Tag: E-bullion

  • PROSECUTION: ASD Member Funded Account With Transfer From E-Bullion And Used Ad Rotator To Pitch ‘StreamlineGold,’ Apparent Pyramid Scheme; Records Show E-Bullion Founder Charged In Wife’s Murder In California

    An AdSurfDaily promoter whose cash was seized in February 2009 and now has been targeted for forfeiture funded one of her three ASD accounts in part with a transfer from E-Bullion, a shuttered payment processor whose founder was charged in 2008 with operating an unlicensed money-transmitting business and hiring a hit man to kill his estranged wife, according to records.

    The E-Bullion allegation raises troubling new questions about the sinister worlds of autosurfs and HYIPs, how ASD and its members were exchanging money and whether ASD and top promoters were employing secret conduits. In 2008, prosecutors asserted ASD had a relationship with E-Gold, a payment processor accused in 2007 of money-laundering. Yesterday’s assertion that ASD also had a relationship with E-Bullion marked the first time that prosecutors have raised E-Bullion’s name in the ASD case.

    Erma Seabaugh, known among ASD members as the “Web Room Lady,” used E-Bullion in November 2007 to transfer $10,510 to ASD, according to a forfeiture complaint filed yesterday.

    SCREEN SHOT: Federal prosecutors asserted yesterday that ASD member Erma Seabaugh funded one of her ASD accounts by transferring $10,510 from E-Bullion.

    E-Bullion founder James Fayed was jailed in California in August 2008, the same month as the seizure of tens of millions of dollars from ASD and nine months after the firm was used to transfer money to ASD, according to records. He initially was charged in an indictment unsealed in August 2008 by federal prosecutors with operating an unlicensed money-transmitting business that had processed more than $20 million in Ponzi scheme payments. The scope of E-Bullion’s alleged Ponzi business is unclear, but the company now has been linked to at least three alleged Ponzi schemes.

    In September 2008, Fayed was charged by the Los Angeles District Attorney’s office with the July 2008 murder of his wife, Pamela Fayed.

    In June 2008, a month before she was killed in a California parking garage by a man who allegedly had accepted $25,000 from James Fayed to carry out the plot, Pamela Fayed had informed federal prosecutors in California that she wished to cooperate in the investigation of E-Bullion, according to records. E-Bullion is referenced in court files as a payment processor used by Gold Quest International (GQI), an alleged Ponzi scheme operating in Las Vegas that was charged by the SEC in May 2008 and also was charged by Canadian regulators.

    A total of four people, including James Fayed, now have been charged in the murder plot. As with many things in the miserable worlds of HYIPs and autosurfs, the prosecution of GQI by the SEC turned into Theatre of the Absurd.

    GQI, accused in May 2008 by the SEC in a $29 million Ponzi case, sought to derail the case by filing a lawsuit for $1.7 trillion against the agency. Company officials absurdly asserted that GQI was immune to U.S. law because its Las Vegas operations enjoyed purported sovereignty that was portable from an “Indian” tribe in North Dakota and that GQI also was off-limits to prosecution in the United States because it was registered in Panama.

    Chillingly, E-Bullion also is referenced in documents filed by the Ontario Securities Commission in a case against Ponzi swindler Brian David Anderson, a former Christian clergyman from Vancouver, British Columbia. Anderson was sentenced to prison in the United States earlier this year for his role in a Ponzi scheme known as Frontier Assets.

    Anderson also was linked to a mysterious scheme known as the “Alpha Project.” U.S. and Canadian investigators also identified Anderson as a pitchman for an international HYIP known as Flat Electronic Data Interchange (FEDI). FEDI’s operator, Abdul Tawala Ibn Ali Alishtari, also known as Michael Mixon, was convicted in September 2009 of financing terror and fleecing investors in the FEDI scheme.

    In addition to the ASD account funded by the E-Bullion transfer, Seabaugh had at least two other ASD accounts, prosecutors charged in the forfeiture complaint. She used one of her accounts to advertise a mysterious business known as StreamlineGold, which was described by investigators as a probable “pyramid scheme dealing with the sale of memberships that are sold to customers.”

