SEC Says Chicago Rabbi’s $10 Million Nursing Home Ponzi Scheme Targeted Orthodox Jews, Including Holocaust Survivor

The Securities and Exchange Commission charged a well-known Chicago rabbi with running a Ponzi scheme that raised at least $10 million from primarily Orthodox Jewish investors who thought their funds were being used to buy, operate, and sell nursing home facilities. Zvi Feiner, 49, his business associate Erez Baver, 39, and several companies operated by Feiner were charged with violating federal securities laws in a complaint filed on September 19, 2019.  Baver and his company, Cedarbrook Management, Inc., agreed to settle the Commission’s charges without admitting or denying the allegations and consented to disgorgement and prejudgment interest of over $2.25 million and a civil monetary penalty to be determined at a later date.  Feiner is contesting the Commission’s allegations.

According to the Commission’s complaint, Feiner formed FNR Healthcare, LLC (“FNR”) in 2007 and told investors it was “a private equity group focused on quality healthcare assets throughout the United States.”  But FNR did not actually hold those assets; instead, Feiner would establish a separate LLC for each nursing home facility he purchased and then sell membership interests in those entities to investors.  In private placement memorandums that were prepared for each entity, prospective investors were told they would receive an above-average annual return - often around 15% - from the operation of the specific facility they invested in, that an investment would be “low-risk,” and that they could expect a full return of their investment within three to five years.  

Some PPMs also contained language or provisions designed to reassure investors of the safety and success of the investment, including claims that (i) Bayer and/or Feiner were also making a personal investment in the facility; (ii) investors would receive quarterly distributions that were paid out before any profits were paid to the managers; (iii) the investment would be so profitable that the investor would be entitled to an additional “windfall” return when the facility was sold; and (iv) that the principals had extensive experience in the industry and were currently operating a significant number of “beds” in other facilities.  In total, and based on these claims, FNR and Feiner rated at least $10 million from over 60 investors from March 2014 to 2017.  Many of those investors came from Feiner’s connections in the Orthodox Jewish community, including an 86-year old Holocaust survivor who alone invested over $1 million.

But the Complaint alleges that many of Feiner’s claims to investors were misleading at best and in some instances fraudulent.  For example, Feiner is accused of misappropriating investor funds in at least four LLCs “upon receipt,” using those funds to pay promised distributions to investors in separate LLCs, fund operations in other struggling facilities, and misappropriate funds for his and Baver’s own personal use.  Nor did Feiner and/or Baver purportedly make the personal investments they touted in various PPMs, often either failing to invest at all or making a substantially lower investment than advertised.  In another instance, investors who believed their funds were being used to purchase two nursing homes were not informed about or given equity in a third facility that was purchased with their funds.  Feiner also allegedly sold at least three separate facilities without telling investors who would have been entitled to a portion of the sale proceeds, instead misappropriating funds to support other separate projects, fund distributions to other investors, and for his own personal use.

The Complaint alleges that Feiner and FNR raised “at least $10 million” from March 2014 to 2017, likely focusing on that period because of the current legal uncertainty over whether the Commission is limited to a five-year statute of limitations to obtain disgorgement.  But the Complaint contains other allegations showing that the actual amount raised during the entire duration of the scheme - which may have dated back as far as 2010 - may have been much higher.  For example, and in addition to the four primary LLCs highlighted in the Complaint during the relevant period, the Commission claims that Feiner raised at least $8 million by selling interests in three different LLCs during 2013.  When the facilities owned by those LLCs were sold, Feiner purportedly concealed the sales from the respective investors and instead misappropriated the sales proceeds by making transfers to other LLCs and paying back loans.  

While the sales of the nursing facilities were often profitable, the Commission alleges that the scheme eventually collapsed under the weight of increasing obligations and eventually ceased paying investor distributions by late 2016.  Only then did investors begin to ask questions, with several investors in a 2014 project learning with their attorney’s assistance in early 2017 that the property at issue had been sold back in 2015.  

