Tag: U.S. Court of Appeals for the First Circuit

  • Appeals Court Upholds 20-Year Prison Sentence Of Seng Tan, Mercedes-Driving Pyramid Schemer Who Blamed Hurricane Katrina For Payment Delays And Told Members That The ‘Gods’ Had Sent Her To Make Them Millionaires

    EDITOR’S NOTE: Simply put, the World Marketing Direct Selling (WMDS) and OneUniverseOnline (1UOL) pyramid scheme of James Bunchan and Seng Tan was one of the ugliest — if not the ugliest — in U.S. history. Bunchan eventually was implicated in a a murder-for-hire plot in which 12 witnesses and a federal prosecutor in Massachusetts were discussed as targets.

    Bunchan was convicted in both the pyramid case and the murder-for-hire case, which was brought separately. He was sentenced to a combined 60 years in federal prison, sentences upheld by the U.S. Court of Appeals.

    Tan was sentenced to 20 years for her role in the WMDS/1UOL pyramid scheme, which also was a Ponzi scheme. The U.S. Court of Appeals for the First Circuit now has upheld that conviction. The opinion of the panel was written by Circuit Judge Ojetta Rogeriee Thompson in exceptionally straightforward language apt to put readers “right there.”

    A link to the full opinion appears at the bottom of this story . . .

    “She usually made quite an entrance, showing up in a chauffeur-driven Mercedes . . . Tan’s pitch was quite attractive. She and Bunchan were millionaires, she said, and the ‘gods’ had sent her to make ‘the Cambodian people’ millionaires too.”First Circuit Judge Ojetta Rogeriee Thompson, writing for the court and denying the appeal of Seng Tang in the WMDS/1UOL pyramid-scheme case, March 23, 2012

    An affinity fraudster who ran a $20 million pyramid scheme with her husband has lost her bid to overturn her conviction and 20-year prison sentence.

    Writing for the U.S. Court of Appeals for the First Circuit, Judge Ojetta Rogeriee Thompson laid out the thinking of a three-judge panel that denied the appeal of Seng Tan, who ran the fraud scheme with James Bunchan.

    Using exceptionally straightforward language in the 17-page opinion, Thompson recounted the nature of the pyramid case. The opinion began with a subhead titled “SETTING THE STAGE.”

    “A federal jury convicted James Bunchan and Seng Tan, a husband and wife team, of numerous mail-fraud, money-laundering, and conspiracy crimes committed in furtherance of a classic pyramid scheme that swindled some 500 people out of roughly $20,000,000 in the early to mid-2000s,” the opinion began. “Fellow scammer Christian Rochon pled guilty to similar charges on the first day of trial, and his testimony in the prosecution’s case helped seal the couple’s fate.”

    Thompson next described the venture, below a subhead titled “THE SCHEME.”

    “Bunchan founded and owned two self-styled multi-level marketing (MLM) companies — World Marketing Direct Selling (WMDS) and Oneuniverseonline (1UOL) — that supposedly made a mint selling health and dietary supplements. In a legit MLM venture — think Avon, Mary Kay, Amway (companies Tan had worked for) — each person who joins the sales force also becomes a recruiter who brings in other persons underneath her. But the venture survives by making money off of product sales, not off of new recruits.

    “Not so with WMDS and 1UOL,” Thompson continued. “Neither sold much of anything, and both raised gobs of money almost exclusively by recruiting new investors, also called members.”

    “Here,” Thompson continued, “is how it all worked.” (Italics added.)

    Bunchan tasked Tan with drumming up new members, something she was born to do, apparently. Both she and Bunchan are Cambodian émigrés. And they focused their recruitment efforts primarily on Cambodians living here, many of whom were first-generation Cambodian-Americans who had limited educations and spoke little English. As “CEO Executive National Marketing Director,” Tan ran informational seminars for potential investors, meeting them at hotels, their homes, and elsewhere. She usually made quite an entrance, showing up in a chauffeur-driven Mercedes. And she spoke to the attendees in their native language (Khmer), stressing their common background too (including their shared experiences living in Cambodia during the murderous reign of the Khmer Rouge).