    The account through which Seabaugh promoted StreamlineGold was funded by a transfer from La Fuente Dinero, yet-another Ponzi scheme associated with ASD, prosecutors said.

    StreamlineGold’s website now throws an error message, but web records show it was promoted on the MoneyMakerGroup and TalkGold forums, two websites that are associated with Ponzi schemes and referenced in federal court records as a place from which the alleged Pathway To Prosperity Ponzi scheme was promoted.

    “StreamLine Gold is literally what it says,” a poster crowed on the MoneyMakerGroup Ponzi site in November 2007, the same month Seabaugh allegedly was promoting the same scheme through ASD. “[I]t can provide you with an unlimited income through the combination of Precious Metals and Cash with a business model whose time has come PLUS the most advanced and lucrative pay plan ever devised.”

    Records suggest StreamlineGold had failed in an earlier iteration — and then failed again after rebirthing itself.

  • BULLETIN: Alberta Securities Commission Orders $2 Million Penalty Against ‘Lord’ David Greene And John Jenkins In Gold Quest International Ponzi Case

    After determining in January that Gold Quest International (GQI) was a “sham” operating as both a Ponzi and a pyramid scheme, the Alberta Securities Commission (ASC) now has doled out the penalties.

    David Michael Greene, also known as “Lord” David Greene, and John Jenkins were ordered to pay an “administrative penalty” of $2 million, ASC said today. Greene and Jenkins were GQI’s operators, according to the agency.

    Michael McGee, described by ASC as having played “a lesser but still considerable role” in the scheme, was ordered to pay an administrative penalty of $100,000. ASC further determined that McGee claimed that a case against him filed by the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission had been “dismissed” when it had not.

    In fact, ASC said, the SEC case had resulted in a judgment of more than $8.5 million against McGee, but that the judgment is not being enforced because of McGee’s professed inability to pay.

    If the case involving GQI was not one of the strangest in Canadian history, it almost certainly is one of the strangest in U.S. history.

    Part of the money in the case is tied up in a California homicide investigation in which the operator of the E-Bullion payment processor was charged with murdering his wife.

    During the SEC litigation, the purported “attorney general” of a purported “sovereign” Indian tribe tried unsuccessfully to sue the SEC for the spectacular sum $1.7 trillion, claiming GQI was immune from U.S. securities laws.

    Read this story for more background on GQI.

    Penalties doled out by ASC were less severe on GQI President Delroy Atwood. He was not assessed a financial penalty other than a share of litigation costs of $49,700, but was “prohibited from acting as a director or officer of any issuer for five years,” ASC said.

    Greene and Jenkins were banned from the Alberta capital markets for life.  McGee was banned for 10 years.

    “In the Merits Decision, we found that Greene created Gold-Quest and the Gold-Quest Offering,” ASC said. “Greene and Jenkins ran Gold-Quest’s operations, with some assistance from McGee.

    “Gold-Quest and Greene lured investors by touting investments in the Gold-Quest Offering as safe and secure or guaranteed and by promising 87.5% annual returns,” ASC continued. “These statements about the investments were misrepresentations. The Gold-Quest Offering, purportedly involving investment in foreign currency trading, was in fact a sham.

    “On the evidence, we were satisfied that, during the relevant period, Gold-Quest itself did not open any foreign currency trading account, receive income from any currency trading, have an active currency trading program or any actual currency traders in its employ, or place investors’ money with external foreign currency traders,” ASC said.  “Rather, the evidence was that any foreign currency trading had been done through foreign currency trading accounts opened in the names of Greene and Jenkins, had been minimal and had resulted in heavy losses.”

    The scheme gathered $29 million, ASC said.

  • GNI Members: Failed Program Was ‘Honest’ And ‘Real’; Critics Should Shut Up And Focus On Haiti Earthquake

    Critics of Gold Nugget Invest (GNI), the collapsed Internet HYIP, do not understand that the program that advertised a return of 7.5 percent a week was “real,” according to a member writing on an online Ponzi board.

    Bickering about GNI only will lead to additional problems for the company, which is faithfully trying to reorganize, and the critics should send money to Haiti instead of infecting the membership with negative thinking, according to the member.

