Tag: ASD

  • EDITORIAL: ENOUGH! Payments For ‘JustBeenPaid’ Purportedly Routed Through Canada From BigBooster.com Email Address Linked To Frederick Mann At Domain That Uses Street Address In South Africa; Pitch Site Features Repurposed Video Of Warren Buffett And Prompt To Register With Gmail Address — Even As YouTube Removes Some Video Pitches; Alert Pay-Enabled Site Once Touted AdSurfDaily

    Screen shot: Neither of these two YouTube videos for JustBeenPaid will load on a site associated with the purported "opportunity" — but a repurposed video featuring billionaire investor Warren Buffett will. It is common in fraud schemes for scammers to trade on the names of celebrities and to suggest a famous person endorses a "program."

    There are the deliberate shills for JustBeenPaid — serial Ponzi board hucksters such as “10BucksUp,” for example.

    And there are the unwitting shills whose celebrity is stolen without their knowledge to sanitize the over-the-top fraud that promotes absurd returns — people such as famed investor Warren Buffett. Buffett’s only tie to JustBeenPaid is that he lives and breathes on the same planet occupied by the collective of international scammers behind the purported “opportunity.”

    A YouTube video in which Buffett is giving a speech to a group of Florida MBA students is shoehorned into a JustBeenPaid promo at BigBooster.com. As Buffett arrives at the podium, he makes sure the microphone is working.

    “Testing,” he quips. “One million, two million, three million.”

    The audience appreciates the line.

    Buffett’s repurposed appearance sandwiched into the JustBeenPaid promo at BigBooster.com is one filled with irony that is the very definition of bizarre. As this post is being written, it is the only video on the page that works. Two in-house videos for JustBeenPaid do not work and carry these messages:

    • “This video is no longer available because the YouTube account associated with this video has been terminated.”
    • “This video has been removed because its content violated YouTube’s Terms of Service.”
    This YouTube video of famed investor Warren Buffett is playing in a promo for JustBeenPaid on a website known as BigBooster.com.

    But the repurposed video of Buffett is every bit as dangerous as it is bizarre: It is being used to help the JustBeenPaid Ponzi scheme proliferate globally. And the people behind JustBeenPaid once promoted AdSurfDaily before the U.S. Secret Service exposed the ASD Ponzi scheme in August 2008. (See graphic near bottom of story.)

    To its credit, YouTube has been removing JustBeenPaid videos at least for several days. But even as YouTube does the right thing by taking the videos offline in the age of epidemic white-collar crime and global money-laundering and Ponzi theft, the video of Buffett still plays on the BigBooster site. The likely reason is that there is no easy way for YouTube to associate Buffett’s 13-year-old speech at the University of Florida to a relatively recent BigBooster.com ad for JustBeenPaid, a “program” of recent vintage.

    Research by the PP Blog suggests Buffett delivered the speech on Oct. 15, 1998 — when Saddam Hussein still was presiding over Iraq and George W. Bush still was governor of Texas before being elected President of the United States more than two years later. A decade passed — as did the 9/11 terrorist attacks, Bush’s eight-year occupancy of the White House and the fall of Saddam Hussein — before the people behind JustBeenPaid apparently had the brainstorm of shoehorning the Buffett video into the BigBooster promo to help them sell a scam.

    YouTube’s removal of the JustBeenPaid videos poses only a minor hurdle, according to an email attributed to JustBeenPaid honcho Frederick Mann, who’s also the apparent braintrust behind BigBooster.com and a former ASD member.

    “We’ve started moving our videos to our own server,” the JustBeenPaid email attributed to Mann read in part.

    BigBooster.com appears to be hosted in South Africa; JustBeenPaid.com appears to be hosted in the United States. Both domains use a street addresses in South Africa that lists Mann as the administrative contact.

    Here is some of the advice attributed to Mann in the BigBooster.com promo associated with JustBeenPaid and related “programs.” (Italics added.)

    • Get in early.
    • Get in with “significant” money
    • If the program performs well, do some early compounding.
    • Sponsor as many people as possible to earn referral fees.
    • Withdraw your original risk capital as soon as appropriate to get into a “can’t-lose” position.
    • Parlay, compound, or let run some of your profits.
    • Think in terms of maximizing the money you “take off the table.”

    Much of the power of this formula is that it enables you to make money with programs that fail after a few months, but if a reasonably good program lasts 6 months or longer, you could earn tens of thousands.

    The message could not be more at odds with the principles for which Buffett stands, and yet Mann and JustBeenPaid incongruously sandwich him into the promo after previously leading ASD recruits to disaster.

    And even as JustBeenPaid tells members it is saying goodbye to Google’s YouTube, is is encouraging members to register for the “program” by using a Google Gmail addresses.

    “Gmail E-mail addresses work well with JustBeenPaid! – and they are free!” the firm informs prospects on its sign-up page.

    But it gets stranger yet: Payouts from JustBeenPaid come from an email address assigned to “michael” on the BigBooster.com domain, according to “I got paid” posts by shills on the Ponzi forums such as MoneyMakerGroup.

    Not “JustBeenPaid” or “Frederick” — but “michael.”

    And the cheerleaders and shills cheer on, even as a condition has developed in which the program is trying to rescue itself from collapse, offshore servers apparently are being brought into play — and the money is being routed from AlertPay in Canada to a murky business with footprints in both the United States and South Africa and the “opportunity” just happens to be trading on the name of Warren Buffett after previously pushing traffic to ASD.

    This is happening through a process by which a 13-year-old speech by the billionaire has been repurposed and made to load on the BigBooster site via YouTube — even as JustBeenBeen can’t get its own YouTube videos to load and even as it apparently is saying goodbye to YouTube while encouraging people to use Google Gmail addresses to sign up so they purportedly can get paid by “michael” at BigBooster.com for JustBeenPaid.

    Like JustBeenPaid, ASD had a tie to AlertPay. And ASD and a spinoff surf known as AdViewGlobal also used Gmail addresses and relied on videos to spread the scheme.

    On May 14, 2008, according to research by the PP Blog, ASD was touted on BigBooster.com as a “cash cow.” Less than three months later, the U.S. Secret Service alleged that ASD was an international Ponzi scheme that had sucked in tens of millions of dollars, routed money through Canada and was contemplating ways to get offshore.

    “I (Frederick Mann) have been with ASD since January 07,” remarks attributed to Mann on the BigBooster site read. “Past performance indicates a strong probablility (sic) that ASD will continue to perform as advertised. (By early May 2008, I had received 14 payments totalling over $6,000!”)

    On May 14, 2008, BigBooster.com was touting AdSurfDaily.

     

    Screen shot: Even as JustBeenPaid concedes YouTube is removing its videos, the "opportunity" is encouraging prospects to register by using a free Gmail addresss. Google owns both YouTube and Gmail. Payments for JustBeenPaid are being routed through Canada-based AlertPay by a person apparently known as "michael" of BigBooster.com. Both BigBooster.com and JustBeenPaid.com use street addresses in South Africa, and the linked companies appear also to have a presence in the United States. (Red rectangle around Gmail's name and red block of sponsor's name added by PP Blog.)

     

  • SPECIAL REPORT: SMOKING GUN? MoneyMakerGroup Ponzi Forum Post Made During Same Month Grand Jury That Indicted AdSurfDaily’s Andy Bowdoin Convened May Tie AdViewGlobal To International Penny-Stock Scheme And Collapsed Payment Processor In Arizona

    Combined with corporation records and documents such as news releases, this post on the MoneyMakerGroup Ponzi forum raises questions about whether AdViewGlobal, an autosurf with close ties to AdSurfDaily, was part of an elaborate penny-stock scheme and money-laundering conduit that consumed the EWalletPlus payment processor and left AVG members holding the bag.