    Tan’s pitch was quite attractive. She and Bunchan were millionaires, she said, and the “gods” had sent her to make “the Cambodian people” millionaires too. She bragged about how profitable both companies were thanks to high product sales, which earned members at the “Distributor” level fantastic sales commissions. But a member did not have to sell a single item to make money, she explained. For a lump-sum payment of $26,347.86, an investor could skip the Distributor level, become a “Director I,” and get an immediate “bonus” of $2,797, plus $300 every month for the rest of her life, her children’s lives, their children’s lives, and so on. Promotional pamphlets also promised investors that if they recruited more members and kicked in more money (any where from $130,000-$160,000), they could become “Gold Directors” and earn even higher never-ending monthly payouts (something like $2,500 a month). And Tan urged persons short on cash to take out second mortgages or home-equity loans or to borrow money from their retirement accounts to finance their investments, and more than 150 people did. She even had members sign forms so that the loan proceeds would be wired directly to WMDS or 1UOL.

    When prospective investors asked her point-blank whether they had to sell company merchandise to get money, Tan answered no. She and Bunchan reduced their promises to writing, with Tan even signing letters guaranteeing monthly returns basically forever.

    In words that could describe many corrupt ventures, Thompson noted that the “scheme started out swimmingly.

    “WMDS and 1UOL used newly-invested money to trick old investors into thinking that the good times were here to stay,” Thompson wrote.  “Not knowing any better, members were ecstatic. Bunchan and Tan were too, obviously. And with cash pouring in, the pair used the companies’ coffers as their own personal piggy bank.”

    The Beginning Of The End — And A ‘Hurricane’ Explanation

    It frequently is the case in the universes of corrupt “opportunites,” including HYIPS, that the weather gets blamed when payment problems develop — so much so, that explanations involving high winds have become an investment-fraud cliché.

    Such was the case in the WMDS/1UOL scam.

    “[Tan] started having trouble signing up new investors,” Thompson wrote. “So WMDS and 1UOL stopped mailing out the monthly checks. Members revolted, naturally. Tan tried to quell the uprising, blaming the ‘delay’ on banking glitches caused by Hurricane Katrina and telling members that they would get their checks soon — out-and-out lies, the record reveals.”

    Even more fraud clichés came into play, including thefts from family members to prop up the scheme, the continued gathering of funds while the enterprise was tanking and the issuance of selective payouts to calm nervous investors and sustain the deception.

    “Worse still,” Thompson wrote, “after getting an earful from irate investors, Tan flew to Minnesota and raked in hundreds of thousands of dollars — bilking her son-in-law out of $150,000 and his friend out of $300,000 — making the same false promises of unending returns she had made before. And she herself decided which lucky member would get a check from the new money — an ill-conceived stopgap measure, it turns out.”

    The ruling also includes a footnote that speaks to yet-another investment-fraud cliché: the appointment of a “name-only” executive to become the face of an enterprise. This was the alleged role of Rochon, the purported “president.”

    “A high-school graduate, Rochon became president (in name only, though) for one reason, and one reason only: Bunchan wanted an ‘American face’ for his companies, and his neighbor Rochon (a Caucasian of Canadian decent) apparently fit the bill,” the footnote reads. “And after renting Rochon a suit jacket and taking him to a professional photographer, Bunchan had Rochon’s photo plastered all over the companies’ promotional pamphlets.”

    Read the ruling and the dissection of the legal issues here.

  • BULLETIN: Appeals Court Upholds Conviction Of James Bunchan, Pyramid Schemer Who Scammed Investors, Plotted Murder Of 12 Witnesses And Identified Federal Prosecutor As Possible Homicide Target

    BULLETIN: The U.S. Court of Appeals for the First Circuit has upheld the conviction of James Bunchan in a murder-for-hire plot that grew from a pyramid scheme that gathered $20 million and mostly targeted people of Cambodian descent.

    Federal prosecutors described the pyramid scheme as “devastating,” saying it relied on smoke and mirrors to fleece more than 500 victims, many of whom lacked command of English and had little formal education.