    “[W]hy not use your idle time for [the Haitian people?]” the GNI apologist asked on the ASA Monitor Ponzi board. “l doubt if you can do that ‘cos that is your true nature.”

    Haiti suffered a devastating earthquake Jan. 12. As many as 200,000 people are believed to have perished.

    In earlier posts, the apologist suggested that GNI critics were suffering from “mental illness” and observed that, “I will be very grateful if GNI runs for 20 years as a pronzi (sic) !!!!”

    The poster did not explain how a program purported to be a “real” business could create legitimate profits by operating as a Ponzi scheme.

    GNI, which positioned itself as a betting “arbitrage,” tanked last week. It is among a number of recent investment programs using the name of a precious metal or a precious mineral that have encountered difficulty either from members or law enforcement. GNI did not publish verifiable financial information. There is no way to verify GNI’s claims, including an apparent claim that certain resources are tied up in a purported banking investigation in Europe that has nothing to do with the company.

    GNI now says its program will pay “up to” 20 percent monthly through a “No Risk Wager.” The company did not explain how it had categorically eliminated risk during a period in which it apparently did not have access to the capital it needed to operate and had suddenly changed the rules, leaving existing members holding the bag while apparently still advertising for new members to entrust their funds to the firm.

    Some members, though, insisted they were standing by GNI because it always had “paid” and just hit a bump in the road.

    Canadian regulators last week declared a collapsed program known as Gold Quest International (GQI) a “sham” and both a Ponzi and a pyramid scheme. Investors dumped at least $27 million into the program, according to the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission.

    GQI, which claimed Panamanian registration while operating from Las Vegas and saying it was immune to U.S. and Canadian law because it was affiliated with a “sovereign” Indian tribe, scammed thousands of investors, according to the SEC and the Alberta Securities Commission.

    At least $3.15 million linked to GQI ended up in New Zealand, in one or more bank accounts tied to a company known as Topaz Group Ltd., according to court filings by Larry Cook, the court-appointed receiver in the SEC case. The majority of that money then was “immediately transferred from the Topaz Group business account to the account of Wendy Smurthwaite Davies, the wife of John Davies,” according to court filings.

    John Davies was identified as the owner of Topaz Group.

    Other GQI money made its way into E-Bullion accounts in California, according to court filings. The E-Bullion money is tied up in a fraud and murder investigation of E-Bullion owner James Fayed, accused of having his wife killed in a Greater Los Angeles parking garage.

    Another “gold-themed” tie involves Brian David Anderson, a former Christian clergyman from Vancouver, British Columbia. Anderson recently was sentenced to 90 months in federal prison in the United States for operating a $4 million Ponzi scheme known as Frontier Assets.

    Anderson also was linked to a mysterious scheme known as the “Alpha Project.”

    U.S. and Canadian investigators identified Anderson as a pitchman for an international HYIP known as Flat Electronic Data Interchange (FEDI). FEDI’s operator, Abdul Tawala Ibn Ali Alishtari, also known as “Michael Mixon,” was convicted in September 2009 of financing terror and fleecing investors in the FEDI scheme.

    Records in the Anderson case include references to E-Bullion.

  • CHILLING: Terrorism Link, A Ponzi, An HYIP, Gold, Mysterious ‘Offshore’ Businesses, ‘Rebates’ — And A Brutal Murder In California

    EDITOR’S NOTE: HYIP or autosurf promoter? Can’t say no to the commissions from recruiting people into scheme after scheme? Position yourself as an “expert” on Internet forums — even though you don’t have a clue about the motivations of the program owners and may not even know their names? Find yourself promoting programs that reference “gold” and “funds” and relying on marketing assertions that cannot be verified? Tell your recruits that the programs are money “games” or nontraditional investments? Been involved in one program after another that has failed in this seedy and dangerous world? Think that you’ll have a lifetime of plausible deniability and that professional investigators will believe you when you explain you didn’t really know what was going on — despite the fact you’ve been involved in one failed “program” after another, perhaps for months and even years?

    Here’s a story about what can happen in the sea of HYIP, “Gold,” Ponzi and autosurf corruption . . .

