Maryland Man's Second Ponzi Scheme In 25 Years Nets 20-Year Prison Term

A Maryland man who duped dozens of investors out of more than $1 million was sentenced to spend the next twenty years in prison - approximately two decades after he served jail time for a similar scheme.  Henry M. Fisher Jr., 60, received the sentence for conducting what Montgomery County prosecutors called an elaborate Ponzi scheme that duped victims by promising quick and outsized returns through the purchase and resale of real estate.  In total, Fisher's scheme is said to have caused more than $1 million in losses to approximately 23 victims.

Perhaps not surprisingly, Fisher's prison sentence comes nearly two decades after Montgomery County authorities accused Fisher of defrauding nearly 400 investors out of more than $8 million in a similar real estate Ponzi scheme.  Fisher was arrested in 1992 and charged with ten counts of theft in connection with his investment operation which promised significant returns through " an elaborate series of phony real estate deals" from December 1990 to February 1992.  

In the most recent Ponzi scheme, Fisher faced a burglary charge in addition to other counts after authorities alleged that he broke into a home to give a potential investor a "tour" of the home.  While Fisher is not the first accused schemer to face a burglary charge (see here and here), such a charge is quite rare.

Stephen Darr Appointed As TelexFree Trustee

An independent trustee has been appointed to manage the business operations of TelexFree Financial, LLC; TelexFree, LLC; and TelexFree, Inc. (collectively, "TelexFree"), the consortium of entities currently accused by state and federal regulators of operating a massive pyramid/Ponzi scheme that raised hundreds of millions of dollars from victims.  Stephen B. Darr's appointment as Chapter 11 Trustee was made public in a filing by the Assistant U.S. Trustee in a Massachusetts bankruptcy where the TelexFree bankruptcy is currently pending.  In connection with his appointment, Darr's bond was set at $1 million.

Darr is a principal of Mesirow Financial Consulting, LLC, an independent financial services firm that provides a wide array of corporate services, including restructuring, management, and consulting. Darr currently works out of Mesirow's Boston office, where he serves as the Senior Managing Director. Darr has significant experience in providing financial advisory services to complex restructuring matters, including past engagements with well-known failed companies RefCo and WorldCom.

Darr will have his work cut out for him as he assumes the duties of a Chapter 11 Trustee set forth in 11 U.S.C. 1106.  Pursuant to Section 1106, the Chapter 11 Trustee must, as soon as practicable,

(A) file a statement of any investigation conducted under paragraph (3) of this subsection, including any fact ascertained pertaining to fraud, dishonesty, incompetence, misconduct, mismanagement, or irregularity in the management of the affairs of the debtor, or to a cause of action available to the estate; and

(B) transmit a copy or a summary of any such statement to any creditors’ committee or equity security holders’ committee, to any indenture trustee, and to such other entity as the court designates.

Additionally, the Trustee must also, as soon as practicable, either (1) file a Plan of Reorganization pursuant to Chapter 11; (2) indicate which a Plan of Reorganization will not be filed; or (3) recommend conversion of the case to a case under other chapters of the Bankruptcy Code, including Chapter 7 which provides for liquidation.

Darr's first steps under Section 1106 will be closely watched.  TelexFree is currently embroiled in multiple civil suits brought by state and federal regulators on  accusations that the company's business model was nothing more than a pyramid and/or Ponzi scheme. Further, the Securities and Exchange Commission and the U.S. Trustee in Nevada (where TelexFree originally filed for bankruptcy) have characterized the company's decision to file for bankruptcy as ill-fated and undertaken solely to subvert regulators.  Indeed, before a Nevada Bankruptcy court granted the Commission's request to transfer venue to Massachusetts, TelexFree's lawyers had consistently sought to show that the company had shed its wrongful ways and was seeking to emerge as a legitimate and profitable company.  

As suggested back in an April article, an independent examination of TelexFree could ultimately result in the decision to convert the case to a Chapter 7 bankruptcy and liquidate the company.  Such a decision would spell the end of the company's hopes to emerge from bankruptcy as a legitimate company.

Previous Ponzitracker coverage of TelexFree is here.