    EDITOR’S NOTE: Longtime readers of the PP Blog will recall that the purported AdSurfDaily (ASD) spinoff known as AdViewGlobal (AVG) and some of its members engaged in particularly bizarre behavior in May 2009. The absurdities included announcing (and then unannouncing) a puported deal with a new offshore wire facilitator, announcing (and then unannouncing) a new website with purported new services and claiming the upstart company was healthy enough not only to pay out 250 percent matching bonuses to members and 200 percent matching bonuses to recruiters, but also to pay out multilevel downline commissions and purported surfing income of up to 8 percent a day.

    Just two months earlier — in March 2009 — AVG suddenly announced its account at an unspecified bank had been suspended and that its chief executive officer  had resigned. The firm bizarrely added that CEO Gary Talbert would not leave the company altogether. Rather, Talbert would remain in the accounting department.

    Just a month earlier, Talbert, also a former ASD executive, had been introduced in an AVG conference call by Terralynn Hoy, an ASD member and moderator of the pro-ASD Surf’s Up forum and an emerging forum for the AVG autosurf. The introduction occurred in February 2009 after weeks of assertions by AVG that there were no ties between itself and ASD. The introduction was preceded by a bizarre announcement in late January of 2009 by AVG that the appearance of its graphics on an ASD-controlled webroom was an “operational coincidence.” The person making that announcement on AVG’s behalf was Chuck Osmin, a former ASD employee.

    AVG’s websites ultimately disappeared. Members claimed AVG was owned by George and Judy Harris, and at least one of the AVG websites identified  George Harris as an AVG trustee. George Harris, described in court filings as the head of ASD’s purported real-estate division, is the stepson of Andy Bowdoin and the son of Bowdoin’s wife, Edna Faye Bowdoin.

    It later proved to be the case that May 2009 — the same month in which AVG was reimagining itself as one of the world’s leading advertising and communications firms while at once announcing and unannouncing key bits of purported news — was the same month the grand jury that indicted ASD President Andy Bowdoin had convened.

    The PP Blog is reporting today that records strongly suggest AVG was a cog in a larger fraud  — one that somehow married the AVG autosurf to a penny-stock scheme with a purported arm in the “oil” businesses and a branch that owned an Arizona payment processor known as EWalletPlus that later collapsed.

    Here, now, our Special Report . . .

    Is stock manipulation in multiple venues part of the bigger picture of the AdSurfDaily Ponzi scheme? Out of the clear blue sky in the fall of 2008  — as ASD awaited a critical court ruling in the Ponzi forfeiture case against the assets of President Andy Bowdoin — ASD claimed it expected a $200 million revenue infusion from Praebius Communications, a penny-stock firm that did not disclose audited sales figures.

    But the Praebius announcement, which ASD later withdrew without explaining why, may not be the firm’s only tie to a penny-stock company.

    A May 2009 post on the MoneyMakerGroup Ponzi forum is adding to lingering questions about whether AdViewGlobal — an autosurf with close ties to ASD — was part of an elaborate penny-stock scheme and money-laundering conduit  involving multiple companies, domestic and offshore venues and individuals with ties to ASD.

    On May 5, 2009, a MoneyMakerGroup poster who used the handle of “IMCanadian” claimed he (or she) had received autosurfing payouts totaling $1,300 from AdViewGlobal (AVG) on unspecified dates. The payments, according to the post, were routed through SolidTrustPay (STP), a Canadian payment processor.

    The MoneyMakerGroup post potentially provides a glimpse into how fraudulent securities businesses may layer themselves to confuse both investors and authorities. The post cites two different email addresses as the sources of STP payments from the AVG scheme.  Although the email addresses purportedly were used by AVG to cause STP to issue AVG autosurf payouts, neither of the addresses used  a domain name owned by AVG. Instead, they used Yahoo and Gmail addresses.

    AVG, according to records, could have chosen to use email addresses that corresponded to its own domain names. The firm owned at least two namesake domains before it suspended member cashouts in June 2009: ADVGlobal.com and AdViewGlobal.com.

    But relying on free email providers such as Yahoo and Google was not the sole oddity associated with AVG, a firm an early promoter predicted would become a “1 Billion Dollar Company [before the] end of 2009.”

    “Most if not all of your leaders are joining,” the promoter flatly counseled on a forum known as FreeLunchRoom on Dec. 23, 2008, two days before Christmas.

    The MoneyMakerGroup posts that followed cited not only the Yahoo and Gmail payout addresses, but also two different STP usernames from which AVG payouts to “IMCanadian” purportedly originated. Absent in both usernames was any reference to AVG itself.

    Like AVG, ASD also used STP, according to records. In August 2008, the U.S. Secret Service alleged that ASD had wired “several million dollars” to STP just prior to the seizure of tens of millions of dollars from the personal bank accounts of ASD President Andy Bowdoin.

    A payment of $200 for AdViewGlobal earnings was received through STP from an STP user who used the acronym “avg” as part of a yahoo.com email address, but did not use an AVG domain, according to the MoneyMakerGroup post. The STP username linked to the AVG payout was “karveck,” not AdViewGlobal or AVG, according to the post.

    An AVG payment for $1,100, meanwhile, had come from an STP member who used the words “tmscorp” and “usa” — along with the abbreviation “llc” as part of a Gmail address, according to the post. The STP username for the payout was “tmscorp,” not AdViewGlobal or AVG, according to the post.

    Ten days after the claims appeared on MoneyMakerGroup, the grand jury that indicted ASD President Andy Bowdoin in the District of Columbia was sworn in, according to records. The swearing in occurred just 11 days after the Obama administration announced a crackdown on offshore fraud schemes. On the same day Obama himself spoke about the crackdown — May 4, 2009 — AVG announced it had secured a new offshore wire facilitator in the aftermath of the purported suspension of AVG’s bank account in March 2009. Research by the PP Blog suggests that AVG sought to route money to itself by using a Florida shell company that had sought the services of an offshore firm later banned by the National Futures Association.

    The seal on the Bowdoin indictment was lifted on Nov. 23, 2010, during a period in which some ASD members were discouraging others from filing remissions claims in the ASD forfeiture case brought by federal prosecutors and the U.S. Secret Service in August 2008.

    Bowdoin was arrested in Florida on Dec. 1, 2010. He faces an upcoming trial on allegations of wire fraud, securities fraud and selling unregistered securities for his operation of ASD. AVG’s name does not appear in the indictment.

    The Operative Word: ‘Murky’

    Much remains murky about the degree of connectivity among ASD, AVG, STP, Karveck, TMS Corp and EWalletPlus. It is known that ASD and AVG had members and promoters in common. Both firms used STP to process payments, but it remains far from clear how many STP accounts the companies and their executives or insiders controlled and how much money generated in the ASD scheme remained in offshore accounts that later could be tapped to channel money to AVG.

    ASD and AVG are known to have turned to members and moderators  of the now-defunct Surf’s Up forum to sanitize the respective schemes.  The surf firms, according to AVG, also shared at least two of the same employees: Chuck Osmin and Gary Talbert.

    Some ASD members have claimed Bowdoin was a silent partner in AVG and fronted the money to acquire EWalletPlus, AVG’s purported in-house payment processor. If the assertion that Bowdoin provided money to buy EWalletPlus is true, it may mean that the deal was heavily layered to shield Bowdoin from being identified as the funding source and that AVG had more than one silent partner.

    Karveck and TMS Corp used multiple versions of their names, a potential indicator of money-laundering — i.e., a bid to dupe banks into warehousing fraud-scheme proceeds. Karveck, for example, has been referred to as just plain Karveck, but also Karveck International. Records show that at least three versions of the TMS Corp. name exist: TMS Corp., TMS Association and TMS Corp. USA LLC.

    TMS Corp. USA LLC is listed in Nevada and Arizona records as using ASD’s address in Quincy, Fla. Its manager is listed as Talbert, the former executive at both ASD and AVG.