    UPDATED 12:42 P.M. ET (U.S.A.) Yesterday a reader provided us a document that can only be described as chilling. The document, from the Ontario Securities Commission (OSC), includes exhibits from a 2003 Canadian civil-securities case against convicted Ponzi swindler Brian David Anderson, a former Christian clergyman from Vancouver, British Columbia.

    Last week, Anderson was sentenced to 90 months in federal prison in the United States for operating a $4 million Ponzi scheme known as Frontier Assets. Anderson also was linked to a mysterious scheme known as the “Alpha Project.”

    U.S. and Canadian investigators, meanwhile, also identified Anderson as a pitchman for an international HYIP known as Flat Electronic Data Interchange (FEDI). FEDI’s operator, Abdul Tawala Ibn Ali Alishtari, also known as “Michael Mixon,” was convicted in September 2009 of financing terror and fleecing investors in the FEDI scheme.

    Why is the document chilling? For starters, its references a bank account held by Goldfinger Coin & Bullion Inc. in Camarillo, Calif. If that name does not ring a bell, think “E-bullion,” the now-shuttered money-exchange business purportedly backed by gold.

    James Fayed, the operator of Goldfinger and E-Bullion, was charged in 2008 with operating an unlicensed money-transmitting business. Investigators said E-Bullion had been used to transact at least $20 million in Ponzi scheme payments.

    During the same general time period in 2008, the SEC was conducting a Ponzi scheme investigation into a separate company known as Gold Quest International (GQI), which used E-Bullion and claimed to be registered in Panama.

    GQI operated from Las Vegas. It initially tried to claim that it was immune to U.S. law because of links to a “sovereign” Indian tribe. GQI was charged in May 2008 by the SEC with operating a Ponzi scheme. The purported “attorney general” of the purported “sovereign” tribe reacted by trying to file a lawsuit against the SEC for the preposterous sum of $1.7 trillion. A federal judge was not amused, and struck the bizarre filings.

    Woman Stabbed To Death

    On July 28, 2008, Pamela Fayed — James Fayed’s estranged wife — was brutally murdered in a parking garage in California. She was stabbed in the chest, neck and face — and left to die, according to court filings. Prosecutors said there was no evidence of robbery or carjacking. The murder, according to court filings, occurred just minutes after a meeting Pamela attended with her criminal attorney and her husband’s criminal attorney.

    James Fayed was present at the meeting, according to court filings. A meeting with separate attorneys — this one involving a divorce hearing — had been scheduled for the next day, July 29, 2008. Prosecutors said that James Fayed was at risk of being ordered to turn over nearly $1 million to Pamela at the divorce proceeding.

    Pamela had advised the government in June 2008 that she wished to cooperate in its criminal investigation of E-Bullion, according to prosecutors.

    “Pamela’s murderer left the crime scene in a red SUV that was captured on surveillance video, along with its license,” prosecutors said. “The license was traced to Avis car rentals in Camarillo, not far from [the] defendant’s business. The vehicle had been rented from Avis on July 3, 2008 using an American Express card issued to defendant and GCB.

    “An American Express credit card with the same account number was found in defendant’s wallet during a search of his residence in the days following Pamela’s murder. During the search of defendant’s residence, officers also found approximately $60,000 in cash wrapped in plastic material; approximately $3,000,000 in gold; and approximately 31 firearms, including one with a long-range night vision scope, along with thousands of rounds of matching ammunition,” prosecutors alleged.

    Prosecutors also alleged James Fayed arranged for the July 28 meeting to create an alibi.

    Read a court filing in the federal case against James Fayed in which prosecutors alleged he operated an unlicensed money-transmitting business. The filing references the alleged murder plot.

    Murder Charges Filed

    James Fayed and an employee — Jose Luis Moya — were charged by the Los Angeles District Attorney’s office with murder and a conspiracy plot in September 2008. Fayed paid Moya “approximately $25,000 to arrange the murder of Pamela Fayed,” investigators said.

    On July 3, 2008, investigators said, “Fayed and his company — Goldfinger, Inc. — rented a Suzuki sport utility vehicle that was used by the killers at the Watt Tower parking garage where Pamela Fayed was killed.

