UPDATED 5 P.M. ET (U.S.A.) Various members of the Florida-based AdSurfDaily 1-percent-a-day Ponzi scheme advanced various theories that judges, prosecutors and investigators committed various felonies during the course of the probe and follow-up actions in court. The claims were absurd on their face and, when the arguments were rejected, they were replaced by conspiracy theories. Time after time the conspiracy theories expanded to accommodate unpleasant fact sets, with various “defenders” of ASD retreating into an infinite set of contingencies and conflating one artificial reality after another.
Now, a Florida resident and apparent participant in Zeek Rewards has filed a document in federal court that accuses the court-appointed receiver in the Zeek Ponzi scheme case of committing a felony. The receiver, Kenneth D. Bell, is a former federal prosecutor who once successfully prosecuted a Hezbollah terrorist cell operating in the United States.
The PP Blog contacted the Zeek receivership today to seek comment from Bell. The Blog’s message was not immediately returned.
In separate filings that appear on the docket of Senior U.S. District Judge Graham C. Mullen of the Western District of North Carolina, Nathaniel Woods claimed Bell or Bell’s receivership team unlawfully mailed a “bogus subpoena” to him in Ocala, Fla., thus committing a felony under Florida law.
Mullen is presiding over the Zeek Ponzi case. In August, the SEC accused Zeek of operating a $600 million Ponzi- and pyramid scheme. Zeek’s business model was very similar to the model of ASD. ASD’s business practices triggered both civil and criminal investigations by the U.S. Secret Service in 2008.
The subpoena, Woods claims, was meant for the purposes of “intimidation and harassment” on the part of the receiver.
And Woods further claims that sending a “bogus subpoena” from North Carolina to Florida through the U.S. Mail constitutes “simulated process” under Florida law, a “third degree felony.”
An accompanying document filed by Woods as an exhibit claims that “preliminary Zeek Rewards records” reviewed by the the receivership show that Woods received more than $496,000 from Zeek but paid nothing (“$0.00”) into the purported program.
Bell is seeking the return of the money, describing it as “money lost by victims,” according to the exhibit.
Woods is seeking to quash the subpoena, which demands records of Woods’ interactions with Zeek dating back to January 2010. He also claims the subpoena was only an “alleged subpoena” and was improperly served.
A domain styled “500FREEBIDS4U.COM” is registered in the name of Nathaniel Woods at the Ocala street address to which the subpoena was sent, according to records. Other domains listed with an email address that appears on the registration data attributed to Nathanial Woods include Mybidshack10k.com, Mybidshackhow.info, Mybidshack4u.com and Mybidshackearn.info.
Daryle Douglas, a onetime purported Zeek executive, also has been associated with a MyBidShack entity, according to researcher “K. Chang.”
Zeek was a purported “penny auction” company operated by Paul R. Burks through Rex Venture Group LLC in Lexington, N.C. The penny-auction site was known as Zeekler. Zeek’s MLM arm was known as Zeek Rewards. Burks has consented to a judgment in the case. He has neither admitted nor denied the SEC’s allegations, which include securities fraud and the sale of unregistered securities.
On Aug. 17, the U.S. Secret Service said it also was investigating Zeek. The SEC has said Burks duped investors into believing the purported Zeek “program” was paying a legitimate return of about 1.5 percent a day.
Bell has said that perhaps 1 million people sent money to Zeek. Viewed by the number of potential victims and the number of transactions, Zeek may be the largest Ponzi scheme in U.S. history.
Earlier this month, Bell said the receivership had gathered evidence that nearly 1 billion transactions were conducted through Zeek in about 18 months.
AdSurfDaily was a Ponzi scheme that promoted a payout of 1 percent a day. It has about 100,000 members and gathered about $119 million, also in about 18 months, according to records.
Records suggest that Zeek, which launched after the Secret Service brought the ASD Ponzi case, did about five times the dollar volume of ASD and potentially had 20 times the user volume.
The civil portion of the ASD case dragged out for all or parts of five years. ASD President Andy Bowdoin admitted in May 2012 that ASD was a Ponzi scheme. In August 2012, less than two weeks after the SEC brought the Zeek case, Bowdoin was sentenced to 78 months in federal prison.
ASD and Zeek are known to have had members in common.