Tag: Freedom Conference 2010

  • AdSurfDaily Cited In INetGlobal/Steve Renner Search Warrant Application; Former Company CEO Helped Agents Prior To Raid; Undercover Agent Joined Surf Program; Agents Witnessed Spectacle At New York Function

    The U.S. Secret Service observed Minnesota-based INetGlobal’s operations for weeks in January, dispatched undercover agents to join the autosurf, learned that a bank recently had closed accounts tied to the firm amid money-laundering suspicions — and already had received incriminating information from the firm’s former chief executive officer prior to executing multiple search warrants Tuesday, according to records.

    Agents even traveled to a company function in New York, mixed in with the audience and observed INetGlobal owner Steve Renner, according to records. The function was known as “Freedom Conference 2010.”

    Most of the attendees were Chinese, the Secret Service said.

    “[C]onference registration took a long time because nobody at the registration desk spoke Chinese, and many of the conference attendees could not make themselves understood in English,” the agency said.  “There was an interpreter in the main hall, but Renner often spoke over the interpreter.”

    At one point, Renner started a pandemonium by holding up $20 bills, which he began handing out to attendees in exchange for $10 bills, the agency said.

    “This caused a crush of people to approach the front of the hall, and Renner eventually needed assistance moving people back,” the Secret Service said. “Renner asked, through an interpreter, how many people in attendance had their own business, and only two raised their hands.”

    Steven Keough, a retired naval officer who was INetGlobal’s CEO for only weeks before being fired by Renner, contacted federal prosecutors Jan. 8 to report concerns about Renner and the company, according to court documents.

    Meanwhile, the search-warrant application cites the government’s prosecution of assets tied to Florida-based AdSurfDaily and a Jan. 4 order of forfeiture by U.S. District Judge Rosemary Collyer to bolster the case against INetGlobal and related companies. The application also cites the successful prosecution of the 12DailyPro and Phoenix Surf Ponzi schemes by the SEC.

    As was the case in the ASD prosecution, the Secret Service raised allegations of Ponzi fraud, wire fraud and money-laundering against INetGlobal, saying the company had grossly overstated its membership numbers, had co-mingled funds and operated the business in slipshod fashion.

    Agency Assigns Veteran From ASD Case To INetGlobal Case

    At least one of the Secret Service agents involved in the INetGlobal investigation also was involved in the ASD investigation, according to the search-warrant affidavit. Agents located an INetGlobal sales pitch online, and the agent involved in the ASD probe called the INetGlobal member.

    Out of the gate, INetGlobal was described by the member as a wink-nod proposition, the Secret Service said — and it turned out that the INetGlobal member also had been an ASD member.

    “The member said he had previously been a member of ASD . . . and said, ‘We know what happened there,’” the Secret Service said. “The member said he was reluctant to join iNetGlobal due to it being similar to ASD.

    “The member said, ‘we all know what this program is.’ The member said his daughter and wife surfed the websites and the member did not care about the services provided. The member said he just wanted to put his money in and get it out. The member said you convert your earnings to V-cash and then receive payouts by check or through an ATM card you can sign up for. The member said members earn a daily return on their investment but that he was not sure what he exactly earned. The member said he has not been able to figure out the percentage of return due to the convoluted information provided on the iNetGlobal website.”

    Regardless of the member’s own concerns about the program, the member nonetheless was eager to recruit the undercover Secret Service agent, according to the affidavit.

    “The member pushed [the undercover agent] to join and wanted to conduct a three way call with his sponsor,” the Secret Service said. “The member said bringing in new members under you was the best way to earn maximum returns.”

    CEO Met With Secret Service Prior To Raid

    Keough’s holds a Bachelor of Science in Chinese from the U.S. Naval Academy at Annapolis, Md.; a Master of Arts in Congressional Studies from the Catholic University of America, Washington, D.C.; and a law degree from Boston College Law School.

    After working for INetGlobal for only weeks, Keough said things going on inside the firm made no sense and he had come to believe Renner had hired him as a “good face” for the company, according to the search-warrant application.

    Keough told agents he believed Renner fired him for asking too many questions, according to the filings.

    “Keough described what he called his first ‘red flags,’ which were the reported size (50,000 members) and purported revenue ($100 million) of iNetGlobal; the complete disarray and disorganization of the businesses; and the seemingly small outside legitimate income,” the Secret Service said. “Keough further stated that the companies’ website never seemed to work properly, making him question what customers who purchased the advertising service alone, without the possibility of rebates, were getting for their money.

    “Keough said on occasion he witnessed Renner manually manipulating the iNetGlobal system to pay out percentages that were different, and smaller, from the percentage listed on the iNetGlobal website,” the Secret Service continued. “Keough also wondered how, with so little outside income, the company could pay these outlandish returns. Keough said Renner would explain away his concerns by telling him how beneficial the advertising was and about all the different levels a member could achieve. Keough said, ‘I never really understood how it could work.’

    “Renner told him iNetGlobal had 50,000 members, had been in business for 10 years, was debt free, and had made over $100 million in revenue. Keough said he later learned all these facts were ‘lies.’

    “Keough further stated that Renner used the misleading information in power point presentations and webinars to recruit others,” the agency said.

    Once becoming CEO, “Keough conducted his own internal audit and found, contrary to Renner’s statements, that iNetGlobal had only approximately 30,000 members, iNetGlobal had only been in business for 14 months, there were huge liabilities associated with the members’ ‘investments’ and the company’s estimated revenue was approximately $28 million, not the $100 million in revenue claimed by Renner.

    “Keough said he was particularly alarmed because he knew Renner and/or representatives of iNetGlobal were using these false statements to promote and market iNetGlobal to would-be members (investors),” the Secret Service said. “Keough believed these false statements caused individuals to invest with iNetGlobal.’

    “Keough said he had an iNetGlobal employee conduct an analysis to determine the member liability,” the Secret Service said. “The employee reported back to Keough that at least 87% of the company’s revenue was generated from sale of memberships to members residing in China.”

    The search-warrant application also claimed that a company Renner owned provided payment-processing services for a Ponzi scheme called “Learn Waterhouse,” which was smashed by the SEC in 2004.

    When a court-appointed receiver asked Renner to turn over funds to the receivership estate by converting electronic credits to cash, it was learned that Renner could not do it because he had “invested” more than $2.5 million in Learn Waterhouse V-Credits on “stamps, coins, Salvador Dali sculptures, autographed letters, guitars and amplifiers, fractional interests in motion picture companies, and fractional interests in oil wells, among other things.

    “Additional sums of customers’ money had been spent by Renner personally, including on daily living expenses,” the Secret Service said.