Cincinnati Money Manager Pleads Guilty To $8.7 Million Forex Ponzi Scheme

A Cincinnati man has pleaded guilty to charges that he masterminded a forex-based Ponzi scheme that raised at least $8.7 million from friends, acquaintances, and even members of a church group.  John R. Bullar, 52, pleaded guilty today in an Ohio federal court to one count of wire fraud and one count of money laundering.  Each of tne charges carries a maximum 20-year prison term as well as criminal monetary penalties.  In a parallel action filed by the U.S. Commodity Futures Trading Commission, Bullar and his company were also charged with violations of federal commodities laws.

Bullar owned and operated Executive Management Advisors ("EMA"), which he represented to potential investors as a successful commodities-trading firm.  Bullar told investors that their funds would be used to trade commodity futures and commodities options, touting himself as an experienced futures trader with significant experience with trading floors at the Chicago Board of Trade and the Chicago Mercantile Exchange.  Investors received regular account statements showing purported profits that they understood were derived from trading profits.  In total, nearly $9 million was raised from investors that included Bullar's friends and members of a church group.

However, of the millions of dollars raised by Bullar, only a fraction was used to trade commodities futures and options as promised.  Indeed, of the approximately $786,000 deposited in his trading account, Bullar lost more than $230,000 in the form of trading losses and fees.  Of the remaining millions of dollars in investor funds, Bullar misappropriated or embezzled approximately $6 million for his own use, including the payment of personal expenses, cash withdrawals, the purchase of property and vehicles, and for landscaping and other home improvements.  Additionally, Bullar used investor funds to pay "returns" to existing investors - a classic hallmark of a Ponzi scheme.  

The scheme ultimately collapsed in 2013 after Bullar was unable to satisfy investor redemptions.  While one investor had requested the redemption of their $1.5 million investment to close on a real estate transaction, Bullar admitted to that investor that he was unable to satisfy that request due to his operation of a fraudulent investment scheme.  Bullar later admitted the same to another investor, and indicated he knew he would be going to prison for the fraud.  

The CFTC complaint against Bullar is below:

Enf Bull Ar Complaint 092314

Appellate Court: Ponzi Schemer's Loss Calculation Must Account For Payments To Victims

In a decision that could have far-reaching implications, a federal appeals court has vacated a convicted Ponzi schemer's 11-year prison sentence after finding that the loss amount used in calculating the relevant sentencing guidelines improperly failed to account for money returned to victims in the form of fictitious "interest" payments. Jason Snelling, of Cincinnati, Ohio, was originally sentenced in October 2012 to a 131-month term after previously pleading guilty to three counts of conspiracy, obstruction, and tax evasion. While the resentencing will likely reduce Snelling's 131-month sentence, he must also deal with two other prison sentences related to the scheme, including a 40-year prison sentence being served consecutively to Snelling's other sentences.

History

Snelling and others operated Dunhill Investment Advisers and CityFund Advisory in downtown Cincinnati, where they held themselves out as successful day-traders and solicited investors by promising guaranteed annual rates of return ranging from 10% to 15%. Ultimately, dozens of investors entrusted millions of dollars to Snelling and his companies. However, rather than utilize investor funds as promised, Snelling and his partner ran a Ponzi scheme whereby they used incoming investor funds to pay returns to existing investors, as well as to support lavish lifestyles that included purchases of a boat, furniture, and even plastic surgery.

After a tip by an investor whose accountant questioned the legality of the operation, authorities filed civil and criminal charges against Snelling and his partner, including state and federal charges against Snelling. In connection with the federal charges, Snelling ultimately pleaded guilty to one count each of three counts of conspiracy, obstruction, and tax evasion.

District Court Sentencing

While the plea agreement included Snelling's admission of guilt to the charges, it also referenced the disagreement between the government and Snelling regarding the offense-level calculations to be used by the U.S. Probation Office to calculate the sentencing-guidelines range included in a Presentence Investigation Report ("PSR"). Snelling argued that, under the U.S. Sentencing Guidelines, any funds returned to investors during the course of the fraud in the form of "profits" or "interest" should be used to offset the initial loss attributable to his fraud. Indeed, the commentary to U.S.S.G. § 2B1.1 provided that a loss would be reduced by, among other things:

(i) The money returned, and the fair market value of the property returned and the services rendered, by the defendant or other persons acting jointly with the defendant, to the victim before the offense was detected. The time of detection of the offense is the earlier of (I) the time the offense was discovered by a victim or government agency; or (II) the time the defendant knew or reasonably should have known that the offense was detected or about to be detected by a victim or government agency.

