Jury Convicts Texas Man of $50 Million Ponzi Scheme

A Texas man was convicted of orchestrating a $50 million Ponzi scheme whose victims included members of a church congregation and former professional football players.  Kurt Barton, 44, had faced thirty-nine criminal counts relating to his former tenure at the helm of Triton Financial, which prosecutors said was nothing more than a giant Ponzi scheme.  Barton faces decades in prison after being convicted of conspiracy, securities fraud, 15 counts of wire fraud, five counts of false statement related to a loan and 17 counts of money laundering.  

According to prosecutors, Barton took in more than $75 million from nearly 300 investors while operating Triton Financial.  Of that amount, only $20 million was spent on legitimate operations, while the remainder went to fund Barton's lavish lifestyle, fund business operations, and to make interest payments to existing investors.  Barton solicited investors that their funds would be used for a variety of purported legitimate business activities, including real estate investment and short-term business lending.  Barton also employed several former NFL players, including Ty Detmer and Chris Weinke, to promote the business to outside investors.  Several of those players also lost money with Barton.

United States District Judge Sam Sparks ordered Barton jailed despite pleas from his attorneys to remain free on bond until sentencing.  The United States Probation Department will prepare a sentencing report with a recommended sentence.  Sentencing is currently scheduled for November 4.  

A copy of the indictment is here.

The website of the Receiver appointed over Triton Financial is here.

Final Arguments set for Wednesday for Texas Businessman Accused of $50 Million Ponzi Scheme

Final arguments are set for Wednesday in the trial of a Texas investment manager accused of orchestrating a $50 million Ponzi scheme.  Kurt Barton, of Austin, Texas, has been on trial for over a week in a Texas federal court, where he stands accused of nearly forty charges including conspiracy to commit wire fraud, securities fraud, making false statements to secure loans, and money laundering.  If convicted of the charges, Barton faces a maximum sentence that could amount to several effective life sentences.

Barton, the former chief executive of Triton Financial, is accused of operating a Ponzi scheme between December 2005 and December 2009 that raised approximately $75 million from investors.  According to the indictment, potential investors were offered varying deals involving real estate, including entailing investments in existing real estate or the promise to purchase real estate with investor funds.  Barton allegedly employed former professional athletes, such as Ty Detmer and Chris Weinke, to act as salesmen for the deals and to lend credibility to the business.  Former NFL kicker Ty Detmer is listed as another victim of Barton's scheme.  Barton's attorneys have contested the charges, portraying Barton as an honest businessman who fell victim to ill-advised land deals and a faltering economy.  Barton chose not to testify in the trial.

A federal jury will be asked to deliberate Barton's fate following closing arguments.  A receiver has been appointed to recover assets for the benefit of defrauded investors, but reports have indicated that not enough funds exist to fully repay investors.  

 

Nine Year Prison Sentence for California Ponzi Schemer

A Los Angeles man was sentenced to nine years in federal prison for operating a Ponzi scheme that targeted retired transit workers and was estimated to have taken in nearly $15 million in investments.  Thomas L. Mitchell, 64, of Los Angeles, California, had pled guilty in April to a single count of mail fraud, for which he faced a maximum prison sentence of twenty years.  Consistent with a plea agreement between Mitchell and prosecutors, United States District Judge Gary A. Feess also ordered Mitchell to pay $7 million in restitution to defrauded investors.

From 1995 to 2010, Mitchell and his fiirm Mitchell, Porter & Williams, Inc. ("MPW") solicited investors to purchase promissory notes from two other companies he operated: Adivanala AA Investment Trust and AB3, Inc.  Investors were enticed with the prospect of fixed annual returns of ten to fifteen percent for three or six-year terms.  Many of these investors were former employees of the Los Angeles County Metropolitan Transit Authority, where word of mouth had circulated regarding the returns offered by Mitchell.  In representations to investors, Mitchell attributed the ability to achieve high rates of return from the use of "leverage to invest in certain government backed bond funds."  In total, approximately 82 investors entrusted $14.7 million with Mitchell.  Yet, instead of investing these funds, Mitchell used money from new investors to make interest payments to existing investors.  Additionally, Mitchell used millions of dollars to fund an extravagant lifestyle.

The Securities and Exchange Commission ("SEC") also instituted an action against Mitchell and MPW, issuing an order in May that enjoined Mitchell from future association with entities in the financial industry and revoked the registration of MPW as an investment advisor.

A copy of the SEC Complaint is here.

A copy of the SEC Order is here.

 

 

Appeals Court Affirms Madoff Trustee's Claim Determination Method

A New York appellate court issued an opinion today affirming the method used to determine loss amounts suffered by victims of Bernard Madoff's colossal Ponzi scheme. Under this method, each Madoff victim's net equity was calculated by crediting the amount of cash deposited by the customer into his or her account, less any amounts withdrawn from the account. Irving Picard, the court-appointed trustee overseeing the liquidation of Madoff's failed broker-dealer, had faced opposition from groups of investors (the "Objecting Investors") who instead urged the use of each investor's last reported account statement balance before Madoff's scheme was exposed.