    Each of the TMS firms appears to have a tie to EWalletPlus, which once shared the same server in Panama with AVG. Despite serving pages from Panama, AVG purported to be based in Uruguay and to enjoy U.S. Constitutional protections even though it was operating offshore. Making the situation even murkier is that a penny-stock company known as Vana Blue Inc.  claimed in 2008 to own TMS Corp., the parent company of the EWalletPlus web portal, and to have have acquired Karveck International in February 2009.

    The claims came in the form of news releases — and news releases are common tools in penny-stock frauds.

    AVG formally launched in February 2009, a year after VanaBlue claimed ownership in a news release of TMS Corp. and EWalletPlus and months after the seizure of Bowdoin’s assets in August 2008. Prior to the seizure, Bowdoin ventured to Costa Rica and Panama, according to court filings by the Secret Service.

    The purpose of the Bowdoin trip, according to the Secret Service, was to to incorporate ASD Cash Generator — a replacement autosurf for a Bowdoin surf that had collapsed in 2007 —  and an entity known known as La Sorta Trading outside of U.S. jurisdiction. The agency made the claim on Feb. 26, 2009, less than a month after the formal launch of AVG and during the same period in which AVG reportedly had met with a convicted securities felon and announced the formation of a purported offshore “private association.”

    Also in February 2009, Vana Blue declared Karveck International  a “newly acquired asset” that had produced $1.8 million in revenue in January 2009. Karveck was described as a company that “specializes in internet advertising and promotion in a search engine and ad clicking type environment.”

    Mysteriously, however, VanaBlue disowned Karveck International just six months later — in August 2009. What Vana Blue initially had described in February as a completed acquisition of Karveck International was redescribed in August as deal that had fallen through as a result of “further due diligence.”

    “Vana Blue was unable to complete this transaction but is in the final stages of negotiation with an oil company to continue its plans of acquisitions,” Vana Blue claimed on Aug. 17, 2009.

    During the month of August 2009, ASD’s Bowdoin announced in court filings that he was “negotiating” with federal prosecutors. The August 2009 negotiations, which collapsed by mid-September of the same year, marked at least the second time that Bowdoin or his legal team claimed that the ASD patriarch was seeking to find a way to settle the ASD forfeiture case.

    Bowdoin’s negotiations pleading appeared on the docket of U.S. District Judge Rosemary Collyer on Aug. 4, 2009. Thirteen days later — on Aug. 17, 2009 — Vana Blue announced on Business Wire that its acquisition of Karveck International — a deal it described in February 2009 as completed — had fallen through.

    Vana Blue claimed in the same announcement it was proceeding on a deal for an oil company despite its sudden loss of Karveck International.

    Just days before Bowdoin’s Aug. 4, 2009, confirmation that he again was negotiating with prosecutors, Vana Blue’s website suddenly went missing.

    Earlier this year, a source told the PP Blog that she provided $5,000 to her sponsor — and that the sponsor converted her money to cashier’s checks made payable to TMS Association, one of the “TMS” companies records suggest was tied to both AVG and EWalletPlus. The woman told the Blog that she believed she was a victim of the ASD scheme.

    On Dec. 21 2010, just 20 days after Bowdoin was indicted, an email that appeared to have originated with an AVG member began to circulate among ASD members.

    The email accused members of ASD who were participating in the remissions program established by the Justice Department and the Secret Service of signing their “morals and soul away” and supporting “innocent peoples lives being destroyed.”

    In a possible bid to intimidate ASD members, the email further claimed that an unspecified “back lash” would occur against any ASD member who participated in the claims program.

    Last month ASD members who filed approved claims forms received back 100 percent of the money they had directed at ASD. The remissions payments were funded by money seized by the Secret Service in the ASD Ponzi case.

    Although its is believed the government also has opened a probe into the affairs of AVG, prosecutors have made only veiled references to AVG in court filings in the ASD case.

     

  • BULLETIN: Florida Man, 71, Booked Into Alabama Jail On Theft Charges; James Leonard Craft Is Subject Of Probe By Alabama Securities Commission Into Purported ‘South American’ Railroad Cross Ties; Some Strange Parallels To ASD Case Emerge

    James Leonard Craft booking photo: Source: Etowah County Sheriff's Office.

    BULLETIN: The cavalcade of senior citizens implicated in alleged securities schemes continues. James Leonard Craft has been taken from a jail cell in Florida and placed in one in Alabama to answer felony charges that he was at the helm of a securities swindle.

    Craft, 71, of Milton, Fla., originally was arrested in Florida Sept. 23 on an out-of-state fugitive warrant. He was held at a Santa Rosa County detention facility until yesterday, when he was transported to Etowah County Jail in Alabama to face charges. Bond was set at $30,000, according to records.

    In October 2010, the Alabama Securities Commission (ASC) named Craft in a cease-and-desist order. The agency alleged that Craft, beginning in 2008, was selling unregistered securities for a purported lumber business that produced or sold railroad ties.

    The securities were offered through LLCs known as Universal Wood Products LLC, Century Lumber and Land LLC and Milton Timber LLC, according to the ASC order.

    An Alabama resident told investigators he was introduced to the opportunity by a “business associate and missionary residing in Tennessee,” according to ASC records. Whether ASC suspects affinity fraud was not immediately clear.

    NorthEscambia.com is reporting that Craft was part of an October 2010 ribbon-cutting ceremony for an upstart business that the struggling Florida small town of Century expected would create 500 jobs. Those jobs never materialized, the site reported. More than 3,000 applications for employment were received.

    ASC records claim that at least two Alabama residents were told that the purported lumber firms could make money because Craft and a business partner bought railroad ties in “South America” and sold them to U.S. railroad companies “suffering from a shortage of the lumber product.”

    Alabama investors directed at least $180,000 to a promissory-notes scheme involving Craft, according to ASC.

    Precisely how the Craft case had morphed into a criminal prosecution was not immediately clear today. Etowah County Jail records show that Craft is being held for another “agency,” but the name of the agency was not listed.

    In Alabama, county-level prosecutors and ASC work together on securities cases.

    The emerging Craft case has bizarre coincidences and parallels to the AdSurfDaily case. ASD was operated by Andy Bowdoin, a senior citizen in the small Florida town of Quincy, which is situated in Gadsden County. Craft, himself a senior citizen, also operated from a small town in Florida. By coincidence, the jail in which he’s currently lodged is in Gadsden, Ala.

    Andy and Faye Bowdoin at a July 2008 Chamber of Commerce photo op. The small town of Quincy was pleased that ASD had created jobs, but the ASD story took a sour turn when the U.S. Secret Service accused Andy Bowdoin of operating an international Ponzi swindle a month after this photo was taken. Some ASD employees were getting paid in "ad packs," according to court records.

    In the case of ASD, the Gadsden County Chamber of Commerce announced in 2008 it was pleased that ASD had made its home in Quincy and was creating jobs. The Century Area Chamber of Commerce appears to have felt the same way about the Craft-related  firms. The NorthEscambia.com story linked to above shows a Chamber banner at the Craft ribbon-cutting ceremony. Craft appears in the photo alongside people who appear to be genuinely pleased and proud that a jobs-creator had come to the small town.

    Like Craft, ASD’s Andy Bowdoin was implicated in an Alabama securities swindle. Bowdoin’s Alabama caper occurred in the 1990s, according to records.

     

     

  • UPDATE: ASD Figure Kenneth Wayne Leaming’s Firm Listed As Registered Agent For At Least 73 Firms, Including Companies That Use The Words ‘Homeland Security,’ ‘Federal Asset’ And ‘JP Morgan’

    Kenneth Wayne Leaming, also known as "Kenneth Wayne" and "Keny."

    UPDATED 12:52 P.M. EDT (OCT. 9 U.S.A.) A week ago, some AdSurfDaily members received an email that encouraged them to “name” federal prosecutors, a federal judge and a U.S. Secret Service agent as “thieves” and to file documents at the “county” level identifying the public officials as such.

    The email led to questions about whether a new campaign to harass officials involved in the ASD Ponzi scheme case was under way.