A copy of the Certificate of Appointment is below:

Cert

 

New Jersey Woman Accused Of $42 Million Ponzi Scheme

A New Jersey woman has been indicted on charges that her freight and shipping business was a giant Ponzi scheme that may have defrauded victims out of more than $42 million.  Shirley Sooy, 63, was charged with one count of wire fraud conspiracy, one count of wire fraud, two counts of mail fraud, and two counts of trafficking in criminal proceeds.  If convicted of the charges, Sooy could potentially face decades in prison as well as criminal fines.

According to authorities, Sooy operated several entities under the umbrella of the TransVantage Group ("TVG") consisting of freight payment, logistics, and shipping businesses.  Beginning in 2003, Sooy and an unnamed co-conspirator operated the companies, entering into contracts with four clients (referred to as "Victim Companies" by the Department of Justice) pursuant to which TVG audited and approved freight bills generated by those clients' carriers.  TVG was then supposed to use funds provided by those Victim Companies to make payments to the respective carriers.  In total, TVG processed billions of dollars in payments from the Victim Companies to the carriers.

However, rather than keep the funds from each client in separate trust accounts, TVG commingled the funds in two freight payment accounts held at Bank of America and TD Bank, respectively.  TVG then used those funds to, among other things, pay older, unpaid carrier bills of certain Victim Companies.  In addition, millions of dollars in trust funds were misappropriated for company obligations and for a variety of personal expenses, including mortgage payments for several houses, the purchase of a 48-foot yacht, a $135,000 Maserati, and the remodeling of Sooy's house.  According to authorities, this continued for ten years.

In early 2013, one of the Victim Companies was contacted by a carrier over a late payment for which funds had already been advanced to TVG.  The company immediately contacted TVG, whose employees were instructed by Sooy to blame the issue on a bank "float" issue and assure the company that the issue was a misunderstanding.  The company dispatched an auditor to review TVG's books, which revealed that approximately $15 million advanced by the company to TVG was unaccounted for.  Sooy allegedly made a variety of incriminating statements to that auditor, including that a multi-million dollar cash hole had existed at TVG for years, and that some of Victim Companies' money had been invested and lost in the stock market.  

Authorities estimate that the Victim Companies suffered total losses of more than $42 million as a result of the scheme.  Sooy posted a $100,000 personal recognizance bond, and was also required to turn in her passport.  

The criminal complaint is below:

Sooy, Shirley Complaint

11th Circuit Clarifies "Property of Debtor" Issue, Opens Door To Prejudgment Interest In Clawback Suits

Editor's note: Jordan Maglich currently serves as counsel to the Receiver in the below case.  The opinions contained herein represent his opinion only, and do not represent the views of his law firm or the Receiver.

The Eleventh Circuit Court of Appeals issued an opinion that, for the first time, addressed an increasingly common argument raised in "clawback" lawsuits related to the recovery of fraudulent transfers and opened the door for an award of prejudgment interest against "net winners."  In Burton W. Wiand v. Vernon M. Lee, et al, a three-judge panel issued an opinion affirming an award of summary judgment in favor of the receiver appointed over Arthur Nadel's $350 million Ponzi scheme and against one of Nadel's investors for approximately $1 million in false profits.  That investor, Vernon Lee, had appealed the award of summary judgment based on Florida's Uniform Fraudulent Transfer Act ("FUFTA"), arguing the sole issue of whether the false profits he received constituted "property of the debtor" required under FUFTA. The Receiver had cross-appealed, arguing that the district court's refusal to grant prejudgment interest constituted an abuse of discretion.

Judge Mark E. Fuller, a District Judge in the Middle District of Alabama sitting by designation, authored the 20-page opinion.  From 2000 to 2008, Lee and his trust received nearly $1 million in false profits from Nadel's scheme, which purported to offer investors lucrative returns through Nadel's purported trading prowess.  Following the collapse of Nadel's scheme in early 2009 and the subsequent appointment of a receiver, Lee and other "net winners" were sued for the return of their false profits.  

The Receiver sought recovery of the approximately $1 million in distributions made to Lee in excess of his principal, arguing that the transfers constituted violations of FUFTA both under its actual fraud provision and its constructive fraud provision.  Under the actual fraud provision, a transfer made or obligation incurred by a debtor is fraudulent as to a creditor if the debtor made the transfer or incurred the obligation "with actual intent to hinder, delay, or defraud any creditor of the debtor." Fla. Stats. 
§ 726.105(a).  The fraudulent transfer must be of an asset, which is defined as any "property of the debtor," subject to limited exceptions.  

