Tag: Best Diamond Funding

  • PONZI NEWS/UPDATES: Fire Destroys ‘3 Hebrew Boys’ Ponzi Headquarters; Minnesota Man Gets Nearly 10 Years In Prison In Ponzi Case; California Man Gets 25

    Sign of the apocalypse? The headquarters of the “3 Hebrew Boys” Ponzi scheme in Columbia, S.C., was gutted in a fire Monday and Tuesday. Firefighters spent 19 hours over two days battling the blaze, but the “building and all contents . . . were completely destroyed,” according to Beattie B. Ashmore.

    Ashmore is the court-appointed receiver in the case. Proof-of-claim forms for victims of the $80 million Ponzi swindle became available April 15, only 11 days before the fire broke out. The cause of the fire is under investigation, and the building was an asset of the receivership estate.

    “All computers and documents have been stored off-site since the Receiver took possession of the building in October 2007,” Ashmore said. “The building was being managed by a reputable property management company, fully insured and continuously monitored by a security company. The Receiver will make a claim immediately with the Hartford Insurance Company for the full value of the building with the insurance proceeds going to the benefit of the victims.”

    The 3 Hebrew Boys case is one of the strangest in the United States, drawing comparisons to the alleged AdSurfDaily Ponzi scheme owing to elements of affinity fraud and antigovernment rhetoric.

    Joseph Brunson, Tim McQueen and Tony Pough were convicted in November of swindling tens of millions of dollars in a bogus debt-relief “ministry.” The purported aim of the program was to free people from government “bondage,” and the investigation was referred to as “Satan’s handiwork.”

    In the earliest days of the 3 Hebrew Boys case, more than 100 people protested on behalf of the scheme at a rally in Columbia, saying the government did not understand the program, had overreached in its prosecutorial efforts, refused to deny it was wrong and had chosen to move forward with the case in a bid to save face.

    In an approach similar to one used by the AdViewGlobal (AVG) autosurf, members were forced to agree to a confidentially clause that purportedly prohibited them from discussing the company outside the confines of meeting places. Participants were threatened with a $1 million penalty for sharing information.

    AVG, which has close ties to ASD, morphed into a “private association” in February 2009. Members were scolded for sharing information and calling the autosurf an “investment” program. As the company appeared to be collapsing in May and June, members were threatened with copyright-infringement lawsuits for sharing information published by the firm.

    Brunson, McQueen and Pough are jailed awaiting sentencing. After they were found guilty of 174 counts mail fraud, money-laundering and transporting stolen goods, the men filed documents accusing former U.S. Attorney Walt Wilkins of treason and committing acts of war by prosecuting them.

    The men became known as “3 Hebrew Boys” after operating a website with the same name, which is based on a biblical story of believers who escaped a furnace by relying on their faith. The Ponzi scheme operated under the name Capital Consortium Group LLC.

    Minnesota Ponzi Sentencing

    A Ponzi scheme operator in Rosemount, Minn., has been sentenced to 117 months in prison and ordered to pay $21.8 million in restitution to victims.

    Charles “Chuck” E. Hays, 56, has been detained since his arrest in February 2009. He pleaded guilty last year to one count of mail fraud, one count of wire fraud and one count of structuring transactions to avoid financial reporting requirements.

    Among the items seized in the case was a $3 million yacht acquired with investors’ money. Hays operated a firm known as Crossfire Trading LLC and bilked investors out of more than $20 million by operating a Ponzi scheme.

    “Hays told potential investors he was a day trader in stock index futures and other futures contracts,” federal prosecutors said.

    Investors plowed money into the scheme based on lies told by Hays, and he “admitted he diverted and converted those funds for his personal use and other unauthorized purposes,” prosecutors said.

    The sentencing judge in the case was U.S. District Judge Donovan Frank.

    California Ponzi Sentencing

    Milton Retana, 46, of Huntington Park, was sentenced to 25 years in prison for a $62 million Ponzi scheme that bilked mostly Spanish-speaking investors out of at least $33 million.

