Blog

  • UPDATE: Purported ‘Sovereign Citizen’ Sentenced To Jail Time In State-Level Case That Began As Bank-Fraud Probe Now Charged With Federal Tax Crimes

    ponziblotterJohn A. Glavin, the Wisconsin man and purported “sovereign citizen” who received a memorable rebuke from a county judge who sentenced him to 90 days in jail in a case about transferring property illegally to dupe a bank, now has been indicted under federal law for tax crimes.

    Glavin, 43, is the father of 11 children. How he apparently became immersed in “sovereign” chicanery is unclear.

    But in January, Glavin was sentenced to 90 days in jail by Juneau County Circuit Judge Paul Curran, who told him that “fidelity to nonsense is no virtue,” the Juneau County Star Times reported.

    The Star Times is reporting that Glavin now has been indicted on federal tax charges.

    In a brief statement, federal prosecutors in the Western District of Wisconsin said that Glavin filed bogus tax returns in 2005 and 2008. Those false returns sought a combined refund amount of more than $956,000, prosecutors said.

     

     

  • BULLETIN: 3 Church Officials, Including 2 Pastors, Arrested By Toronto Police In Alleged Fraud Scheme In Which Money Was Funneled To Panama

    Source: Toronto Police Service.
    Source: Toronto Police Service.

    BULLETIN: Dozens of members of a church congregation were scammed by husband-and-wife pastors and a church administrator in a Forex fraud and “loan” scheme in which money was funneled to Panama, Toronto police say.

    Arrested were Lorraine Bahlmann, 47, Verna Hibbert, 48, and Marlon Hibbert, 49. They’ve been charged with with 38 counts of fraud over $5,000 in the alleged scam, which reportedly gathered about $8.6 million.

    Millions of dollars appear to be missing, police said.

    “Each month, the accused would have statements, which he would send to the victims showing growth in their investment accounts when in fact the accused was losing money,” said Det. Gail Regan of the Service’s Financial Crimes Unit.

    The Ontario Securities Commission was involved in the probe, police said.

    “[L]arge portions of the victim’s money” are believed to have been transferred to Panama, Regan said.

    “The victims are hurt and distraught,” she said. “They still can’t believe that someone like him has done this to them.”

    Investigators have identified 38 victims, but Regan said there may be nearly 200. The phone number to contact police is 416-808-7238.

    Some of the victims lost their homes and life savings, Regan said.

    Between January 2005 and December 2010, “the accused convinced congregation members and their families and friends to invest money with the pastor in the form of loan agreements and investment contracts,” police said.

  • Rethinking ‘Superman IV’ As GoFunPlaces Pronounced DOA In The USA

    gofunplacesUPDATED 4:14 PM EDT (U.S.A.) Superman IV — the last movie (1987) starring Christopher Reeve as the Man of Steel — was not a great flick. It’s remembered principally for Reeve’s starring role, the penury of what the Washington Post described as the “the Golan-Globus conspiracy,” poor special effects — and for something Superman did: Round up all the nuclear weapons on earth, place them in a giant net and heave them into the sun.

    Depending on your point of view, the movie delivered either the greatest utopian achievement ever or the storied franchise’s cheesiest moment.

    With Ponzi and fraud schemes proliferating online across the planet, could Supe make a difference in 2013 in a different arena — one that would not alienate too large a segment of the audience?

    The PP Blog, for one, wouldn’t mind if Superman hurled all the HYIP scams and pretend “revenue-sharing” programs into a boiling sun. He could start with the remaining carcass of GoFunPlaces/GoFunRewards, which is now DOA in the USA, according to BehindMLM.

    Reload scams certainly will follow; Supe could boil them, too. And using his high-speed mind index, he could segment the serial scammers (Lex Luthors) from the general population and deliver them to the judge. They are causing real pain to real people.

    As things stand in the real, nonutopian world, how GFP/GFR members will get back their money is unknown. If there is a potential plus for folks drawn into MLM’s latest debacle, it’s that the enterprise claims it is “Backed By A 100 Million Dollar Plus Debt Free Company.”