    Quotations from the email were attributed to “Keny,” the nickname of ASD figure Kenneth Wayne Leaming. (Leaming also is known as “Kenneth Wayne.”) The PP Blog reported Sunday that Leaming — in 2009 — filed involuntary bankruptcy petitions against the Washington State Bar Association and a Franciscan hospital in the state. A judge dismissed both petitions, and enjoined Leaming from filing such documents. A judgment of $2,750 was entered against Leaming in the case in which he claimed the bar association owed him more than $32 billion.

    Leaming has been repeatedly sanctioned in Washington state for filing vexatious liens and court documents, according to records.

    Today the PP Blog is reporting that Leaming’s company — American-International Business Law Inc. — is listed in Washington state records as the registered agent of at least 73 companies. The names of several of the firms use words typically associated with government and banking.

    Examples of these include:

    An inactive corporation known as “Homeland Security Service” whose “trustee” is listed as “Task Force, Civil Rights.” The Anti-Defamation League lists Leaming as a member of the Civil Rights Task Force, a sovereign-citizen group.  After the 9/11 terrorist attacks a decade ago, the U.S. government established the Department of Homeland Security, a cabinet-level agency. The precise type of business in which “Homeland Security Service” engaged is unclear.

    Federal Asset Management Service. This active firm lists Leaming and ASD figure Christian Oesch as trustees, with American-International Business Law Inc. as the registered agent. Oesch was an unsuccesful pro se litigant in the ASD forfeiture case and joined with Leaming in an unsuccessful  bid to sue the United States, apparently for the staggering sum of $29 trillion. The U.S. Court of Federal Claims tossed the lawsuit in December.

    Federal Fleet Management. This inactive corporation appears to be tied to the Civil Rights Task Force and lists American-International Business Law Inc. as its registered agent. The business purpose of Federal Fleet Management was not immediately clear in electronic records.

    Presidential Detail. This active corporation lists Leaming as one of the trustees, along with the Civil Rights Task Force and others. American-International Business Law Inc. is the registered agent. The business purpose of Presidential Detail was not immediately clear in electronic records.

    JP Morgan Holdings. This active corporation, which uses a form of the famous J.P. Morgan brand, lists Leaming and the Civil Rights Task Force among its trustees. American-International Business Law Inc. is the registered agent. The purpose of the firm was not immediately clear.

    JP Morgan. This inactive corporation also uses a form of the famous J.P. Morgan name. Leaming is listed as a trustee, and American-International Business Law Inc. is listed as the registered agent.

    American-International Business Law Inc. appears to be listed as the registered agent for at least 73 firms in Washington state. Another such firm — now inactive — was called “Apprentice Millionaires.” It listed Leaming and the Civil Rights Task Force as trustees.

    There also is a company called “Center For Business and Estate Planning,” with Leaming as the sole trustee and his firm as the registered agent.

    There are dozens of other firms with a Leaming tie, according to records.

    At least two notaries public with ties to Leaming and the ASD case have had their licenses revoked, according to records. In the email some ASD members received last week, they were advised to send a “notary certified copy” of county-level “thieves” claims against public officials to the home address of John G. Roberts Jr., the Chief Justice of the United States.

     

     

  • DURANGO HERALD: Attorney Says His Client Was Ponzi Player Who Tried To ‘Scam The Scammers’; E-Bullion’s Name Surfaces In Illustrative Case Of Frederick H.K. Baker, Who Is Sentenced To Federal Prison

    In July 2010, FINRA memorably described the HYIP sphere as a “bizarre substratum of the Internet.” The regulator warned about “online payment systems” that are used for criminal activity, noting that some fraud purveyors discuss subjects such as how to “build a winning HYIP portfolio” and how “to ‘ride the Ponzi’ and get in and out before a scheme collapses.”

    A case brought by federal prosecutors in Colorado against a Utah man could be an eye-opener for fraudsters and their apologists and shills who engage in bizarre and reckless behavior such as that outlined by FINRA and help fraud schemes proliferate to consume millions of dollars.

    Indeed, the Durango (Colorado) Herald is reporting that Frederick H.K. Baker will be going to federal prison for 41 months (see link at bottom of post). Although FINRA’s 2010 Public Awareness Campaign is not referenced in the story, Baker’s case speaks to a number of the issues FINRA raised more than a year ago.

    Compellingly, even Baker’s attorney conceded that his client thought he could “scam the scammers” by knowingly becoming a Ponzi player and adopting a strategy by which he’d get in early, collect his profits — and then get out, according to the Herald.

    “Baker thought he could make money if he got in early,” the Herald reported. “In effect, he was running a Ponzi scheme to invest in other Ponzi schemes . . .”

    The Herald’s story quotes a federal prosecutor who told a federal judge that Baker’s scheme destroyed families and caused financial and emotional heartache for the victims.

    And it also notes that E-Bullion, the shuttered California payment processor whose operator, James Fayed, was convicted in May of arranging the July 2008 gruesome murder of his wife, was used in the Baker scheme.

    E-Bullion also has been referenced in the AdSurfDaily Ponzi case, the Legisi Ponzi case, the Gold Quest International Ponzi case, the FEDI case and other cases. The most recent reference to E-Bullion in the Legisi case, according to research by the PP Blog, occurred on Sept. 22, 2011 — less than three weeks ago.

    An attorney for two individuals claimed in court filings that his clients had used E-Bullion when investing with Legisi and were out $92,094.11. The attorney noted that their claims to a share of proceeds from the receivership estate have been rejected. Other filings list the reason for the rejection as inadequate documentation of the investment. The operators of fraud schemes such as Legisi are infamous for keeping poor records and not entering information in books, a sad reality that can lead to a result of victims of fraud schemes not receiving compensation from restitution pools.

    Read the Baker story in the Durango Herald. The story is compelling because it points out that Ponzi players have more to lose than just money. Baker, according to the story, is now facing some harsh realities and coming to grips with what his descent into the Ponzi darkness truly has cost him and his family.

     

  • UPDATE: Federal Prosecutors Have ‘No Comment’ On ASD-Related Email That Encouraged Members To Identify Public Officials As ‘Thieves’ And Send ‘Certified’ Copy Of Theft Claims To Home Of U.S. Chief Justice

    ASD President Andy Bowdoin

    UPDATED TO ADD COMMENT FROM U.S. MARSHALS SERVICE AT 3:21 P.M. EDT (U.S.A.) Federal prosecutors in the District of Columbia this morning declined to comment on an email received Saturday by some AdSurfDaily members that encouraged them to file documents at the “county” level and “name” federal officials as “thieves.”

    Prosecutors also declined to comment on whether the government had beefed up security for judges and prosecutors in response to strange developments in the ASD case. On Saturday, some ASD members received an email that encouraged them to send a “notary certified copy” of theft claims they file in their home counties against federal officials to the home address of U.S. Chief Justice John Roberts.

    “No comment,” the office of U.S. Attorney Ronald C. Machen Jr. said.

    The U.S. Marshals Service, which provides security for the U.S. court system, said this afternoon that “it is the policy of the U.S. Marshals Service not to comment on or confirm ongoing judicial threat investigations.”

    The PP Blog reported yesterday that ASD figure Kenneth Wayne Leaming, a reputed “sovereign citizen” who sometimes goes by the names of “Kenneth Wayne” and “Keny,” filed involuntary bankruptcy petitions in 2009 against the Washington State Bar Association and a Franciscan hospital in Washington state.

    Leaming’s combined claims totaled more than $41 billion. He was permanently enjoined “forever from filing a bankruptcy petition or any other pleadings before this court without the advance leave from one of the bankruptcy judges of this court,” according to federal records.

    “Keny” has been cited by ASD members as the author of a November 2010 “legal opinion” and as the author of Saturday’s email that provided guidance to ASD members. The ASD case had been marked by strange events since the U.S. Secret Service seized tens of millions of dollars in a Ponzi scheme probe in August 2008.