    The case became known as the “Best Diamond case.” Retana operated a purported real-estate investment company known as Best Diamond Funding. It was yet another instance another in which the name of a precious metal or mineral was used in a Ponzi scheme.

    Evidence of the fraud was hidden in the back of a religious bookstore operated by Retana’s wife, prosecutors said. When investigators searched the bookstore, they found millions of dollars in cash. Best Diamond was located next door to the bookstore.

    The scheme — like many other Ponzi schemes — featured an appeal to religion, prosecutors said.

    “Best Diamond Funding solicited money through advertisements in Spanish-language magazines, on the Internet, and during weekly investment seminars at locations across Los Angeles. The raucous investment seminars often had as many as 300 potential investors and incorporated religious messages,” prosecutors said.

    “Retana guaranteed returns as high as 84 percent each year, claiming that he would purchase properties in bulk at below-market prices and immediately sell them for a profit,” prosecutors said. “However, records obtained by federal investigators showed that Retana used only a tiny fraction of the victims’ money to purchase real estate and that his company was actually losing money.”

    The sentencing judge in the case was U.S. District Judge R. Gary Klausner.

  • California Man Guilty In $62 Million Ponzi Scheme; Milton Retana Targeted Latinos, Ordered Evidence To Be Hidden In Back Of Religious Bookstore

    In yet another case in which the name of a precious metal or mineral was used in a Ponzi scheme, Milton Retana has been found guilty of six counts of mail fraud and one count of lying to federal investigators.

    Evidence of the fraud was hidden in the back of a religious bookstore operated by Retana’s wife, prosecutors said. When investigators searched the bookstore, they found millions of dollars in cash, prosecutors said.

    Retana, 46, of Huntington Park, Calif., faces a maximum of up to 125 years in prison. Sentencing is set for April 26. Investigators said he operated Best Diamond Funding, a Ponzi, affinity-fraud and real-estate investment scheme that fleeced more than 2,000 victims out of more than $62 million.

    Best Diamond was located next door to the bookstore. The FBI and U.S. Postal Inspection Service smashed the scheme, prosecutors said.

    Jurors returned the verdict in less than an hour, after a week-long trial. Dozens of victims appeared in court to hear the verdict, prosecutors said.

    Beginning in 2006, Retana told investors their money would be used to buy and sell real estate. He targeted mostly a Spanish-speaking audience, and used religion in his pitches, prosecutors said.

    “Retana guaranteed returns as high as 84 percent each year, claiming that he would purchase properties in bulk at below-market prices and immediately sell them for a profit,” prosecutors said.

    But records showed Retana “used only a tiny fraction of the victims’ money to purchase real estate and that his company was actually losing money,” prosecutors said.

    As often is the case in investment schemes, victims “mortgaged their homes and drained their retirement accounts because they believed Retana’s promises that their investments would be safe,” prosecutors said.

    Among the victims were a stone mason, a truck driver and a roofer. The roofer also was the pastor of his church.

    The scheme nearly was detected in 2008, when the California Department of Real Estate audited Best Diamond, prosecutors said.

    Retana, though, stymied the probe “by ordering his employees to hide all of the investor files at the back of his wife’s religious bookstore, La Libreria Del Exito Mundial.

    “His scheme was disrupted in October 2008, when federal agents from the United States Postal Inspection Service and the Federal Bureau of Investigation executed search warrants on the offices of Best Diamond Funding and the bookstore,” prosecutors said.

    Agents found $800,000 in cash stashed in Retana’s desk and $3.2 million in cash hidden in the back of the bookstore. Investigators seized another $8 million from Retana’s bank accounts.

    “Soon after the execution of the federal search warrants, agents interviewed Retana, who lied about how much money he had received from the investors and claimed that he could pay all of them back,” prosecutors said. “Retana was later secretly recorded telling a Best Diamond employee not to tell the government how much money Best Diamond had received from the investors.”