLETIN: The SEC has filed an emergency action in federal court in New Jersey to halt a “Swiss debentures” scheme allegedly operated in the United States by a man charged criminally in Jamaica with laying waste to investors in a $326 million Ponzi scheme.

    U.S. District Judge Anne E. Thompson has frozen the assets of the defendants in the U.S. case, while also ordering the repatriation of assets and expedited discovery.

    The Jamaican scheme, which was exposed in 2008, is known as “Cash Plus.” It has become the subject of global intrigue and an international money-chase, playing out not only in the Caribbean but also in venues such as Europe and the emirate of Dubai in the Persian Gulf. Dubai is one of seven emirates of the United Arab Emirates.

    The alleged U.S.-based scheme appears to have begun in late 2010 and has the hallmarks of a prime-bank/HYIP hybrid that promised spectacular returns of up to 100 percent monthly, according to the SEC complaint.

    Investigators said the U.S. case against Bertram A. Hill was “unrelated” to the alleged Jamaican fraud for which he faces trial this year, but that millions of dollars had been “spirited” to Latvia and Jamaica from bank and brokerage accounts in the United States without investors’ knowledge or permission.

    Hill, according to the SEC allegations, was booted by the Financial Industry Regulatory Authority (FINRA) amid customer complaints 2002. FINRA, the SEC said, leveled a $5,000 fine against Hill that remains unpaid

    Hill, whose age was not immediately known, resides in Red Bank, N.J., according to court filings. The SEC said he presided over a company known as Secure Capital Funding Corp. (SCF), which purported to be a subsidiary of a firm known as “ST Underwriters.”

    ST Underwriters, the SEC said, held itself out as a “private banking group” operating out of Panama and as a subsidiary of a company known as “Secure Trust.”

    Although Secure Trust “purports to be a business operating in Switzerland,” the SEC said, it “is not authorized by the Swiss Financial Markets Supervisory Authority . . . to do financial business in Switzerland and is on FINMA’s published “black list.”

    A mysterious company known as PP&M Trade Partners, which purported to be located in Elkart Ind., also was part of the fraud, the SEC alleged. PP&M was under the control of Kiavanni Pringle of Metheun, Mass., according to the agency.

    Pringle, whose age was not immediately known, also has been named a co-defendant in the case. Despite the assertion PP&M was operating as a financial-services business in Indiana, the Indiana location proved to be a “warehouse where another business with which Mr. Pringle was previously associated stores televisions and other merchandise,” the SEC said.

    PP&M actually was operating from Pringle’s home in Massachusetts and had “no clients” prior to November 2010, the SEC said.

    Pringle and PP&M used “multiple, detailed websites” to engage retail brokers to find investors for the scheme, the SEC alleged. The brokers were offered “commissions” of up to 4 percent from purported “gains” enjoyed by clients.

    “None of the offerings and sales of purported Swiss debentures made by Defendants beginning in December 2010 have been registered with the Commission by an issuer in accordance with the federal securities laws,” the SEC said. “At least some of the sales made by Defendants have been made to persons who did not qualify as ‘accredited investors’ so as to exempt Defendants from the obligation to register the securities offerings and make required disclosures. None of the Defendants ever sought or obtained an exemption from the registration requirements.”

    Read the stunning SEC complaint, which asserts that at least some of the investors didn’t even know with whom they were doing business because the “true identities” of the alleged schemers were not disclosed.

    Read a 2008 story in the Jamaica Observer that outlines allegations made against Hill nearly three years before a new scheme allegedly took root in the United States.