The government opposed Snelling's position, taking the position that Snelling “should not get credit for payments to perpetuate the scheme made with other victims’ money.” In other words, the Government maintained that Snelling's payment of fictitious returns to victims served simply to further the fraud and create the impression that the venture was legitimate. At sentencing, despite Snelling's protests, the Government adopted the Government's position and held that:

the loss should not be reduced, particularly because the monies did not represent profits . . . any return of money was to induce further investment . . . .

Based on the Government's methodology, the Court held that the intended loss for purposes of federal sentencing guidelines was $8,924,451.46. Using the highest calculated offense level of 35 for mail and wire fraud and after applying a three-level reduction based on Snelling's acceptance of responsibility, the Court applied U.S.S.G. § 2B1.1(b)(1)(K) to arrive at a sentencing range of 121 to 151 months. Based on that calculation, Snelling was ultimately sentenced to a 131-month term.

The Appeal

Snelling timely appealed, claiming that the district court committed error by using a loss figure of $8,924,451.46, representing the total amount of money taken in from investors, instead of of $5,336,187.78, which represented the total losses after accounting for the total amount returned to investors over the life of the scheme. This difference was crucial, as different sub-sections of U.S.S.G. § 2B1.1(b)(1) applied based on whether or not the loss figure was greater than or less than $7 million. As a result, while the calculation used by the district court resulted in a range of 121 to 151 months, a calculation using the loss figure urged by Snelling would have resulted in a maximum range of 97 - 121 months.

The Sixth Circuit agreed with Snelling's position, specifically noting that:

Snelling’s argument, based on the text of the Guidelines alone, is persuasive. His reading of the Guidelines is further bolstered by U.S.S.G. § 2B1.1 Application Note 3(F)(iv), which specifically addresses Ponzi-scheme loss calculations. Application Note 3(F)(iv) states that, when calculating the loss figure in a Ponzi scheme, the “loss shall not be reduced by the money or the value of the property transferred to any individual investor in the scheme in excess of that investor’s principal investment.” U.S.S.G. § 2B1.1 Application Note 3(F)(iv). Snelling argues that the language of this note implies that courts are expected to reduce loss figures by the sums returned to investor victims, and that the note seeks to limit such reduction to no more than the principal invested. Thus, the Sentencing Commission, while contemplating that loss figures should be reduced according to the amount of money returned, does not want a single investor’s returns to be deducted beyond the amount originally invested: “[T]he gain to an individual investor in the scheme shall not be used to offset the loss to another.” U.S.S.G. § 2B1.1 Application Note 3(F)(iv). Again, Snelling’s argument is persuasive. The fact that the Application Notes limit deductions from loss figures to no more than the sums originally invested implies, quite strongly, that the loss figures are to be reduced in the first place.

(emphasis added). The Court also looked to previous editions of the sentencing guidelines, pointing to language in the pre-2001 editions that entirely omitted any language calling for a reduction based on the sums returned to victims.

Addressing the government's position, the Sixth Circuit conceded that while there certainly was appeal to prohibiting a Ponzi schemer from benefiting from making payments to carry out the fraud, the relevant concern was whether the district court properly applied the sentencing guidelines. Based on the finding that the district court did commit error by failing to account for the payments made by Snelling to his victims, the Sixth Circuit vacated Snelling's sentence and remanded the case back to the district court for resentencing.

Implications

The Sixth Circuit candidly admitted that adopting Snelling's position would, in essence, ultimately mitigate the sentence a Ponzi schemer would ultimately face. Indeed, it is well-acknowledged that a Ponzi schemer's ability to consistently deliver the returns promised to investors serves to create an aura of legitimacy around the scheme and ultimately entice new investors. However, the Sixth Circuit noted that it was restricted to the question of whether the sentencing court adhered to the sentencing guidelines as written, and vacated the sentence based upon its finding of error.