    In November 2010, Cornell University Law School, Justia.com and Oyez.org removed the online profiles of Leaming after questions were raised about whether he was a licensed attorney.

    In the profiles, Leaming had been listed as an attorney who advertised a fee structure of up to $250 an hour from Spanaway, Wash.

    Leaming was the subject of a letter sent in 2005 by the Practice of Law Board of the State of Washington. The Law Board made a determination in December 2005 that Leaming’s conduct in cases it was investigating “constitutes the unauthorized practice of law.”

    In one case, the Law Board said, a notary public accused Leaming of coercing her into “notarizing documents that resulted in the loss of her notary license.”

    Leaming became a figure in the ASD case in 2010 after he was denied leave to file documents in the civil portion of the ASD case and later joined with ASD figure Christian Oesch, an unsuccessful pro se litigant in the case, to sue the United States — apparently for the staggering sume of more than $29 trillion.

    Civil judgments against money and property seized by the Secret Service in the ASD case were entered in the government’s favor in 2009 and 2010, and the prosecutors returned $55 million to about 8,400 ASD members last week through a process known as remission.

    There were repeated efforts by some ASD members to discourage others for filing for remissions.

    Bowdoin claimed last week — prior to Saturday’s email attributed to “Keny” — that the government “forced [ASD] members to sign the untrue statement to get a refund of their monies.”

    Bowdoin’s email followed on the heels of an email by an ASD member named “Sara” that claimed to provide “insider information” that a government plot was under way.

    Since at least July, Bowdoin has been soliciting ASD members to pay for his criminal defense on charges of wire fraud, securities fraud and selling unregistered securities.

     

  • SPECIAL REPORT: Email Encourages AdSurfDaily Members To Identify Federal Prosecutors, Federal Judge And Secret Service Agent As ‘DOJ Thieves’ In County-Level Filings — And To Send ‘Certified Copy’ Of Claims To Home Address Of Chief Justice Of The United States

    AdSurfDaily figure Kenneth Wayne Leaming, also known as "Kenneth Wayne" and "Keny."

    EDITOR’S NOTE: A week after the U.S. Department of Justice, the U.S. Secret Service and federal prosecutors in the District of Columbia put $55 million from civil judgments back in the pockets of AdSurfDaily members as the criminal prosecution of ASD President Andy Bowdoin continues, a new effort by some ASD members to undermine the credibility of public officials by describing them as thieves who are encouraging ASD members to lie appears to be under way. Whether the government is taking extra security precautions in the ASD case is not known. The U.S. Marshals Service and the office of U.S. Attorney Ronald C. Machen Jr. in the District of Columbia did not respond immediately to the PP Blog’s requests for comment on this story. The Blog was unable today to contact the Public Information Office of the Supreme Court for comment.

    UPDATED 8:10 A.M. EDT (OCT. 3, U.S.A.) Is a purported “sovereign citizen” whom records show filed an involuntary bankruptcy petition against the Washington State Bar Association in 2009 that claimed he was owed an outstanding debt of more than $32 billion now leading an effort to destroy the reputations of public officials involved in the AdSurfDaily Ponzi case?

    On Saturday, two ASD members confirmed to the PP Blog that they had received copies of an email that encouraged them to identify federal prosecutors and a federal judge in the District of Columbia — as well as a U.S. Secret Service agent — as “DOJ thieves.”

    The email accused prosecutors of running a “scam” against Florida-based ASD and encouraged ASD members to file an “affidavit” with their “county recorder” that would name the prosecutors, the judge and the Secret Service agent as criminals. It further encouraged members to send a “notary certified copy” of their claims to the home address of John G. Roberts Jr., the Chief Justice of the United States.

    Why members were encouraged to send documents to Roberts at his home address was unclear. Roberts, 56, is the nation’s highest ranking judicial officer and is chief judge of the U.S. Supreme Court.

    In the email, ASD members were further encouraged to send certified copies of their “DOJ thieves” claims to U.S. Attorney General Eric Holder and the “RUST Group.” Rust Consulting Inc. is the government-approved remissions administrator in the ASD Ponzi case. Federal prosecutors last week released $55 million seized by the Secret Service, and Rust deposited the money into the bank accounts of about 8,400 ASD members who filed approved remissions claims in the case.

    ASD members who participated in the remissions program would be “coerced” into lying by prosecutors to put Bowdoin in prison, according to the email.

    If they did not “TESTILIE” — a new phrase that marries the words “testify” and “lie” and apparently means misrepresent their testimony at prosecutors’ requests — they will “be put into prison for false claims and fraud,” according to the email.

    “MARK MY WORDS,” the email emphasized in all-caps. The word “TESTILIE” also was capitalized in the email, quotes from which were attributed to ASD figure “Keny.”

    “Keny” is the nickname of ASD figure Kenneth Wayne Leaming. Leaming has been identified by the Anti-Defamation League as a so-called “sovereign citizen.”

    Records in Washington state identify Leaming as one of two persons who filed an involuntary bankruptcy petition against the Washington State Bar Association (WSBA) in 2009 that claimed a debt against the association of “US$32,091,000,000.00.”

    The petition against the bar association was filed on Oct. 12, 2009. WSBA moved within days to have the petition dismissed and for sanctions against Leaming. Leaming moved for a continuance and to have the judge removed, according to records. The judge denied both the continuance bid and a motion styled “Notice of Duty to Recuse,” and the case was dismissed on Oct. 23, 2009. A judgment of $2,750 was entered against Leaming, and he was enjoined “forever from filing a bankruptcy petition or any other pleadings before this court without the advance leave from one of the bankruptcy judges of this court.”

    Also during the month of October 2009 — while the involuntary petition against WSBA was in the courts — Leaming filed a petition to place Franciscan Health Systems, a community hospital in Washington state, in involuntary bankruptcy. That petition also was dismissed.

    Records in Pierce County, Wash., show that Leaming filed a purported lien for $9.24 billion against the hospital, seeking to attach “all tangible and intangible property” of the facility, including its fixtures, furnishings, motor vehicles, bank accounts, passbooks, saving certificates, stock certificates, lines of credit, inventories, promissory notes, office equipment, educational equipment — and even its mineral and water rights.

    Leaming and ASD figure Christian Oesch sought last year to file a lawsuit apparently seeking $29 trillion against the United States for the government’s actions in the ASD case. Leaming’s company — American-International Business Law Inc. — is referenced in the April 8, 2011, Congressional Record as the filer of an unspecified claim against the United States.

    At least two notaries public associated with Leaming have had their licenses revoked, according to records.

    Some ASD members have been associated with a practice that has been called “paper terrorism.” The practice is designed to chill litigation opponents and create inconvenience for public officials such as judges and prosecutors by making them the targets of vexatious litigation pleadings or other documents designed to nuisance them.

    Here are the comments attributed to “Keny” in the email ASD members reported receiving yesterday on the heels of the remissions payouts by the government last week. (Italics added.)

    SCAM by DOJ …. By accepting these funds, they claim to be ASD/Andy’s VICTIMS (NOT DOJ victims) who will be required to testify that they were victims of ASD/Andy if they don’t want to be arrested and prosecuted for perjury /false claims. It will totally bury Andy.

    As a “victim refund” they will now be coerced into testifying that they were a victim of Andy, not the DOJ, and unless they TESTILIE claiming that Andy scammed them, they will be put into prison for false claims and fraud. MARK MY WORDS.

    They MUST (within 72 hrs) acknowledge “receipt of the funds stolen by the DOJ, and specifically (name the ss agent, us attys, and judge as the DOJ thieves), and do so in affidavit form, filing a certified copy into public records (county recorder, etc,) and sending a notary certified copy to Eric Holder, DOJ, and the Chief Justice (Roberts) of the Supreme Court of the United States (at home), and to the RUST Group.

    ALSO, maybe close out with “Claimant hereby conditionally waives any punitive and/or exemplary and consequential damages claims in the event the funds taken are returned to me within 30 days of (NAME OF AGENT/OFFICER) receiving this claim.”