    While awaiting trial in the pyramid case, Bunchan discussed hiring a hitman to kill Assistant U.S. Attorney Jack Pirozzolo of the District of Massachusetts. Pirozzolo specializes in prosecuting economic crimes.

    Bunchan was the founder and owner of World Marketing Direct Selling (WMDS) and OneUniverseOnline (1UOL), which were positioned as purveyors of cosmetics, health and dietary supplements.

    The pyramid scheme collapsed in early 2005. Federal prosecutors said the companies generated money almost exclusively through the recruitment of new investors or “members.”

    While jailed in Massachusetts awaiting trial in the pyramid case, Bunchan hatched a murder-for-hire plot that called for 12 people be believed would testify against him to be killed. The FBI became aware of the plot and staged a sting in which Bunchan believed an assassin named “Jamal” would carry out the murders for a fee.

    “Jamal” actually was an undercover police officer posing as a hitman.

    Bunchan first was convicted on the pyramid charges and sentenced to 35 years in federal prison. After the pyramid trial, he was tried on charges flowing from the murder-for-hire plot. A jury returned guilty verdicts in the murder-for-hire plot, and Bunchan was sentenced to 25 years.

    All in all, Bunchan’s pyramid scheme resulted in sentences totaling 60 years. His bids to overturn convictions in both cases now have failed.

    Pirozzolo, who joined the Justice Department in 2003 and encountered the Bunchan pyramid case two years later, was promoted to First Assistant U.S. Attorney for the District of Massachusetts last year.

    In 2007, Pirozzolo received the Justice Department’s Director’s Award for his role in the investigation and prosecution of illegal mutual fund market timing conduct occurring at Prudential Securities Inc.

    Pirozzolo also received the Chief Postal Inspector Award for his work on the Prudential market timing cases. In 2008, he received a Victim Rights Award for his work on the Bunchan case.

    Visit Leagle.com to read the murder-for-hire appeals decision against Bunchan.

  • KABOOM! Federal Judge Was Right When He Ordered Marketers To Pay $48.2 Million In False-Advertising Case Brought By FTC, Appeals Panel Rules; ‘Complete Absence Of Support’ For Most Claims Made About Supreme Greens And Coral Calcium Dietary Supplements

    The name of infomercial pitchman Kevin Trudeau is cited in an unsuccessful appeal of an order to pay $48.2 million for false advertising. Trudeau, a convicted felon who has clashed with the FTC multiple times, is not a party to the order.

    UPDATED 11:44 A.M. EDT (U.S.A.) So, you want to tell customers that your products cure diseases ranging from cancer to Parkinson’s and multiple sclerosis? And when critics and investigators and lawyers begin to ask tough questions, you want to deflect?

    And when a federal judge orders you to pay $48.2 million for making deceptive claims, you want to turn to the U.S. Court of Appeals and claim the critics got it all wrong, the FTC got it all wrong, expert witnesses got it all wrong  and the judge who ordered you to pay got it all wrong — and you want the appeals court to believe your claims were “mere puffery and were mollified by disclaimers?”

    Get ready to write a big check and return your ill-gotten gains: The U.S. Court of Appeals for the First Circuit has upheld the order to pay issued by U.S. District Judge George O’Toole in a case involving what the FTC described as the “phony health claims” made by marketers of dietary supplements known as “Supreme Greens” and “Coral Calcium.”

    Infomercial pitchman Kevin Trudeau hawked the purported benefits of coral-derived calcium on TV, settling the FTC claim for $2 million and a ban from making infomercials for products other than books. The FTC action that led to the appeal by other defendants was brought in 2004.

    The ruling by the appeals court upholding the $48.2 million penalty, however, cites passages from an infomercial in which Trudeau asked Robert Barefoot — referred to in court filings as a “purported” expert — questions.

    “Barefoot claimed that all diseases are caused by a condition called acidosis,” according to court documents. Here is part of what Barefoot said  (red added):

    “Are you getting the minerals? And if you’re not, you will become acidic and you will get one of the major diseases. You can have heart disease, cancer, lupus, fibromyalgia, multiple sclerosis. Name the disease, they’re all caused by acidosis.”