    See March 23 PP Blog story on yet another five-alarm fire served up by MLM and some of its purported “leaders.”

     

  • Purported ‘Sovereign Citizen’ Leads Utah Troopers On Freeway Chase And Is Arrested

    In a case reminiscent of the bizzare tale of Jennifer Melisa Herring in North Carolina, a Utah woman and purported “sovereign citizen” has been charged with fleeing police in an automobile.

    Lisa Ann Sovereen, 44, refused to pull over and led the Utah Highway Patrol on a high-speed chase on an Interstate highway, KSL.com reports.

    Sovereen explained that she was “not required to pull over and that police had stolen her previous vehicle and taken her blood,” the station reports.

    Jail records in Salt Lake County list the Sovereen name as an alias used by Lisa Ann Bluth.

    See the police dash-cam video . . .

  • McAfee Site Advisor Issues Phishing Warning On ‘UPrivateBanking,’ Program Targeted At Profitable Sunrise Victims

    A McAfee Site Advisor warning on "YouPrivateBanking" popped up on Facebook last night. Redactions by PP Blog.
    A McAfee Site Advisor warning on “UPrivateBanking” popped up on Facebook last night. Redactions by PP Blog.

    UPDATED 6:12 P.M. EDT (MAY 7, U.S.A.) McAfee Site Advisor has issued a phishing warning for the website domain of “UPrivateBanking,” one of the “programs” targeted on Facebook at victims of the Profitable Sunrise HYIP scheme.

    McAfee is an Internet security service.

    The PP Blog, which uses the McAfee service, observed the warning on a Profitable Sunrise Facebook site late last night. The Blog observed today that, when it typed the URL for the UPrivateBankingSite in the location bar, a Site Advisor warning page appeared in the Blog’s browser window.

    “Whoa! Are you sure you want to go there?” Site Advisor warned. “[Domain Name Deleted by PP Blog] may try to steal your information.”

    “When we visited this site, we found it may be designed to trick you into submitting your financial or personal information to online scammers. This is a serious security threat which could lead to identity theft, financial losses or unauthorized use of your personal information,” Site Advisor warned.

    Various boat-sharks for various scams-in-progress have been targeting Profitable Sunrise victims on Facebook. In April, the SEC said Profitable Sunrise was running an offering fraud from a mail drop in England. Some of the purported “opportunities” pitched by the Facebook boat-sharks promise to pay even more than the absurd 2.7-percent-a-day “Long Haul” plan advertised by Profitable Sunrise.

    UPrivate Banking purports to be “an international financial institution specializing in investment and wealth management.” Details about the “program” are exceptionally murky.

    On Facebook yesterday, UPrivateBanking was pitched as a “business opportunity unprecedented in the history of Network Marketing.” The promo featured a photo of a MasterCard and urged Profitable Sunrise members to watch a YouTube video.

    Read a review of Universal Private Banking (UPrivateBanking) at BehindMLM.

  • Virginia Man Asks For The Return Of More Than $57,000 Wired To Profitable Sunrise In Series Of Transactions

    ponzinews1UPDATED 8:52 P.M. EDT (U.S.A.) A Virginia man has asked for the return of $57,300 wired to Profitable Sunrise in a series of transfers from Bank of America between Jan. 17 and Feb 28. It was unclear from the filing whether the man was a simple investor in Profitable Sunrise, an individual who also was promoting the scheme for commissions or an interested party of a different sort.

    The request was made in the form of a self-filed petition to U.S. District Judge Thomas W. Thrash Jr. in Atlanta. Thrash is overseeing the SEC’s April 4 fraud action against Profitable Sunrise.

    Two of the transfers appeared to have occurred on Feb. 28. Just a day earlier, the state of North Carolina filed a cease-and-desist order against the Profitable Sunrise “program” and purported operators Roman and Radoslav Novak. One of the Feb. 28 transactions was for $18,000 and marked the largest sum among the series of transfers, based on the Virginia’s man’s motion for the court to release the funds.