    “The Suzuki SUV was driven to Fayed’s Ventura County ranch on Happy Camp Road after the killing,” according to investigators. Moya returned the vehicle to Avis the next day.

    OSC Document Outlined Purported Anderson/E-Bullion Meeting In 2003

    The OSC document filed in Canada is important — and we suggest you read every word of it from the link below — because exhibits in the document show the murkiness and just plain creepiness of the HYIP and Ponzi worlds. One exhibit suggests Anderson planned to meet with Fayed and his wife in 2003 to discuss business.

    The document also references Alishtari and FEDI, claiming an investment program was backed by $125 billion in gold. Among other things, the document lists the name of Goldfinger Coin & Bullion and an account number, along with directions on how to open an E-Bullion account.

    Screen shot: From exhibit in 2003 OSC filing.

    Also included in the document is a purported joint-venture agreement marked “STRICTLY CONFIDENTIAL” that purportedly was used by Anderson to recruit investors into an international fraud scheme.

    Parallels To AdSurfDaily Case

    Parts of the document include claims very similar to claims made by promoters of the alleged AdSurfDaily (ASD) Ponzi scheme in the United States. Anderson, for example, was positioned as a “very successful business executive” who attended a function to observe Alishtari receive an award “for Republican Business Man of the Year for the State of New York.” Similar claims were made about ASD President Andy Bowdoin.

    Investor payouts, according to an exhibit in the OSC document, were called “rebates.” ASD, whose assets were seized by the U.S. Secret Service in August 2008 amid Ponzi allegations, also called its payouts “rebates.” Exhibits in the OSC document were thick with references to God and family — another similarity to the ASD case.  Anderson’s efforts to promote the program were deemed “heroic,” and business was conducted in part from Boca Raton, Fla. ASD was thick with Florida members.

    In a purported email from Anderson dated April 17, 2003, according to an exhibit within the OSC document, Anderson laid out the case for the new venture.

    “Dear Family,” the email began. Chillingly, the email appears to reference Pamela Fayed, allegedly murdered by her husband and conspirators five years later. The email suggests there once were happy days between the Fayeds.

    “I am very pleased that my recommendations and leg work have paid off and the Alpha Project will be merging its gold value/currency transfer through E-Bullion,” the email purportedly sent by Anderson claimed.

    “E-Bullion is owned by a wonderful couple who have their roots in Egypt and, therefore, are Arab in descent. I will be spending personal time with them on Monday in California.”

    Screen shot: Exhibit of purported Anderson email in 2003 OSC filing.

    The email, which discusses a trip to Panama, promised investors an “offshore” company and outlined a plan to sell “debit cards” through vending machines that would be positioned in posts offices, hotels and college buildings.

    Put “$20 into a vending machine and the machine spits out a loaded Debit card for you,” the email said. “Now you can begin to see why the Alpha Project in will in time be another Microsoft in size.”

    Claims in HYIP and Ponzi schemes that a company is destined to become the “next” Microsoft or Google are common. Beyond that, the use of debit cards in the murky HYIP and autosurf words is becoming increasingly popular — as are appeals for investors to entrust funds to “offshore” businesses, amid claims that such businesses are outside the reach of U.S. law enforcement.

    Read the OSC document from 2003.

  • Receiver In Gold Quest International Ponzi Scheme Case Settles With Charles Capps Ministries For $100,000; Other GQI Money Is Part Of California Homicide Investigation

    breakingnewsAll that glitters was not gold in the seedy world of Gold Quest International (GQI), according to the receiver in the GQI Ponzi scheme case.

    Corrupt money was given to a ministry in the form of a gift, and other corrupt money is part of a homicide investigation in Los Angeles, according to court filings.

    Receiver Larry Cook has informed a federal judge that he has accepted a settlement of $100,000 from Charles Capp Ministries, saying the Oklahoma-based Christian organization unwittingly received fraudulent transfers of “at least” of $201,517 between January 2006 and August 2008 from the Ponzi scheme, according to court filings.