    “Keny”

    Whether the government has taken or will take extra security measures because of the strange nature of the ASD case was not immediately clear. There have been repeated attempts for months by some ASD members to discourage ASD members from filing for remissions from proceeds seized in the Secret Service’s ASD Ponzi probe and to cast prosecutors, investigators and judicial officers as corrupt.

  • NEW ADSURFDAILY DISASTER? Andy Bowdoin Says Prosecutors Returned ‘Advertising Expenses’ To Members, Not Proceeds Of A Ponzi Scheme; ‘Government Forced Members To Sign . . . Untrue Statement To Get A Refund,’ ASD Patriarch Claims

    Andy Bowdoin: Is ASD's patriarch now accusing the government of subornation of perjury?

    UPDATED 3:44 P.M. EDT (U.S.A.) Facing felony charges of wire fraud, securities fraud and selling unregistered securities and the potential of 125 years in prison, accused Ponzi schemer Andy Bowdoin has responded by accusing federal prosecutors in the District of Columbia of forcing members to lie to qualify for compensation from a victims’ fund in the AdSurfDaily case, according to an email ASD members have received.

    Last week, the government released $55 million seized in the ASD case and began to distribute it through Rust Consulting Inc., the remissions claims administrator approved by the U.S. Department of Justice and the U.S. Secret Service. Members began to receive payments Friday. About 8,400 ASD members filed approved claims, according to the government.

    In an email to ASD members yesterday in which Bowdoin continued his efforts to solicit $500,000 to pay for his criminal defense, the ASD patriarch suggested  prosecutors had set up the remissions program to dupe them into identifying themselves as crime victims. (Emphasis added.)

    “We need the legal defense funds now more than ever to combat this great injustice where the government forced members to sign the untrue statement to get a refund of their monies,” Bowdoin claimed in the email.

    The remissions money was not the proceeds of a Ponzi scheme, Bowdoin claimed. Rather, the money members received constituted a return of their “advertising expenses.”

    Bowdoin did not explain in the email what he intended to do if the government produced evidence that people were advertising nonexistent businesses on ASD’s closed network. Nor did he explain what he would do if the government produced evidence that the sums sent to ASD for individual advertising purchases bore no connection to the real world: a sole proprietor of an MLM sideline business hawking fruit juice who historically posted $5,000 in gross revenue suddenly spending three times that amount to advertise on ASD, for example.

    Bowdoin himself was accused in 2008 of advertising a failed, dissolved business in his own advertising “rotator” to generate purported “rebates.” In making the assertion, the government effectively was claiming that even a nonexistent business — or perhaps even a blank page or a page that promoted a personal Facebook site — could generate a return on investment if inserted in ASD’s rotator.

    “To secure some of ASD’s rebates himself, Bowdoin promoted a bogus website through ASD,” prosecutors claimed on Aug. 25, 2008. “Bowdoin explained to the Secret Service that he used the ‘advertising’ he secured from ASD to promote GPS Tech, an unsuccessful business endeavor that had already been dissolved.”

    In a footnote within the three-year-old filing, prosecutors claimed “Bowdoin also acknowledged that he modeled ASD after12dailypro, that ASD had no significant income (except maybe a couple thousand dollars) other than what its members paid in (and expected back as rebates). Bowdoin said he was not sure how ASD differed from 12dailypro except, he said, ASD did not guarantee a particular percentage, and its payments were only based on its sales. Bowdoin acknowledged that representations that he had met with the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) in Washington, DC, and representations that a team of SEC attorneys that he hired had approved of his operation were made up, as was ASD’s representation that Bowdoin had been awarded a Medal of Distinction by President Bush for business acumen.”

    12DailyPro was an autosurf successfully sued by the SEC in 2006 amid allegations it was operating a massive online Ponzi scheme. Prosecutors said later that Bowdoin had a “silent partner” in ASD — and that the silent partner had been Bowdoin’s 12DailyPro sponsor. The government has said all along that ASD falsely traded on Bush’s name to sanitize a fraud that gathered tens of millions of dollars.

    The U.S. Secret Service and prosecutors said in August 2008 that Bowdoin had disguised his securities venture as an advertising company that paid “rebates” of 125 percent. They later said that ASD’s internal computer systems described payouts to members as “ROI” — for “return on investment.”

    Bowdoin, though, claimed yesterday that ASD, “by definition,” was not a Ponzi scheme. He did not addresses the government’s contention about the “ROI” reference, instead insisting that ASD offered “no guarantees” that members would receive payouts. In August 2008, the government claimed that ASD’s Terms of Service included these words:

    “Advertisers will be paid rebates until they receive 125% of their ad purchases.”

    An expert witness hired by ASD acknowledged in 2008 under cross-examination that the words had appeared in ASD’s TOS. Despite the fact that the TOS document has been a matter of public record for more than three years, some ASD members claimed that the government has produced no evidence and that ASD members who agreed that they are victims of a massive financial crime will be “torn apart” on the witness stand by ASD’s lawyers.

    The “torn apart” claim was made on Jan. 17, 2011, two days before the deadline for ASD members to file a remissions claim with Rust in the case. The claim followed previous claims that a “group” of ASD members might sue persons who identified themselves as victims.

    Bowdoin, 76, further claimed in yesterday’s email that, at his upcoming trial, the government will use claims forms signed by members to prove “they were ‘investors’ and therefore victims” of a Ponzi scheme.

    On Jan. 23, 2009 — just 10 days after Bowdoin withdrew his claims to the seized money “with prejudice” and just one day after a federal judge memorialized Bowdoin’s withdrawal and consent to forfeit the seized money — federal prosecutors explained the law to ASD victims and said the compensation program would be governed by these federal regulations. (Emphasis added in next paragraph.)

    “Under Section 9.8(a)(1) and (2) of Title 28 of the Code of Federal Regulations, in a petition for remission or mitigation of forfeiture a non-owner victim must demonstrate that it suffered a pecuniary loss of a specific amount directly caused by the criminal offense(s) underlying the forfeiture, or a related offense, and that the loss is the direct result of the criminal acts,” the government said in explaining remissions regulations.

    A month later — in February 2009 — Bowdoin reentered the case as a pro se litigant and sought to rescind his decision to submit to the forfeiture. That effort failed after months of legal wrangling, and U.S. District Judge Rosemary Collyer issued a final order of forfeiture for the lion’s share of the seized funds in January 2010.

    Bowdoin appealed that order and a separate forfeiture order issued by Collyer, but lost both cases in the U.S. Court of Appeals.

    In April 2009, in response to Bowdoin’s pro se pleadings, prosecutors revealed that Bowdoin had signed a proffer letter in the case and acknowledged that the government’s material allegations were all true. Bowdoin later revealed in his own court filings that he had met with prosecutors over a period of at least for days in late 2008 and early 2009 and had given information against his interests.

    In yesterday’s email, Bowdoin did not address the proffer issue and his own acknowledgment that he’d provided information against his interest in the hopes of receiving a sentencing reduction. Instead, he asserted that he had “very strong feelings about what the govt. is really doing.

    “[B]ut due to my court case and upcoming trial, I can only pass on a statement made by one of the attorneys on my Legal Defense Team, in response to the govt. media press release issued on Monday, Sept. 26th, with the headline – “$55 MILLION BEING RETURNED TO VICTIMS OF INTERNET FRAUD – Victims Receive Forfeited Ponzi Scheme Proceeds,” Bowdoin continued.

    “I am in full agreement with what my attorney had to say about this govt. press release, which is in ‘quotation marks’ as follows:

    ‘The release is a gross distortion of the facts. There are no ‘victims.’ Not a single person lost a dime until the government shut down the business. These customers bought advertising on the net. They were not investors.’”

    Bowdoin did not say whether the email he sent to members yesterday in which he claimed the government “forced” members “to sign the untrue statement” to qualify for remissions was approved by his attorney.