    The document did not say which of the five Profitable Sunrise “plans” to which the money was directed. Although the SEC obtained an asset freeze after accusing Profitable Sunrise of fraud last month, it is far from clear whether Thrash can order the money returned consistent with the man’s wishes. No receiver has been appointed in the Profitable Sunrise case, and the investigations of the purported “opportunity” by the SEC and other regulators continue.

    One of the five Profitable Sunrise “plans” was known as the “Long Haul,” which had a purported deadline of March 1 for accepting deposits and purported to pay an absurd 2.7 percent daily.

    Based on the man’s filing, it appears as though all of the transfers were directed at entities named relief defendants in the SEC’s action, including Melland Company SRO, Color Shock SRO and Fortuna-K SRO. These Czech entities apparently were receiving money for Profitable Sunrise, which operated through a British entity known as Inter Reef LTD and was conducting an offering fraud through a “mail drop,” according to the SEC’s Profitable Sunrise complaint.

    Like other HYIPs, Profitable Sunrise was flogged online, a situation that potentially puts pitchmen in legal jeopardy. Profitable Sunrise has been accused of selling unregistered securities as investment contracts. The SEC said the Profitable Sunrise referral program operated as a “pyramid scheme” and raised questions about whether the purported Novak brothers actually exist.

    Here are the amounts and dates of the wire transfers, according to the man’s filing:

    • $1,500 on Jan. 17.
    • $6,300 on Feb. 1. (Two transactions; one for $1,800 and another for $4,500.)
    • $9,000 on Feb. 12. (Two transactions; one for $3,000 and another for $6,000.)
    • $8,500 on Feb. 15. (Two transactions; one for $1,000 and another for $7,500.)
    • $10,000 on Feb. 20.
    • $18,000 on Feb. 28.
    • $4,000 on Feb. 28.

    Profitable Sunrise may have gathered tens of millions of dollars, the SEC said last month.

     

  • RECEIVER: AlertPay And SolidTrustPay May Hold Additional Zeek Assets; Forensic Team Is Working ‘To Investigate And Seize These Funds’

    EDITOR’S NOTE: One way to read a report filed yesterday by the court-appointed receiver in the Zeek Rewards Ponzi-scheme case is as a warning manual that brings to life the kind of vexing problems HYIP schemes create for operators, vendors and participants — including “insiders.” Kenneth D. Bell’s report to Senior U.S. District Judge Graham C. Mullen of North Carolina strongly hints that the receivership has identified “key insiders.” Their names have not been published in court filings . . .

    recommendedreading1UPDATED 4 P.M. EDT (U.S.A.) Although early filings last year in the Zeek Rewards Ponzi scheme case suggested that offshore payment processors Alert Pay (Payza) and Solid Trust Pay held more than $40 million connected to Zeek, the court-appointed receiver has advised a federal judge that the two processors may hold even more than originally believed.

    Both AlertPay and SolidTrustPay operate from Canada. Their names appear constantly in Ponzi-board promos for fraud schemes. The companies’ names also have appeared in court filings related to various HYIP schemes, including the alleged $72 million Pathway To Prosperity fraud in 2010 and the $119 million AdSurfDaily fraud in 2008.

    In 2009, while the ASD case was still in the courts, some members of AdSurfDaily received mysterious “final refunds” from SolidTrustPay through an STP-connected email address of oceannamusic@xplornet.com. The purported pro rata refunds led to questions about whether some ASD members were benefiting at the expense of others while the case still was in the U.S. courts and whether ASD actually had money in SolidTrustPay under the name of a different company or a user other than President Andy Bowdoin. (See July 2009 post by PP Blog guest columnist Gregg Evans here.)

    Later, an emerging scam known as JSSTripler/JustBeenPaid purportedly operated by former ASD pitchman Frederick Mann began to use the offshore processors — amid claims from JSS/JPB pitchmen that they not only were recruiting for JSS/JBP, but also managing both the JSS/JBP accounts of their sign-ups and the payment-processor accounts of the sign-ups.