Because it is often difficult to show actual intent to defraud, courts conducting an actual fraud analysis typically look to the statutory "badges of fraud" set forth in 
§ 726.105(2)(a), including whether the transfer was made to an insider, the debtor retained control, the transfer was of substantially all the debtor's assets, or the debtor was insolvent or became insolvent shortly after the transfer was made. Additionally, other federal courts analyzing transfers made in a Ponzi scheme have held that actual intent is sufficiently demonstrated upon a showing of proof that a transfer was made from an entity used to perpetrate a Ponzi scheme - without any analysis of the statutory badges of fraud.  See Donell v. Kowell, 533 F.3d 762, 770 (9th Cir. 2008) (applying California’s UFTA); S.E.C. v. Res. Dev. Int’l, LLC, 487 F.3d 295, 301 (5th Cir. 2007) (applying Texas’s UFTA); Warfield v. Byron, 436 F.3d 551, 558–59 (5th Cir. 2006) (applying Washington’s UFTA).  The "Ponzi scheme presumption," as it has become known, has similarly been held applicable to Ponzi schemes in the bankruptcy context.

Expanding on this analysis, the Eleventh Circuit held:
under FUFTA’s actual fraud provision, proof that a transfer was made in furtherance of a Ponzi scheme establishes actual intent to defraud under § 726.105(1)(a) without the need to consider the badges of fraud.  The magistrate judge was thus correct to frame the inquiry in terms of whether Nadel operated the receivership entities as a Ponzi scheme at the time he made the transfers to Lee.

"Property of the Debtor"

Next, the Eleventh Circuit addressed the argument advanced by Lee that, even if the transfers were made with the actual intent to defraud, they still could not satisfy FUFTA's requirement that Nadel's transfers to investors must have been "property of a debtor."  In other words, because investors received funds from the hedge funds utilized by Nadel to perpetrate his scheme - rather than Nadel himself - investors did not receive "property of a debtor."  

In analyzing this argument, the Court first cited to the seminal Seventh Circuit decision in Scholes v. Lehmann, 56 F.3d 750 (7th Cir. 1995), including the infamous analogy recited by Judge Posner likening the companies used by the perpetrator to "robotic tools" that, upon removal of the Ponzi schemer, were no longer "evil zombies" under the "spell" of the Ponzi schemer but rather legal entities entitled to the return of diverted funds.   Further expanding on this analogy, the Eleventh Circuit held that Nadel's hedge funds were harmed when Nadel diverted the investor funds they were holding for unauthorized uses.  Thus, under Lehmann, these hedge funds became Nadel's "creditors" at the time Nadel diverted their funds to investors because these actions gave them a "claim" against Nadel.  

These funds were "property" of Nadel because:

The creditor must demonstrate that “(1) there was a creditor to be defrauded; (2) a debtor intending fraud; and (3) a conveyance of property which could have been applicable to the payment of the debt due.” Nationsbank, N.A. v. Coastal Utils., Inc., 814 So. 2d 1227, 1229 (Fla. 4th DCA 2002) (citation omitted) (emphasis added).  The third element constitutes Florida courts’ criterion for when something is the property of a debtor under FUFTA. This element is established because the funds that Nadel controlled and transferred to investors could have been applied by him to pay the debt he owed to the receivership entities as a result of his use of funds to perpetrate a Ponzi scheme. With each transfer that Nadel made, Nadel became a debtor of the receivership entities because he diverted the funds from their lawful purpose in violation of his fiduciary duties and was thus obligated to return those same funds to the entities to be used for the benefit of the investors. Therefore, with each transfer, Nadel diverted property that he controlled and that could have been applicable to the debt due, namely, the very funds being transferred. As the Receiver states, “[T]he money transferred to the Defendants is not only ‘applicable to the payment of the debt due,’ but it is the actual money that generated and deepened (in part, along with money transferred to other investors) the debt owed by Nadel to the Investment Funds. In other words, it is the exact 
same money that generated the debt and gave rise to the claims in this case.” 

Thus, the fact that the funds were in the possession of the hedge funds was not a determining factor. Rather, the analysis turned on the fact that the schemer, Nadel, exerted his control over the funds and transferred them in furtherance of his scheme rather than actually use the funds for the promised purpose. By diverting those investor funds to perpetuate his scheme, he violated his fiduciary duties to the funds and was thus required to return those same funds back to the entities to be used for investors' benefit. With each subsequent transfer, the hedge funds' "claim" against Nadel increased.