    Bowdoin fired his original attorneys in 2009, after he had submitted to the forfeiture and agreed to cooperate in the investigation. He later hired replacement attorneys.

    Prior to Bowdoin’s email, an ASD members who identified herself as “Sara” claimed in an email that some ASD members had received amounts like “$50,000 and $60,000” back through the remissions program.

    The email attributed to “Sara” painted a picture of a government conspiracy.

    One apparent ASD member posting on Bowdoin’s Facebook fundraising site claimed last week that he received back $27,690 through the remissions program. The person did not say whether the business he had advertised on ASD had posted revenue that would justify such an advertising purchase, and the government had no comment on the Facebook assertion.

  • EDITORIAL: As Financial Fraud Enforcement Task Force Website (StopFraud.gov) Spotlights AdSurfDaily Prosecution, Bizarre Email Circulating Among ASD Members Raises New Conspiracy Theories

    UPDATED 10:31 A.M. EDT (U.S.A).

    ASD case subject of discussion in Washington’s highest power corridors: The Financial Fraud Enforcement Task Force was formed by President Obama in November 2009. U.S. Attorney General Eric Holder, a member of the President’s cabinet and the chief law-enforcement officer of the U.S. government, presides over the Task Force.

    Secret Service is charter member of Task Force. The U.S. Secret Service, whose duties include protecting the President of the United States, the integrity of the economy and the financial infrastructure of the nation, is a member of the Task Force.

    Among the allegations in the ASD case is that members were falsely trading on the name of then-President George W. Bush to sanitize a $110 million Ponzi scheme, that ASD President Andy Bowdoin encouraged the false claims and arranged to spend Ponzi proceeds to retire the $157,000 mortgage on a home in Tallahassee occupied by his wife’s son and the son’s wife, purchase a lakefront home in Florida, purchase an $800,000 building (for cash), purchase jet skis, a Cabana boat, haul trailers and marine equipment — all while owing restitution to victims of an Alabama securities caper in the 1990s and “thousands of dollars” to an ex-wife.

    Some of the purchases occurred within days of Bowdoin’s return from a May 2008 ASD “rally” in Las Vegas at which he defined himself as a Christian “money magnet” and encouraged others to follow him in thanking God and becoming like-minded “money magnets.” At the rally, Bowdoin urged members not to miss the opportunity to provide ASD with money by the tens of thousands or hundreds of thousands of dollars at a time, according to records.

    “Thank you, God, for destining me to great wealth,” he exhorted the Las Vegas crowd to internalize and recite during the day.

    And he exhorted members to picture themselves wealthy.

    “See a big check coming in from AdSurfDaily,” he urged. “I signed a check the other day, about $22,000. See those checks like that coming for you constantly, just flowing to you.”

    One of Bowdoin’s business partners — Walter Clarence Busby Jr., the operator of the Golden Panda autosurf — was implicated by the SEC in three prime-bank schemes in the 1990s, according to records. Golden Panda, according to Busby, was hatched after he went fishing with Bowdoin on a Georgia lake in April 2008. Just days after the fishing expedition, Bowdoin boarded a plane and flew to Costa Rica, according to court filings.

    Weeks after his return from Costa Rica, Bowdoin headed to Washington, D.C., to rub elbows with politicians, according to court filings.

    Read the full news release on the AdSurfDaily case here. It is published on StopFraud.gov, the Task Force website.

    New conspiracy theory emerges after government compensates ASD victims. As often has been the case, some ASD members appear not to have taken the clue that top Justice Department officials and perhaps the White House itself are being briefed on developments in the ASD case. The ASD case became a national-security case when the U.S. Secret Service discovered in 2008 that Andy Bowdoin, a recidivist securities swindler in his seventies who allegedly had “earned no significant income from legal employment in the twenty years prior to his commencement of ASD’s operation,” suddenly was sitting on tens of millions of dollars and had handed out some of it to political rainmakers.

    Some of the handouts, which came in the form of contributions to the National Republican Congressional Committee (NRCC), occurred in early 2007, even as the first Ponzi scheme iteration of ASD was collapsing and the firm’s original members were left holding the bag while Bowdoin explained $1 million had been stolen by “Russian” hackers. Bowdoin did not file a police report about the purported theft because he did not want to draw the attention of law enforcement, according to court filings.

    The NRCC handouts continued in 2008, after Bowdoin had changed the name of his collapsed autosurfing venture from AdSurfDaily to ASD Cash Generator, plumbed it with new cash from a new group of suckers, started a second Ponzi venture known as LaFuenteDinero, arranged with Busby to form a third Ponzi-in-waiting  (Golden Panda) and had flown to Costa Rica with a “North Carolina lawyer” (and co-owner) of LaFuenteDinero, according to court filings and Federal Election Commission records.

    In a bizarre email that began to circulate among ASD members yesterday, the seed was planted that that the government was trying to recruit witnesses by luring them with remissions payments — and that prosecutors might claw back the remissions money if  the member “did not cooperate in testifying against ASD.”

    The date upon which the email was written could not immediately be determined, but the email appears to be the second in a two-part series sent after ASD members began to receive remissions payments late last week.

    The content of the email, which was described as “insider information” and attributed in part to an unamed third party who purportedly overheard a conversation involving a federal prosecutor at an unspecified location, was titled, “Important Warning: ASD/Golden Panda.”

    Among the suggestions in the email was that the government planned to “force” ASD members who received remissions distributions to testify against Bowdoin in his upcoming criminal trial on charges of wire fraud, securities fraud and selling unregistered securities. The email was signed “Sara.”

    Here is the email verbatim (italics added):

    “Hi Everyone-

    Since I sent the last email update about ASD/Golden Panda monies being received by members, I received some very important insider information you should know. This is an important warning.

    The information (these are not quotes) I am sharing with you was spoken by and was heard directly from an attorney for the government, in relation to the ASD legal case. I must protect the source but I can assure you it is reliable (it is not Andy). I was told that the person heard the government attorney say they had hired the Rust Company to send a remission form by email and US-mail to ASD and Golden Panda members. The form was to be sent under the pretense that the member would get their money back if they filled out the form to request a remission of their ASD/Golden Panda monies seized by the government on 8/1/08. Those members would then receive their remission monies directly into their bank accounts, but the attorney said that their names would go onto a list and they would then be summoned by the court (at the members own expense) to testify against ASD. They would be forced to testify against ASD even if they did not believe that ASD was illegal, because the form they signed was set up in such a way that the member was essentially stating that ASD victimized them in an illegal business. I’m imagining a typical scenario in court would be: The attorney for the government would read statements from the form and the member’s answers and then say something like, “Is this your signature?” to force the member into saying that the statements were theirs.  And, take note, that it was also mentioned by the attorney that the direct deposit into the member’s account could be reversed at any time if ASD should eventually lose the case or if the member did not cooperate in testifying against ASD. If the money isn’t in the account anymore, it would be money owed back to the government, so moving the money would not help. The addendum that I was advised to suggest to you if you were drawn to fill out the form (sent by the Rust Company on behalf of the government) that stated that you did not make an investment in ASD/Golden Panda, but rather bought advertising, would apparently protect you from the government’s tactics, but I honestly do not know that for sure.

    Many of us had major red flags when we read the form as it was obvious what the government was trying to do. That’s why it was advised that members add the addendum to their form, to protect themselves from the government’s deceptive practices. So pray about how you should proceed. Please don’t ask me. I can’t make this decision for you.

    God’s Blessings,

    Sara

    The email appears to have followed the email below, which divines a construction by which  the government seized ASD money illegally and set up the remissions program only because ASD members outraged at the illegal seizure demanded the return of their funds (verbatim/italics added):

    “Dear ASD & Golden Panda Members-

    I have some news! ASD and Golden Panda Members have recently received a “remission” of the money that was in their ASD and/or Golden Panda accounts, deposited directly into their personal bank accounts by the government; amounts like $50,000 and $60,000 and it was apparently 100% of the money that was owed to them!