    Because HYIP schemes proliferate in part through the willful blindness of promoters and serial con artists, a situation has evolved over the years in which fraudulent proceeds circulate between and among scams and their individual promoters. “Alan Chapman,” a Zeek pitchman, also was promoting JSS/JPB and a follow-up scam known as “ProfitClicking,” for instance. Serial huckster “Ken Russo” also promoted Zeek and JSS/JBP — and many more schemes, including ASD and Profitable Sunrise, which the SEC described last month as a scam that may have gathered tens of millions of dollars.

    But a new filing by Kenneth D. Bell, the Zeek receiver, suggests that the receivership may seek to foreclose any after-the-fact opportunities for offshore processors to duck their responsibilities to the receivership estate and for holders of the offshore accounts to benefit from Zeek after the SEC brought spectacular allegations of Ponzi- and pyramid fraud against Zeek in August 2012.

    Zeek, the SEC said last year, was a $600 million fraud scheme that used at least 15 foreign and domestic financial institutions.

    A forensic accounting has led Bell to believe that “both Payza and SolidTrustPay may have additional Receivership assets.”

    In a report to Senior U.S. District Judge Graham C. Mullen, Bell said he is working “to investigate and seize these funds.”

    And, Bell advised Mullen, “[t]o the extent these entities allowed affiliates to withdraw funds after receiving notice of the Receivership, the Receiver may seek reimbursement of indemnification for the funds from the payment service providers.”

    If Bell somehow is able to foreclose chicanery involving serial Ponzi pitchmen and the scamming insiders with offshore accounts, it could go a long way toward minimizing the spread of fraud schemes over the Internet.

    Bell’s April 30 filing also reveals that the receivership has recovered $291,000 from a “merchant services account reserve” that had been held by American Express for Rex Venture Group, Zeek’s parent company. At the same time, it reveals that Bell — to date — has recovered $36,000 from Zeek net winners in prelitigation settlements. That number may grow. The deadline to enter into negotiations for a prelitigation settlement is May 31.

    More than anything, though, Bell’s report to the court showcases the enormous problems created by HYIP schemes. Among the problems outlined in the filing:

    Potentially costly and time-consuming litigation disputes for all parties. Zeek operator Paul Burks is claiming privilege on certain matters. Some Zeek “winners” have filed motions that could slow down the refund process for Zeek victims at large.

    Taxes: Zeek appears to have misclassified certain employees as independent contractors, which has tax ramifications.

    Incomplete records. Because of poor records at Zeek, some members who received 1099 tax forms from the receivership received forms that showed earnings either higher or lower than actual earnings. The receivership has prepared amended 1099s for certain Zeek members.

    Possible disputes with vendors. Bell’s report noted that USHBB Inc. asserted it was owed $878,856 by Zeek. USHBB produced video promos for Zeek. In September 2012, the PP Blog reported that Zeek once listed USHBB executive OH Brown as an employee. Meanwhile, USHBB once produced videos for a collapsed MLM scheme known as Narc That Car.)

    Clawback litigation: In the absence of settlements, the receiver potentially could file actions that involve thousands of Zeek affiliates in possession of ill-gotten gains from the scheme.

    Read the receiver’s April 30 filing. (Our thanks to the ASD Updates Blog for providing the filing.)

    Visit the receivership website.

     

     

     

  • UBER-BIZARRE: Man Stabbed Parishioners During Sunday Mass Because He Believed Choir Director Was ‘Part Of A Group Of Freemasons Who Are Involved In A Large-Scale Conspiracy,’ Albuquerque Police Say

    Lawrence Capener: Source: Al Police.
    Lawrence Capener: Source: Albuquerque Police.

    Sunday Mass at St. Jude Thaddeus Catholic Church was the site of multiple attacks by a knife-wielding man who believed the choir director was “part of a group of Freemasons who are involved in a large-scale conspiracy,” the Albuquerque Police Department said.