Following United States Bankruptcy Judge Burton R. Lifland's opinion affirming Picard's use of the net investment method, several investor groups appealed the decision to the Second Circuit Court of Appeals. Addressing the arguments of Picard and the Objecting Investors, Chief U.S. Circuit Judge Dennis Jacobs first noted that SIPA's statutory language  "does not prescribe a single means of calculating net equity that applies in the myriad circumstances that may arise in a SIPA liquidation."   Instead, such a determination should be based on specific fact patterns. Weighing the differing approaches set forth by the parties, Judge Jacobs concluded that:

Mr. Picard's selection of the Net Investment Method was more consistent with the statutory definition of net equity than any other method advocated by the parties or perceived by this Court. There was therefore no error...If the Last Statement Method were adopted, those claimants who have withdrawn funds from their BLMIS accounts that exceed their initial investments would receive more favorable treatment by profiting from the principal investments of those claimants who have withdrawn less money than they deposited, yielding an inequitable result.

Further elaborating on this reasoning, Judge Jacobs emphasized the underlying fact that the customer statements were nothing more than after-the-fact constructs that were simply molded to reflect historical market transactions. Adoption of the Last Statement Method, theorized Judge Jacobs, would simply serve to serve as a stamp of judicial approval of Madoff's fraud. He concluded that the use of the Last Statement Method in this case would have the absurd effect of treating fictitious and arbitrarily assigned paper profits as real and would give legal effect to Madoff's machinations.

The ruling today has several important ramifications. First, investors who withdrew more than their original principal investment, termed net winners by Picard, are not entitled to share in any funds recovered by Picard for the benefit of defrauded investors. To date, that amount has increased to over $10 billion. Second, by virtue of excluding these so-called net winners from any right to recovered funds, the number of customers with viable claims is diminished, and more funds are available to investors whose invested principal exceeded any withdrawals.

The decision has implications for the now-ongoing process of distributing recovered funds back to defrauded investors. As previously covered by Ponzitracker, Picard filed a motion with the court in May seeking approval of his plan to make the first interim distribution to investors. In that motion, he outlined several theoretical calculations of the percentage each investor would expect to receive under the first distribution, with the variations resulting from different figures for the total amount of allowed claims. When the motion was filed, Judge Burton Lifland's approval of Picard's use of the net investment method to calculate distribution to investors had been appealed to the Second Circuit. While Picard sought to use the figure of $17.3 billion, which represented his estimate of the total principal losses suffered by Madoff investors, the pendency of the net investment method decision forced him to instead use the much-larger figure of nearly $57 billion to calculate investor distributions, which represented the aggregate amount of purported holdings as determined by each investor's final account statement. Thus, investors would receive a lower pro rata share of their claim amount.  As Picard stated,

Were the Net Equity Decision to be reversed, those claims of net winner customers that have been denied to date may become allowable and eligible for a distribution from the Customer Fund. In order to ensure that there are funds sufficient to make a pro rata distribution in that eventuality, the Trustee is maintaining significant reserves, which decrease the amount available for distribution from approximately 44% to approximately 13%.

Additional pending appeals further reduced the pro rata amount of each investor's proporsed distribution down to just over 4% of each approved claim. Barring the grant of certiorari (review) by the United States Supreme Court, investors with allowed claims now stand to receive a greater amount in future distributions. Picard has indicated that the first interim distributions are scheduled to commence in September, and it remains unknown as to whether those amounts could change in light of this decision.

A copy of the Second Circuit opinion is here.

Miami man Charged in $1.3 Million Ponzi Scheme

A Miami man with a previous conviction for attempted murder was charged last week with operating a Ponzi scheme that defrauded friends and family out of $1.3 million.  Scott Siegal, previously known as Michael Scott Segal, was indicted on twelve counts of mail and wire fraud.  Each charge carries a maximum sentence of twenty years in prison, along with criminal monetary penalties.

According to the indictment, Siegal founded Bright Jewel Holdings several months after being released from serving a seven-year prison sentence for attempted murder.  Starting in November 2008, the company purported to purchase consumer goods from China at a discount which were then resold in the United States for a substantial profit.  Siegal also represented to potential investors that he was involved in a real-estate deal in China and engaged in a partnership with a Venezuelan company to sell cargo-container locks.  Yet, according to prosecutors, none of these representations were true.  Instead, Siegel concealed his past criminal convictions, and used investor funds to sustain a lavish lifestyle that included expensive cars and a $5.5 million house.  

Siegal is currently being held on $600,000 bond.