The theoretical implications of such a position are significant.  Historically, the government's calculated loss figures were typically rarely disturbed; indeed, the Sentencing Guidelines state that courts "need only make a reasonable estimate of loss … based on available information.” Moreover, and especially in the common scenario where the Ponzi schemer pleads guilty, the post-collapse investigation into the scheme is only in the infant stages and rarely is enough information available to calculate the amount of funds ultimately disbursed to victims.

The biggest takeaway of the Sixth Circuit's decision, assuming it is adopted by other courts in loss calculations, are that scheme perpetrators will essentially be actively mitigating their future prison sentence by continuing their scheme.  Indeed, in the situation of two Ponzi schemes that raise an identical amount of funds from victims, the scheme that makes a higher payout to victims theoretically would result in a lower prison sentence for that perpetrator based on the net loss calculation.  Arguably, such a scenario technically incentivizes a Ponzi schemer to return as much as possible to investors with the knowledge that the returns will not only attract new investors but also serve to ultimately reduce any prison sentence.

The Sixth Circuit's opinion is below:

 

14a0244p-06

 

Judge Fines Texas Man $40 Million For Bitcoin Ponzi Scheme

A federal judge has ordered a Texas man and his company to pay more than $40 million in disgorgement and civil penalties for operating a Ponzi scheme using the virtual currency Bitcoin.  U.S. Magistrate Judge Amos L. Mazzant handed down the order against Trendon T. Shavers and his company, Bitcoin Savings & Trust ("BST"), stemming from an unopposed motion for summary judgment filed earlier this year by the Securities and Exchange Commission, which brought the original charges against Shavers and BST back in July 2013.  

According to the Commission, Shavers, known as Pirateat40 on popular Bitcoin Forum Bitcointalk.org, began soliciting investors to park their Bitcoins ("BTC") in BST, a digital hedge fund that promised weekly returns of up to 7%.  When asked how he was able to achieve such lucrative returns, Shavers told investors that he was involved in bitcoin arbitrage activity that included acting as a middleman for individuals who wished to purchase large quantities of BTC "off the radar."  Shavers later expanded on this explanation, saying

“If my business is illegal then anyone trading coins for cash and back to coins is doing something illegal. :)”  

When further asked about his profit margins, Shavers indicated that he achieved gross returns of nearly 11% per week.  As the operation progressed, the minimum investment amount was raised to 100 BTC, and investors were permitted to re-invest their profits.  

In July 2012, the scheme was estimated to have raised hundreds of thousands of BTC, which then had an average price of approximately $7 per BTC.  However, Shavers announced in a post that the interest rate would decrease to 3.9% weekly beginning August 1, 2012, and began making preferential payouts to friends and longtime investors.  Later that month, Shavers declared default:

As much as I've tried to meet the deadlines within the community, there're conditions beyond my control which have escalated the process to the point it is today.  Bitcoin Savings & Trust has hereby given notice of default to its account holders.

The decision was based on the general size and overall time required to manage the transactions. As the fund grew there were larger and larger coin movements which put strain on my reserve accounts and ultimately caused delays on withdraws and the inability to fund orders within my system. On the 14th I made a final attempt to relieve pressure off the system by reducing the rates I offered for deposits. In a perfect world this would allow me to hold more coins in reserve outside the system, but instead it only exponentially increased the amount of withdrawals overnight causing mass panic from many of my lenders.

However, according to the Commission, Bitcoin Savings and Trust was nothing more than an elaborate scam that Shavers used to take in millions of dollars in BTC.  Shavers took in more than 700,000 BTC, returning approximately 500,000 BTC to investors through purported returns of interest or principal.  Of the remainder, Shavers transferred approximately 150,000 BTC - approximately $1 million based on the average price during that time period - to his personal account, which he used for a variety of unauthorized personal expenses including rent, car-related purchases, and gambling.  Shavers also attempted his hand at arbitrage, selling the BTC's for dollars and vice-versa, but suffered losses.

