Tag: TelexFree Group Inc.

  • TelexFree A No-Show At Alabama Hearing; Litigation Involving Firm Piles Up

    newtelexfreelogoUPDATED 12:25 P.M. EDT U.S.A. Immersed in litigation on at least 10 fronts in the United States while also confronting licensing challenges and asset freezes, TelexFree did not appear last month at a hearing it requested to consider its telecom application before the Alabama Public Service Commission.

    As things stand, the company is not authorized to operate in the state. The May 13 hearing began, according to a transcript published June 4, with an administrative law judge polling the room for appearances on behalf of the state and TelexFree. Two officials from the Commission entered appearances.

    “Let the record reflect that no one has appeared on behalf of the applicant,” noted Administrative Law Judge Scott Morris.

    The Commission then noted a TelexFree matter before the Minnesota Public Utilities Commission. In April, the staff of the Minnesota PUC asked the state to deny the firm the authority to operate, amid allegations it had provided “false and misleading information” during the application process.

    Morris, according to the Alabama transcript, then noted that “unless [TelexFree] requests rescheduling and pays the court reporter fees for not appearing, this application will not go forward. It will be dismissed.”

    TelexFree initially was scheduled to appear at an Alabama hearing on April 10, but asked for the session to be postponed “for a month” owing to unspecified “scheduling conflicts.”  One of those scheduling conflicts now appears to have been the logistics associated with filing for bankruptcy in Nevada less than a month after TelexFree assured Alabama regulators it had the financial wherewithal to operate in the state.

    The Commission accommodated TelexFree by rescheduling the April 10 hearing for May 13, but TelexFree did not show.

    TelexFree’s Alabama application asserted that TelexFree LLC had a “parent company” known as “TelexFree Group Inc.” Where it is based is unclear. A provision of the TelexFree LLC “Operating Agreement” included in the Alabama application purported to permit TelexFree LLC “[t]o lend money upon terms acceptable to the Managers to any person or entity, and to enter into contracts and agreements which are not arms-length if they are consistent with the best interests of the Company.”

    On April 13, TelexFree declared bankruptcy. The Massachusetts Securities Division (MSD) and the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) filed fraud allegations shortly thereafter. MSD described TelexFree as a combined pyramid- and Ponzi fraud that had gathered more than $1.2 billion.

    Less than a month earlier, on March 20, TelexFree filed for its license in Alabama, saying it had 2013 net income of more than $36.4 million and that its “current financials Show considerable net worth.” The document described “Joe Craft” as holding the “Official Title” of “CFO” of TelexFree LLC.

    As the PP Blog reported on April 21 (italics added):

    Page 15 [of the Alabama application] includes an oath recorded March 5, 2014, before a Massachusetts notary public. The oath bears the name and signature of Jim Merrill, who is listed as “President” of TelexFree LLC. The oath attests that the information in the Alabama document — an “Application for a Certificate of Public Convenience and Necessity to provide interexchange telecommunications services in Alabama” — is true to the best of Merrill’s knowledge and belief.

    The document appears accidentally to have identified Merrill as a woman, given that the certification line actually reads “the statements made herein are true to the best of her [emphasis added by PP Blog] knowledge and belief. Merrill appears not to have noticed when signing the document.

    Despite the sworn oath of Merrill that Craft was the “Official” TelexFree “CFO” on March 5, 2014, however, TelexFree’s board appears not to have named Craft CFO until sometime after 8:11 p.m. on April 13, 2014, the same day TelexFree and related entities filed for bankruptcy in Nevada.

    According to TelexFree’s bankruptcy filing, “Joe H. Craft” of “Joe H. Craft, CPA” was present at the meeting, which was called to order by Carlos Wanzeler.

    During the meeting, the board and other attendees, including CPA Craft, “considered the Company’s liabilities, the strategic alternatives available to it, and the impact of each of the foregoing on the Company’s businesses,” according to the bankruptcy filing.