    “No allegations of fraud or securities violations were alleged against Charles Capps Ministries in the complaint filed by the SEC in this action,” Cook said. “Based on the information and belief of the receiver, Charles Capps Ministries was the unwitting recipient of investor funds from Defendant David Greene. Upon learning of the source of the funds it received from Greene, Charles Capps Ministries agreed to return the $100,000 settlement amount.”

    David Greene also is known as “Lord David Greene.” He is one of four named defendants in the SEC case. The others are GQI, John Jenkins and Michael McGee. The SEC filed the action in May 2008, and was hit almost immediately with a bizarre effort to undermine the prosecution.

    A litigant purporting to be the “attorney general” of a purported “sovereign” Indian tribe attempted unsuccessfully to file a lawsuit against the SEC for $1.7 trillion for enforcing securities laws. The GQI entity may have links to an extremist group — The Little Shell Pembina Band of North America — monitored by the Anti Defamation League.

    The ‘Goldfinger’ Murder

    Cook, who performed an international paper chase in the GQI case, further informed the judge that certain GQI assets are tied up in a homicide investigation in California.

    “The owner of E-Bullion was arrested in August 2008 for arranging the murder of his wife, a co-owner of E-Bullion,” Cook said. “The Receiver and the Commission have made numerous inquiries regarding future access to the E-Bullion business records and funds, and we have been advised the U.S. Attorney’s office has not made a decision on when or how these records and funds will be administered.”

    E-bullion co-founder James Fayed, 46, was charged with murder by the Los Angeles District Attorney’s office in September 2008. Prosecutors said he paid Jose Luis Moya, 49, a sum of $25,000 to arrange the murder of his wife, Pamela Fayed. The case has been dubbed the “Goldfinger Murder” in California.

    E-bullion was one of the payment processors used by GQI, which the SEC says operated a $28 million Ponzi scheme with Panamanian registration from Las Vegas. GQI purported to be immune from U.S. law because it was part of a “sovereign” Indian tribe in North Dakota.

    More than 2,100 investors from the United States and Canada participated in GQI. Participants perhaps received as much as $19 million in Ponzi payments, according to investigators in the United States and Canada.

    Cook reported that he had recovered only $389,145.57 to date by tracking money all over the world. Much of the money simply disappeared after making its way to New Zealand, he said.

    “Defendant David Greene has testified that he believed that GQI was going to pay investors the returns promised to them via the profits earned by GQI’s investments in Topaz Group Ltd., an entity based in New Zealand,” Cook said. “The Receiver has identified approximately $3.15 million in payments to Topaz Group from the Tri Fund Inc. account, David Greene[‘s] personal account, and John Jenkins[‘] personal account.

    “The Receiver identified and contacted the owner of Topaz Group Ltd., John Davies, in New Zealand,” Cook continued. “Davies advised the Receiver that the funds he received from David Greene were sent to him on behalf of David Greene. Davies stated that Greene always represented that the investment was Greene’s personal investment and it was not until February 2008 that Greene disclosed the funds belonged to an investment group. Davies stated the funds were not for a specific investment, but were used to fund the expenses of individuals working in Europe to complete various banking transactions that were scheduled to close and pay large profits. Davies further stated that none of these transactions were successful.

    “The Receiver, with the Commission’s assistance, has obtained copies of the Topaz Group Ltd. bank account records in New Zealand,” Cook said. “The Receiver has examined and analyzed this account and determined the majority of the funds transferred by Greene to Topaz were immediately transferred from the Topaz Group business account to the account of Wendy Smurthwaite Davies, the wife of John Davies. A small percentage of the funds Greene sent to Topaz were wired to the individuals identified by John Davies as working on the banking transactions in Europe, and the remainder appear to be used for Topaz Group’s miscellaneous expenses.

    “The Receiver and the Commission have participated in conference calls with the New Zealand law enforcement authorities,” Cook said. “The Receiver has provided the New Zealand investigators with information concerning transfers of investor funds from Defendants Greene and Jenkins to Topaz Group Ltd.”

    For additional information see this document from the Alberta Securities Commission.

    See this filing by the SEC.

    Cook also is the receiver in the case against Affiliate Strategies Inc., the parent company of the Noobing autosurf. Noobing pitched itself to individuals with hearing impairments.