Shavers contested the SEC's charges against him, and argued that he was not subject to the federal securities laws because bitcoin could not be classified as a "security."  That argument was rejected by Judge Mazzant and later affirmed by the District Court, which both found that Bitcoin investments satisfied the test espoused by the Supreme Court in S.E.C. v. W.J. Howey & Co., 328 U.S. 293 (1946).

The Commission's Motion for Summary Judgment sought to impose penalties and disgorgement of approximately $40 million based on the average price of Bitcoin from the scheme's collapse to the present. Judge Mazzant adopted this methodology, and ordered that BST and Shavers must disgorge $38.6 million in ill-gotten gains, as well as approximately $1.8 million in prejudgment interest.  In addition, both BST and Shavers were ordered to pay a civil monetary penalty of $150,000 each for their "egregious" conduct.  

Feds: Deceased Former AARP President Ran $4.6 Million Ponzi Scheme

The Securities and Exchange Commission filed an emergency action charging that a deceased Florida man who once served as President of the South Florida AARP had been running an offshore Ponzi scheme that took in at least $4.6 million from dozens of investors.  In a complaint filed last week, the Commission alleged that Joseph Laurer, a/k/a Dr. Josef V. Laurer, ran the scheme through a company he controlled in the Turks and Caicos until his death on May 15, 2014.  The Commission is seeking declaratory relief, disgorgement of ill-gotten gains, and the repatriation of assets currently being held outside the United States.

Laurer was a resident of Homestead, Florida, where he was a member of the City of Homestead's General Employee Pension Board and later served as President of the Dade County chapter of the AARP.  According to the Commission, Laurer founded Abatement Corp. Holding Company Limited ("Abatement Corp.") in 1994 in the Turks and Caicos Islands, a series of tropical islands in the southeast Bahamas island chain.  Beginning in 2004, Laurer is accused of soliciting investors, many of whom were family and friends, to invest in various entities and funds with names similar to Abatement Corp., including the International Balanced Bond Fund ("IBBF").  Through a website he established as well as documents provided to prospective investors, Laurer touted risk-free and tax-free investments in corporate and government bonds that promised annual returns ranging from 4% to 6%.  Investors were also told that the investments were guaranteed through the "F.D.I.C. or the S.I.P.C."  During the ten-year period from 2004 until Laurer's death in May 2014, approximately 50 people invested at least $4.6 million with Laurer and Abatement Corp.

However, the Commission alleged that Laurer's promises and representations relating to Abatement Corp. and the purported investments were false.  This included that neither the FDIC nor SIPC guaranteed the investments, that Abatement Corp. was not investing in bonds, and that by July 2007 Abatement had ceased purchasing new investments and relied entirely on investor funds to pay "returns" to existing investors.  Investor funds were also diverted to Laurer's wife, Brenda M. Davis, for her living expenses and the purchase of at least two homes.  Additionally, Laurer is accused of using investor funds to sustain his lavish lifestyle as well as for payment of premiums on a $500,000 life insurance policy.  After Laurer's death in May 2014, Davis received approximately $510,000 in life insurance proceeds.  

At the time of Laurer's death, approximately $900,000 remained in various Turks and Caicos bank accounts held in the name of or for the benefit of Abatement Corp.  

The Commission's Complaint is below:

 

comp-pr2014-198

 

Authorities Charge Cay Clubs Principals With Fraud In Alleged $300 Million Ponzi Scheme

The principals of the now-defunct Cay Clubs Resorts and Marinas ("Cay Clubs") were indicted on multiple bank fraud and conspiracy counts in what authorities alleged was a massive $300 million Ponzi scheme.  Fred Davis Clark, Jr., a/k/a Dave Clark, 56, and Cristal R. Clark, a/k/a Cristal R. Coleman, face the charges after originally being arrested and charged earlier this summer with obstruction and fraud charges in connection with their operation of other businesses not directly related to Cay Clubs.  The new charges stem from their operation of Cay Clubs, which bilked investors out of hundreds of millions of dollars over the purported refurbishing of luxury condos.  The Clarks face charges of bank fraud and conspiracy to commit bank fraud, with the bank fraud charges carrying a maximum 30-year prison sentence.  