    During the meeting, the board decided to file for bankruptcy. It then was resolved that “Joe H. Craft” would become one of TelexFree’s “authorized persons.” After this resolution, it then was resolved that “the Authorized Persons be, and they hereby are, authorized and directed to employ the accounting firm of Joe H. Craft, CPA to provide Joe H. Craft to serve as Chief Financial Officer of the Company while the Chapter 11 case is pending and to assist the Company in carrying out its duties under the Bankruptcy Code.”

    Another resolution resolved that “Joe H. Craft be, and he hereby is, elected to serve as Chief Financial Officer of the Company.”

    On April 15, the SEC accused TelexFree, Merrill, Wanzeler and Craft civilly of fraud. Merrill and Wanzeler later were charged criminally with wire-fraud conspiracy. Interim TelexFree CEO Stuart MacMillan said he fired Wanzeler on April 17 and asked Merrill and Craft to resign.

    Page 19 of the 99-page Alabama filing showed an image of a March 8, 2014, document from the office of Alabama Secretary of State Jim Bennett. The document noted that the name TelexFree LLC was “reserved as available” in the state.

    “This name reservation is for the exclusive use of BWFC Processing Center, LLC, 825 East Main St, Boonville, IN 47601 for a period of one year beginning March 08, 2014 and expiring March 08, 2015,” the document reads in part.

    The East Main Street address is the address of both Craft’s accounting firm and the address of BWFC Processing Center LLC, a company listed in New Hampshire as a payment processor. A company with the same name operates in Nevada and provides registered-agent services.

    The SEC said in a complaint that Craft was hired as TelexFree’s accountant in April 2012 and “was sometimes held out as the company’s CFO.”

    Craft is accused of preparing “materially false and misleading” TelexFree financial statements.

    His work for TelexFree “was fraudulent and deceptive, because TelexFree was a Ponzi and pyramid scheme that was destined to collapse, thereby preventing it from making the payments promised to investors,” the SEC alleged.

    The PUCs of Nevada and Hawaii have booted TelexFree, with licensing issues unsettled in Minnesota, Alabama and other states.

    TelexFree is facing civil actions by the SEC and MSD, litigation in bankruptcy court, criminal prosecutions against Merrill and Wanzeler, a criminal grand-jury investigation in Massachusetts, forfeiture actions and at least four prospective class-action lawsuits.

    The firm says on its website that it “has suspended all business activity.”

  • ZEEK-BEATER: TelexFree LLC Filings In Alabama Say Firm Posted ‘Total Income’ Of Nearly $700 Million In 2013; Thursday Hearing On Telecom Application In State Delayed At Company’s Request; Firm May Be Filing Cookie-Cutter Applications With Regulators

    telexfreealabama

    UPDATED 4:50 P.M. EDT (U.S.A.) The TelexFree LLC branch of the TelexFree enterprise posted more than $691 million in “total income” last year, according to a filing with the Alabama Public Service Commission. (The PP Blog retrieved the filing today and saved it as TelexFreeAlabamaApplication.pdf. See link below.)

    TelexFree asked that the document be “FILED UNDER SEAL.” Regardless, the document was published on Alabama’s website. The date-stamp reads March 20, 2014. Among other things, the document asserts that TelexFree LLC, a Nevada entity, was formed with three “initial” managers.

    These include Brazil-based manager Carlos Costa (30 percent), Massachusetts-based manager Carlos N. Wanzeler (50 percent) and Massachusetts-based manager James M. Merrill (20 percent), according to the document.

    TelexFree, a two-year-old MLM company, says it offers a VOIP telephony service and is expanding into services such as cell phones, apps, credit repair and financial advice.

    Other filings in Alabama show that TelexFree requested a hearing scheduled April 10 to consider its application for “Resale Interexchange Authority” to be postponed “for a month” owing to unspecified “scheduling conflicts.” Alabama has reset the hearing for May 13.

    A week ago TelexFree promoters jammed themselves into a small office in Massachusetts that is the base of another TelexFree enterprise — TelexFree Inc. The promoters claimed that recent changes to the TelexFree compensation plan eliminated or negated payments to them. Police responded to the office in Marlborough.