Prejudgment Interest

Next, the Court addressed whether the district court's refusal to award the Receiver prejudgment interest constituted an abuse of discretion.  In the decision below, the Magistrate Judge had concluded that an award of prejudgment interest was not warranted as the defendants "had suffered enough."  In response, the Eleventh Circuit noted that Florida law governed an award of prejudgment interest, specifically the three factors set forth in Blasland, Bouck & Lee, Inc. v. City of N. Miami, 283 F.3d 1286, 1298 (11th Cir. 2002):

Those factors are (1) in matters concerning government entities, whether it would be equitable to put the burden of paying interest on the public in choosing between innocent victims; (2) whether it is equitable to allow an award of prejudgment interest when the delay between injury and judgment is the fault of the prevailing party; (3) whether it is equitable to award prejudgment interest to a party who could have, but failed to, mitigate its damages.

The Eleventh Circuit concluded that the underlying rationale employed constituted an abuse of discretion:

because it fails to identify and apply the equitable factors considered in Blasland to the decision to deny prejudgment interest. The general observation that the Lee Defendants “have suffered enough” does not explain why the Receiver is not entitled to be made whole under Florida law, which holds prejudgment interest is an element of pecuniary damages. Further, that the Lee Defendants will be forced to pay more than the profits they received with the addition of a prejudgment interest award is not an equitable factor weighing against an award, but is a necessary consequence of the loss theory of prejudgment interest.

Noting that other Florida courts had applied prejudmgent interest on FUFTA claims, the Court remanded the issue back to the district court for an application of the factors in Blasland.

A copy of the Opinion is below:

Petters Trustee Prepares Clawback Suits Against International Investors

The court-appointed bankruptcy trustee for the third-largest Ponzi scheme in history has assembled a legal team hailing from all over the globe as the quest to recover assets for victims will now target foreign investors that were fortunate enough to profit from their investment.  Doug Kelley, the trustee tasked with returning funds to victims of Thomas Petters' $3.65 billion Ponzi scheme, has secured legal representation in countries from Germany to Bermuda to the British Virgin Islands as he prepares to launch a series of "clawback" lawsuits.  At stake in the lawsuits: more than $100 million of "false profits" paid to Petters' investors, including offshore hedge funds.  

Clawback lawsuits, as they are known in the landscape of Ponzi scheme litigation, seek to "claw back" fictitious profits paid to scheme investors in excess of those investors' initial investments.  The suits have enjoyed nearly-universal approval from overseeing courts, who justify the suits on the basis that the returns paid were not derived from legitimate business activities but rather simply the re=distribution of funds from incoming investors.  The suits have also played a significant role in the recovery of funds for victims that were not as fortunate to recoup their investment.  As most schemes are discovered only after their collapse, clawback lawsuits and third-party lawsuits often represent victims' best hope for any recovery. Indeed, Kelley previously stated that the "big money" to be recovered would be through clawback lawsuits.

Thomas Petters was arrested in late 2008 after authorities alleged that his electronics factoring business was, in reality, a massive Ponzi scheme.  Petters would later plead guilty (although he would later unsuccessfully attempt to have his sentence reduced) and is currently serving a 50-year prison term in a Kansas federal prison. In addition to Petters, authorities obtained ten other convictions of individuals tied to the scheme.

To date, Kelley has recovered approximately $110 million for the benefit of victims, while related bankruptcy and receivership proceedings have pulled in another $300 million.  Considering that total losses from the scheme are estimated at approximately $2 billion after factoring in payments made to investors, the $410 million recovered to date represents approximately 20% of total losses.  By Kelley's own estimate, potential recoveries through the use of clawback lawsuits could be more than $500 million - including more than $323 million sought from hedge funds Epsilon Investment Management and Arrowhead Capital Management.  

Kelley's legal team was recently able to obtain the lists of investors in the two above hedge funds, which will allow them to perhaps identify further clawback suit targets.  But while U.S. laws are quite clear on recovering funds in these situations, the laws of other jurisdictions where suits may be brought are not nearly as clear.  Nor is it clear whether Kelley will have the option to bring such suits in a U.S. bankruptcy court.  Kelley has indicated that, before proceeding in each jurisdiction, a cost-benefit analysis will be employed to gauge the likelihood of success.