    Lawrence Capener, 24, was arrested on three counts of aggravated battery with a deadly weapon. Police said he carried out a “brutal attack” on the choir director, identified as 48-year-old Adam Alvarez. At least two other churchgoers were stabbed, including choir member Gerald Madrid, 53, and Greg Aragon, 43.

    Madrid “tried to stop the attack by wrapping his arms around Capener” and was stabbed “five times in the back,” police said.

    “Witnesses say that as the final song of the church service began, Capener leapt from his seat, jumped over the pews and charged Alvarez with a knife,” police said.

    Aragon is an off-duty Albuquerque firefighter who intervened with other parishioners to stop the attack. Also wounded was Michael Tungate, a 37-year-old churchgoer, police said. They added that Capener waved his knife “wildly” during a “massive struggle” involving multiple worshipers to disarm him.

    Police credited off-duty public-safety personnel who were attending the Mass with preventing the already-violent attack from becoming even more bloody. Among the churchgoers who intervened were Charles Metzler Jr., an FBI special agent; Chris Maestas, a Rio Rancho police officer; Gilbert Flores, a sergeant with the Department of Corrections; and Daren DeAguero, an off-duty Albuquerque police officer who managed to get Capener handcuffed with cuffs provided by Maestas.

    “The quick action by the parishioners and numerous off-duty public safety personnel clearly prevented a major tragedy,” Albuquerque Police Chief Ray Schultz said.  “We are grateful for the vigilance and bravery of those who undoubtedly put their lives at risk.”

    From a statement by police (italics added):

    Capener was interviewed by APD Northwest Impact Detectives Sunday evening and told them that he intended to attack Adam Alvarez because he believes Alvarez is part of a group of Freemasons who are involved in a large-scale conspiracy.

    As Capener received medical treatment for the cut on his hand, he told medical staff that the Freemasons have tapped into the radio waves of the church’s microphones to send out their message.  Capener stated that the devil was sending a message through the microphone whenever Alvarez sang or spoke. He said that he had been attending church at St. Jude’s for the past three months and on Sunday he “had enough” and had to take action.

    Capener admitted to vandalizing the Masonic Lodge, 1420 Barbara Loop SE, Rio Rancho, NM.  Capener vandalized the Masonic Lodge within hours prior to the church attack.  Capener still had spray paint on his hands when he was taken into custody.  The Rio Rancho Police Department is investigating the vandalism.

    Separately, the Associated Press reported that Capener told police that he was “99 percent sure Alvarez was a mason” and that he thought Alvarez was involved in a conspiracy.

    “He told the investigator that Masons are a group involved ‘in a conspiracy that is far more reaching than I could or would believe,’” the news agency reported.

  • Now, Boat-Sharking For ‘Biwako Bank Limited’: Promos Appear On Facebook Site For Profitable Sunrise And Claim Enterprise Is ‘Japan’s Strongest Bank’

    In 2010, FINRA warned that scammers may provide a "Typo Tip-Off." An enterprise whose affiliates are targeting victims of the alleged Profitable Sunrise pyramid scheme says it is trying to attract "costumers."
    In 2010, FINRA warned that HYIP scammers may provide a “Typo Tip-Off.”  In 2013, an enterprise whose affiliates are targeting victims of the alleged Profitable Sunrise pyramid scheme says it is trying to attract “costumers.”

    Biwako Bank Limited caught our attention yesterday after a boat-shark appeared on a Facebook Profitable Sunrise site to promote it while making this claim: “**THIS IS NOT AN HYIP , THIS IS A BANK**”

    The claim is at odds with a claim on the MoneyMakerGroup Ponzi forum that Biwako has a “GoldCoders’ HYIP Manager License.”

    Regulators have warned for years that internal inconsistencies are one of the hallmarks of HYIP fraud. In 2010, the Financial Industry Regulatory Authority (FINRA) noted that HYIP scammers also often present a “Typo Tip-Off.”