    In its Alabama filings, TelexFree LLC asserted it incurred expenses last year of “[$]572,240,960.21” in a category dubbed “Agent Commission – paid through system.” It also incurred expenses of “[$]50,424,998.61” in a category dubbed “Agent Commission – paid through bank.” Other line-item expenses are listed in the document, which says the firm’s “net income” last year was more than $36.4 million.

    The Alabama filing did not cover TelexFree LLC revenue and expenses year-to-date in 2014. Nor did it cover revenue and expenses for 2012 or revenue and expenses for related TelexFree enterprises. Some affiliates have said they believe TelexFree has gathered $1 billion or more since its inception in early 2012.

    How much revenue TelexFree Inc. of Massachusetts has posted is unclear. In early 2013, affiliates said recruits could deposit money into a TelexFree Inc. bank account in the state. Those instructions closely resembled instructions given to members of the $119 million AdSurfDaily Ponzi scheme in 2008.

    So-called “AdCentral” packages purchased for sums ranging from $289 to $1,375 might be (or might have been) TelexFree’s key revenue-generator. Affiliates have claimed that $289 sent to TelexFree returned $1,040 in a year and that $1,375 returned $5,200. On an annualized basis, the asserted returns equate to roughly 365 percent, fueling claims that TelexFree is a pyramid scheme, a Ponzi scheme — or both.

    Under a scenario based on the assertions of TelexFree affiliates, BehindMLM.com estimates that TelexFree may have AdCentral-related liabilities of more than $4 billion. On March 24, the PP Blog reported that an ad offering 550 AdCentrals for $16,760 appeared online, leading to questions about whether some affiliates had created a black market for the AdCentrals and were trying to sell them in advance of a TelexFree payout suspension.

    TelexFree is under investigation by the Massachusetts Securities Division. It’s also under investigation in Brazil, amid pyramid-scheme allegations. Among the concerns is that TelexFree’s VOIP telecommunications product is a front to mask an investment scheme. Certain TelexFree assets are frozen in Brazil.

    In 2012, the SEC charged a “program” known as Zeek Rewards with operating a massive, international Ponzi- and pyramid scheme that had gathered more than $600 million in less than two years. TelexFree’s filings in Alabama assert that it gathered more than $691 million last year alone.

    Filings by the SEC now suggest Zeek may have gathered $850 million or more. If claims by TelexFree affiliates that their “program” gathered more than $1 billion are true — and if TelexFree later is deemed a fraud scheme — it could surpass Zeek as the largest MLM HYIP Ponzi/pyramid scheme based on U.S. soil and reaching into other countries.

    TelexFree has purported to have more than 1 million members in Brazil alone. There may be 50,000 or more TelexFree members in the United States.

    The Alabama filing asserts that TelexFree LLC has a “parent company” known as “TelexFree Group Inc.” Where it is based is unclear. A provision of the TelexFree LLC “Operating Agreement” included in the Alabama application purports to permit TelexFree LLC “[t]o lend money upon terms acceptable to the Managers to any person or entity, and to enter into contracts and agreements which are not arms-length if they are consistent with the best interests of the Company.”

    Based on filings in both Alabama and Washington state, TelexFree appears to have made loans totaling more than $6.6 million to other TelexFree enterprises. (See March 9, 2014, PP Blog story.)

    Read the Alabama filing, parts of which appear to confuse Alabama with the state of South Carolina. (For example, the Alabama Public Service Commission is based in Montgomery, the state capital. TelexFree LLC’s Alabama application, however, appears to direct Alabama residents to contact the “Office of Regulatory Staff” in South Carolina’s capital of Columbia if a billing dispute arises.)

    If there is a dispute, TelexFree LLC says, “the Customer may appeal to the Alabama Public Service Commission for its investigation at the following address and/or phone number:

    “Office of Regulatory Staff
    “Consumer Services Division
    “1401 Main Street, Suite 900
    Columbia, SC 29201”