Background

Cay Clubs raised more than $300 million from over 1,000 investors through the sale of interests in luxury resorts to be developed nationwide.  Fred Clark served as Cay Clubs' chief executive officer, while Cristal Clark was a managing member and served as the company's registered agent.  Through the purported purchase of dilapidated luxury resorts and the subsequent conversion into luxuxy resorts, Cay Clubs promised investors a steady income stream that included an upfront "leaseback" payment of 15% TO 20%.  In total, the company was able to raise over $300 million from approximately 1,400 investors.

However, by 2006 the company lacked sufficient funds to carry through on the promises made to investors.  Instead of using funds to develop and refurbish the resorts, Cay Clubs used incoming investor funds to pay leaseback" payments to existing investors in what authorities alleged was a classic example of an ongoing Ponzi scheme.  After an investigation that spanned several years, the Securities and Exchange Commission initiated a civil enforcement action in January 2013 against Cay Clubs and five of its executives, alleging that the company was nothing more than a giant Ponzi scheme.  However, the litigation came to an abrupt end in May 2014 when a Miami federal judge agreed with the accused defendants that the Commission had waited too long to bring charges and dismissed the case on statute of limitations grounds.  

Criminal Investigation Continued

Just weeks after the dismissal of the Commission's action, authorities unveiled criminal charges against Fred and Cristal Clark and coordinated their arrest and expulsion from Honduras and Panama where they had previously been living.  The charges stemmed from the Clarks' operation of an unrelated scheme to siphon money from their operation of a series of pawn shops throughout the Caribbean. Authorities alleged that the pair used a series of bank accounts and shell companies previously used with Cay Clubs to steal funds from the pawn shops to sustain their lavish lifestyles abroad.  The pair are currently being held without bond.

Even while the Commission's case foundered, it was apparent that criminal authorities continued to move forward with their investigation.  In April 2014, it was reported that immunity had been granted to two Florida attorneys who were previously involved in day-to-day Cay Clubs operations, including the concealment of the true nature of the company's operations from its lenders.  Attorneys Scott Callahan and Charles Phoenix reportedly testified that they helped conceal the existence of the "leaseback" payments from lenders to give the appearance that the sales to investors were that of real estate - and not securities. Indeed, Phoenix's immunity statement read, in part, that

"In Phoenix's view, there came a time during the course of the operation of Cay Clubs where it could fairly be described as a 'Ponzi scheme' due to its inability to pay existing leaseback obligations without new investor money..."

In a motion filed by one of Clark's attorneys in the Commission's case, it was alleged that Phoenix and Callahan gave the statements under the threat of criminal prosecution. 

Getting Around The Five-Year Statute of Limitations

While the Clarks were able to evade civil prosecution by the Commission by successfully contesting the Commission's adherence to the applicable statute of limitations, it appears that the government will not have the same problem in proceeding with the criminal charges.  Of note, the criminal charges emanate from the Clarks' interactions with their lenders, rather than investors.  The significance of this becomes apparent when reviewing the applicable criminal statutes and recent legislation.  For example, the criminal statute governing statutes of limitation provides:

Except as otherwise expressly provided by law, no person shall be prosecuted, tried, or punished for any offense, not capital, unless the indictment is found or the information is instituted within five years next after such offense shall have been committed.

18 U.S.C. 3282 (emphasis added).  Further, as part of the Fraud Enforcement and Recovery Act of 2009, Congress authorized the the government to prosecute cases against financial institutions, including mortgage lending businesses, using bank fraud, mail fraud, and wire fraud statutes, and extended the applicable statute of limitations from five years to ten years.  This exact scenario was recently outlined by Preet Bharara, the Assistant U.S. Attorney for the Southern District of New York:

“A lot of people thought the statute of limitations is five years in particular cases, but a bank fraud statute has a statute of limitations of 10 years.  If you’re talking about wire fraud and mail fraud, which is specifically five years, but if it affects a financial institution, it’s 10 years.”

By focusing on the Clarks' interactions with lenders, including their omission of certain information such as the "leaseback" arrangement with investors when obtaining lender financing, the government's plan to utilize the longer statute of limitations becomes very apparent.  However, it would not be surprising to see this position attacked by the Clarks.

Update 9/19: The superseding indictment is below:

Superseding Indictment