A copy of the Complaint is below:


SEC Alleges Illinois Developer Ran $41 Million Real Estate Ponzi Scheme

The Securities and Exchange Commission has charged a Chicago property developer and his companies with violating federal securities laws based on allegations that a fix-and-flip real estate investment pitched to hundreds of investors was in reality a $41 million Ponzi scheme. Glenn C. Mueller, 72, and seven entities were named as defendants in an action filed by the Commission in a Chicago federal court on Thursday, September 5, 2019. In addition to seeking the standard injunctive relief, disgorgement of ill-gotten gains, and civil monetary penalties, the Commission has also requested the appointment of N. Neville Reid as a federal equity receiver to take control of Mueller’s entities and marshal assets for the benefit of defrauded victims.

In addition to Mueller, the Commission’s Complaint also named Northridge Holdings, Ltd., Southridge Holdings, Ltd., Eastridge Holdings, Ltd., Brookstone Investment Group, Ltd., Guardian Investment Group, Ltd., Unity Investment Group I, Ltd., and Amberwood Holdings, L.P. as defendants. According to the Complaint, potential investors were told that Northridge was in the business of buying and improving undervalued or mismanaged multi-family residential buildings. The company touted its “nearly 50 years” of real estate business expertise, with its recent February 2019 marketing materials claiming to operate 11 different properties with 935 total units.purchased with a total of $57 million.

Beginning no later than May 2014, Northridge began offering “real estate promissory notes” that paid annual interest of 3% until the funds were invested in a specific property. At the same time, the company also began selling promissory notes characterized as “CDs” or “CD loans” carrying terms ranging from one year to five or more years and annual interest rates ranging from 3% to 6% depending on the note term. Mueller also promised higher interest rates to certain noteholders who invested a larger amount or agreed to a longer note term. From at least May 2014 to April 2019, the Defendants sold at least $41.6 million in promissory notes to 319 investors across 32 states.

As is increasingly common in alleged investment frauds, the Complaint highlights Mueller’s appeal to potential investors based on charitable and religious beliefs by, for example, touting the presence of a church-sponsored resource center located at a large Northridge apartment complex. A Fall 2016 newsletter sent to investors again promoted the church and concluded by saying,

“Your investment in Northridge is growing financially and I believe God rewards those who help others in need. You are benefitting [sic] from both areas. Thank you for working together with us to make this a good investment.”

Northridge’s marketing materials told potential investors that their funds would be used to buy and renovate real estate assets, that each loan was secured by “any and all of the properties and their cash flow,” and the ensuing cash flow would “back up the promissory notes.”

But, the Commission alleges, Mueller and Northridge made numerous misrepresentations to investors in the course of operating a Ponzi scheme that depended on the inflow of new investor funds. When Northridge’s cash expenditures began to exceed the company’s cash inflows, it began using new investor funds to make interest and principal payments to existing investors. The Commission also claims that Mueller diverted nearly $2.5 million in investor funds to trade stocks and options and to make loans to family members. After Mueller learned of the Commission’s investigation in March 2019, he allegedly solicited two new investments totaling $650,000 and used a significant portion to make Ponzi payments, pay legal fees, and to settle a lawsuit involving two previously-purchased properties. Mueller also invoked his Fifth Amendment rights against self-incrimination when subpoenaed for testimony by the Commission.

The action comes almost exactly a year after the Commission filed charges against a separate Chicago-based real estate investing company on charges it was operating a $135 million Ponzi scheme.

The charges also mark the latest scheme discovery in what has been an active 2019. In a recent Ponzitracker analysis of Ponzi scheme discoveries in the first half of 2019, the number of schemes discovered was nearly statistically identical from the same period in 2018. However, the average and median scheme size in the first half of 2019 was nearly double and triple, respectively, from the same period in 2018, perhaps indicating that schemes have recently been able to raise money at a quicker clip.