    Barefoot then claimed that calcium derived from Okinawan coral cured cancer and helped multiple-sclerosis patients emerge from their wheelchairs.

    “[W]e’ve been studying the coral calcium and I can tell you there are tens of millions of people, millions of testimonials. I’ve had 1,000 people tell me how they’ve cured their cancer. I’ve witnessed people get out of wheelchairs with multiple sclerosis just by getting on the coral.”

    “Barefoot asserted that coral-derived calcium was an effective cure for these diseases because it renders the body more alkaline, thereby curing acidosis,” according to court filings.

    The appeals filing cites infomercial exchanges between Trudeau and Barefoot (bolding added):

    Trudeau (host ): Pain, talk about pain. Read in your book if a person has pain, muscle
    pain, joint pain –

    Barefoot: Yes, yes.

    Trudeau: – they take calcium –

    Barefoot: Yes.

    Trudeau: – their body turns from acid to alkaline, pain goes away.

    Barefoot: That’s exactly –

    Trudeau: Is that common?

    Barefoot: Yes, yes, very common.

    Deflections and ambiguities then became part of the case, according to court filings (bolding added):

    “Barefoot went on to claim that coral-derived calcium is superior to other sources of calcium because it is 100% bioavailable, meaning that all coral-derived calcium that is ingested is also absorbed into the body.

    “To bolster his claims, Barefoot noted that unspecified articles from the Journal of the American Medical Association and the New England Journal of Medicine ‘said that calcium supplements reverse cancer . . . that’s a quote.’”

    “The infomercial directed potential customers to call an 800 number, on the other end of which DMC-employed telemarketers would follow a script directing them to tell potential customers that the product Coral Calcium would be 100% absorbed by their bodies and would combat degenerative diseases by rendering an acidic body more alkaline.

    “Telemarketers were also directed to tell sick customers that they should take higher doses of Coral Calcium, up to three times the standard dose. During the relevant time period (from January 2002 to July 2003), the Coral Calcium infomercial generated $54,034,394.82 in sales . . .”

    In a passage from the appeal documents in which the panel referred to a deposition by Barefoot in the case, the panel raised again the issues of defection and ambiguity (bolding added):

    “Indeed, Barefoot’s deposition testimony primarily relies on appeals to generic authority; his standard rhetorical practice is to assert that there are myriad studies that support a given claim, without identifying any specifically,” the appeals panel noted.

    It footnoted two examples:

    “For example, Barefoot claims that he ‘hired the No. 1 scientist in America . . . and he did a peer-review study all over the world and came up with thousands and thousands of references’”; and that ‘I could load you up where it would take you ten years to get out of this building before you read all the people that say calcium prevents cancer’”; and that “[t]ens of thousands of scientists are saying that [calcium prevents cancer], and I can show you the documents.’”

    “For example, when asked about the public availability of these uncountable studies, Barefoot said ‘I have just finished a book called Let’s Cure Humanity, in which I give you 1,000 scientific references. You’re asking for them. I’m giving them to you. I will also give you 100 scientific quotations from the world’s best scientists, and the quotations are startling: reverses PMS, it reverses cancer; that it reverses diabetes . . . ..”

    In upholding Judge O’Toole’s findings and the $48.2 million judgment, the appeals panel ruled that he had applied the court’s “equitable authority to fashion an appropriate remedy, ordering the Defendants to cure their customers in a way that their bogus supplements could not.”

    O’Toole issued the payment order in August 2009, requiring infomercial pitchman Donald W. Barrett, Robert Maihos and their two companies — Direct Marketing Concepts Inc. and ITV Direct Inc. — to pony up for false advertising.

    Read the decision by the appeals panel.

    In a settlement with the FTC in 2004, Barefoot agreed not to make deceptive claims. He disputes that he ever did anything wrong in touting the efficacy of coral calcium.

    “We have cooperated with the FTC, and have reached a settlement, whereby, even though Barefoot is innocent, he pleads guilty and thereby avoids a very expensive trial, which even if he won, would not compensate him for his losses,” his website notes.