    “Watch out for online postings, website copy or emails that are riddled with typos and poor grammar,” FINRA said. “This is often a tip-off that scammers are at work.”

    Now, with Profitable Sunrise apparently dead in the water after actions by the SEC and numerous state and provincial regulators in the United States and Canada over the past two months, Biwako is informing prospects in a video playing on its website that the enterprise exists to connect “costumers” to new opportunities. It also claims that compounding is “avaliable.”

    Meanwhile, it publishes an investment calculator and appears to imply an association with CNN and Time magazine.

    And despite a Facebook boat-shark’s claim that Biwako is not an HYIP, the website of the purported “opportunity” lists four color-coded “plans” that purport to provide daily payouts of between 1.95 percent and 3.05 percent.  The highest-paying plan — the “Red Plan” at 3.05 percent a day — advertises a percentage even higher than the purported “Long Haul” plan of Profitable Sunrise.

    The “Long Haul” plan claimed to pay 2.7 percent a day.

    Earlier this month, North Carolina issued a warning about “reload scams” aimed at Profitable Sunrise victims.

    Like Profitable Sunrise, Biwako also is being promoted on the Ponzi boards.

    Also see March 27 PP Blog story about Facebook boat-sharking and March 31 story. (The March 31 story reports that promotions for a “program” known as TelexFree claim participants can purchase an income that varies by the amount they invest. Under one scenario outlined in a video, participants who send in $15,125 purportedly are buying an income of $1,100 a week for a year.)

    The TelexFree pitch was similar to pitches for the infamous World Marketing Direct Selling (WMDS) and OneUniverseOnline (1UOL) pyramid schemes, which were exposed in 2005 and operated by James Bunchan and Seng Tan. Those scams resulted in federal prison sentences for both Bunchan and Tan.

     

  • UPDATE: MPB Today Operator Ordered To Stay Away From MLM As He Awaits Sentencing In Racketeering Case; Separately, MLM ‘Programs’ Get Pounded In The Press

    Gary Calhoun
    Gary Calhoun

    Gary Calhoun, the operator of the MPB Today MLM “program,” has joined AdSurfDaily Ponzi schemer Andy Bowdoin as a member of a dubious club: A Florida judge has ordered Calhoun not to get arrested on new charges and to stay away from MLM while he awaits sentencing in a racketeering case brought by Florida authorities last year.

    Here is a note on the docket of Circuit Judge Jan Shackelford reflecting the ban: “DEFENDANT TO HAVE NO CONTACT OR RECEIVE ANY INCOME FROM ANY MLM.” Calhoun, according to the docket, will be permitted to pursue any “legal means” to support his family.

    Bowdoin was banned from MLM last year while he awaited sentencing in the $119 million ASD Ponzi scheme broken up by the U.S. Secret Service in August 2008. Prosecutors said Bowdoin pushed a scam known as AdViewGlobal (AVG) even after the government seized more than $80 million in ASD-related bank accounts. After the collapse of AVG in 2009, Bowdoin, 78, pushed a pyramid scheme known as OneX, according to court filings. He later was sentenced to 78 months in federal prison.

    Calhoun, 56, will be sentenced July 30, according to the case docket, which notes a plea agreement. He was arrested on the racketeering charge in December 2012 and has been free on bond since then. In July 2012, federal prosecutors in the Northern District of Florida filed a forfeiture complaint for MPB Today’s headquarters building in Pensacola. The affidavit in the forfeiture case was filed under seal. But the forfeiture case, according to prosecution filings, was brought to enforce 18 USC § 1028 and 18 USC § 1029, statutes dealing with access-device fraud and fraud in connection with identification documents.

    MPB Today operated an MLM married to a grocery-delivery business known as Southeastern Delivery. Among the claims was that a one-time purchase of $200 in groceries could lead to free groceries and gasoline for life. Some promoters claimed the U.S. government and Walmart had endorsed MPB Today. Others encouraged prospects to sell $200 worth of Food Stamps to raise the money needed to join the “program.”