    Personally, I am stunned. My experience over the last decade or more has been that the government has never fulfilled their obligation to return money they have seized from programs they deemed illegal. My opinion is that they are scrambling to do this in order to diffuse the outrage ASD members have felt toward the government from their (in my opinion, illegal) seizure of members’ account funds, so that members will have less opposition toward the government during the eventual ASD trial.

    But, for whatever reason the government is doing it, it is irrelevant to those relieved members who are finally receiving justice from this (in my opinion, illegal) seizure.

    If you have not received your remission, you can go to this website to fill out the form there: adsurfdailyremission.com. You can also call the following toll free information line for more information and even talk to a customer service agent in person to ask any questions you might have about this process: 888-398-8214. The following email address has also been provided to communicate about this: info@adsurfremission.com You will notice that, in the recorded message, the government does NOT back down in their assertion that Golden Panda and ASD were illegal ponzi schemes, but that is obviously not stopping them from returning members’ funds.

    Some of you will notice that this form is the one that many of you did not feel inspired to fill out when it was first presented to us. It really puts members in an uncomfortable position of stating that they were victims of ASD/Golden Panda when they don’t believe they were and many felt as if they were also being set up to incriminate themselves.

    At the time, I was advised to suggest to you that, if you felt drawn to fill it out, you include an addendum that stated that you understood that you were purchasing advertising, not making an investment. That continues to be the advice. Now that people are actually receiving their money back, perhaps some of you may feel more motivated to risk filling out the form. Just be careful not to incriminate yourselves. Be alert as you do it. Do not leave any question unanswered or it will be rejected. You must also provide documentation so hopefully you kept good records.

    You will notice on that website (upper left corner) that it says that you must fill it out and submit it by a date in January, 2011. The way around this may be to say that you just found out about it (you didn’t get their letter in the mail or an email from them) and therefore you are only responding to it now. You might want to make that clear to the Customer Service agent at the number above BEFORE you take the time to fill it out, to confirm that they are still accepting them. If not, take a stand for your right to your monetary remission and ask for a supervisor. I am hearing that they are swamped trying to keep up with the communications they are receiving from members, so please be patient.

    Blessings,

    Sara

    Read a January 2011 story about ASD-related emails. Read a November 2010 story. Read another November 2010 story. Read a December 2009 story.

  • URGENT >> BULLETIN >> MOVING: AdSurfDaily Ponzi Scheme Example Of ‘Insidious’ Financial Crime, Head Of Justice Department’s Criminal Division Says; Top Officials, U.S. Secret Service Issue Statement In Support Of Victims; Obama Task Force Monitoring ASD Case

    Assistant Attorney General Lanny Breuer, head of the Justice Department's Criminal Division.

    URGENT >> BULLETIN >> MOVING: The AdSurfDaily Ponzi scheme is an example of an “insidious” financial crime, the head of the U.S. Department of Justice’s Criminal Division said moments ago in a special statement on how forfeiture laws were used to protect ASD victims.

    Meanwhile, a top official of the U.S. Secret Service described Florida-based ASD as a “criminal enterprise.”

    ASD members who filed approved claims through the government’s remissions program will receive back tens of millions of dollars owing to the quick actions of the U.S. Secret Service and federal prosecutors in the District of Columbia in 2008, officials in Washington said.

    Victims who filed remissions claims and demonstrated losses will be compensated at 100 percent, a rare total, a source with knowledge of the process told the PP Blog last week.

    “[F]orfeiture is a powerful tool for ensuring that victims of financial fraud are made whole,” Assistant Attorney General Lanny A. Breuer said today. “Returning funds to victims is a key goal in our mission to combat financial crimes. We will continue to use every tool at our disposal to bring justice to the citizens defrauded by these insidious schemes.”

    Breuer was backed by U.S. Attorney Ronald C. Machen Jr. in the District of Columbia.

    U.S. Attorney Ronald C. Machen Jr.

    “We are putting $55 million back into the pockets of innocent victims of this online Ponzi scheme,” said Machen.  “As we did in this case, we will continue to work with our law enforcement partners to recover every penny we can find for victims of financial fraud.”

    A top Secret Service official said today that ASD was a “criminal enterprise” and that the remissions program represented a positive outcome for victims of an elaborate fraud scheme.

    “With all of our efforts to punish and deter this criminal enterprise, the rights of innocent parties are protected and will subsequently be returned,” said Assistant Director A.T. Smith of the Secret Service’s Office of Investigations. “This substantial remittance not only emphasizes the cooperation between the Secret Service, U.S. Attorney’s Office, and the Department of Justice, but promotes positive community impact by returning these funds to innocent victims.”

    The U.S. Secret Service “safeguards the nation’s financial infrastructure and payment systems to preserve the integrity of the economy,” said Smith.

    Today’s statement by the officials confirmed that President Obama’s Financial Fraud Enforcement Task Force, which was created in November 2009 to root out fraud, has been monitoring ASD developments and assisting in the case.

    Information for ASD victims is accessible by dialing this number:

    1-800-644-1535

    Victims who use the mail and have questions should contact:

    Basizette Stribling
    Victim Witness Assistant
    Re: AdSurf Daily
    United States Attorney’s Office for the District of Columbia
    555 Fourth Street NW
    Washington, D.C. 20530

    ASD President Andy Bowdoin was arrested by the Secret Service in December 2010. He was charged with wire fraud, securities fraud and selling unregistered securities. Bowdoin, 76, is free on bail and awaiting trial.

  • UPDATE: About 8,400 AdSurfDaily Members Will Receive Remissions Payments; Number Of Successful Claimants Exceeds Population Of ASD’s Home Base Of Quincy, Fla.; No Comment From Prosecutors On Curious Facebook Post From Apparent ASD Member

    Federal prosecutors had no comment this morning about a Facebook posting from an apparent ASD member who claims to have received victim's compensation but still purportedly backs accused felon Andy Bowdoin. Bowdoin is facing criminal charges of wire fraud, securities fraud and selling unregistered securities.

    UPDATE: About 8,400 victims of the AdSurfDaily autosurf are receiving remissions payments of 100 percent of their losses, a source familiar with the process said today.

    The PP Blog first reported Thursday that the remissions payments would be 100 percent across the board to ASD victims who demonstrated a loss. On Friday, the Blog received a stream of confirmations from ASD victims that Rust Consulting Inc., the government-approved claims administrator, had deposited the payments into their bank accounts electronically.

    Based on court filings, the PP Blog is estimating that about 80 percent of ASD members who filed for remissions by the January 2011 deadline had their claims approved. The number represents an “overwhelming majority,” the source said last week.

    The number of successful remissions petitioners significantly exceeds the population of Quincy, Fla., ASD’s headquarters. Quincy’s population is about 7,000.

    The U.S. Secret Service said in August 2008 that ASD President Andy Bowdoin was operating a massive, international Ponzi scheme from Quincy in part by claiming ASD was selling “advertising” that paid “rebates” of 125 percent.

    Bowdoin, 76, has been soliciting contributions for his criminal defense for weeks, asking the people he is accused of defrauding to pony up $500,000 to pay for lawyers.

    Federal prosecutors had no comment this morning on a Friday post on Bowdoin’s Facebook fundraising site from an apparent ASD member who claimed he’d received crime-victim’s compensation but still was backing Bowdoin.

    “I don’t know what happened, but I had posted on here yesterday that the government sent me a letter they would be refunding my ASD money,” the apparent ASD member wrote. “To my surprise and shock, the money IS in my account as of today, all $27,690.00 of it!!!!

    “DO NOT THINK THAT I DON’T BACK ANDY, BECAUSE I STILL DO!!!!” the apparent member exclaimed. “I want ASD BACK, I want Andy and ASD EXONERATED, and I want the government to PAY PAY PAY for what they did and for MISUSE of The Patriate Act (sic), which ironically they used in the most UNPATRIOTIC way seemingly possible!”