    Supporters of the “program” defended it on the PP Blog by calling 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.”

    MPB Today later vanished — but not before a promoter described President Obama as a Nazi and and his family as aspiring to eat dog food. Former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton was depicted as a bawling drunk. First Lady Michelle Obama was depicted as having experienced an embarrassing gas attack in the Oval Office after having sampled “beans” at a Sam’s Club Store.

    From an ad designed to attract prospects for the MPB Today "program."
    From an ad designed to attract prospects for the MPB Today “program.”

    All of it — and more — was designed to attract business to the MLM firm, which apparently has followed ASD into the darkness.

    News of Calhoun’s sentencing date was received during a week in which MLM was experiencing one PR disaster after another. WTOL, a TV station in Toledo, Ohio, carried a report on the alleged Profitable Sunrise HYIP scheme. The SEC said earlier this month that the purported “opportunity” may have gathered tens of millions of dollars and that promoters may not have known for whom they were working.

    Profitable Sunrise was targeted at Christians, according to regulatory actions. Among its absurd offerings was the purported “Long Haul” plan that promised to pay 2.7 percent a day with the payout due April 1 — April Fool’s Day. Promoters called it the “Easter Gift” because Easter occurred on March 31. The payouts, however, never materialized.

    Separately, WFMY of Greensboro, N.C., said it had uncovered evidence that members of the Zeek Rewards “program” were being targeted in a reload scam. In August 2012, the SEC described Zeek as a $600 million Ponzi- and pyramid scheme.

    Meanwhile, the politics and satire site Wonkette ran a piece yesterday titled, “The End Is Near: Time Running Out To Join Amazing Jesus Pyramid Scheme.”

    The story details spam received by Wonkette, apparently from a promoter of a scheme known as “Rocket Ca$h Cycler.”

    The subject line of the pitch, according to Wonkette, was this: “The Wealth Transfer is here!! Florida Pastor & Church break through financially!”

    When MPB Today was operational, it ran a matrix cycler. One particularly bizzare pitch for the “program” in 2010 claimed this: If you “hate Walmart and have written a 603 page manifesto on how Walmart is trying to take over the world and steal your soul,” you should “stop making that pipe bomb and read how you can avoid Walmart and still make bank.”

    Read review of the Rocket Cash Cycler “program” at BehindMLM.

  • FBI: Affinity Fraudster Sued By SEC Launched Follow-Up Scam; Shervin Neman Allegedly Paid Law Firm, Earlier Victims With Money From New Mark — And Then Wrote A Bad Check For $2.35 Million

    ponzinews1Shervin Neman, the alleged affinity fraudster sued by the SEC last year in a Ponzi scheme targeted at the Persian-Jewish community, now has been arrested by the FBI in Los Angeles.

    Neman, 31, also is known as Shervin Davatgarzadeh, the FBI said. The Century City resident was arrested today on a three-count indictment charging him mail fraud and wire fraud, amid allegations he hatched a new fraud scheme after the SEC brought its civil charges in April 2012.

    The SEC described Neman last year as the operator of a “purported hedge fund” that married a real-estate flipping scheme involving purported foreclosures to purported opportunities to profit from IPOs conducted by Facebook, Groupon, LinkedIn and Angie’s List.

    “The month after the SEC filed its lawsuit, Neman solicited $2 million from another victim with false promises that Neman could obtain pre-IPO shares in Facebook, according to the indictment,” the FBI said. “Neman allegedly used the funds obtained from the new victim to pay, among other things, most of his earlier victims and the law firm representing him in the SEC action. Neman then had victims who had been ‘paid back’ write e-mails saying that Neman did not owe them money, according to the indictment, which goes on to say that Neman used these e-mails as part of his defense in the SEC case. In June 2012, Neman sent to the later victim a $2,235,800 check that purported to be the return on the Facebook investment, but that check bounced, according to the indictment.”