Mormons Become Victims in $50 Million Scam to Sell Gold Bullion
2009-09-01 04:01:00.0 GMT
By James Sterngold
Sept. 1 (Bloomberg) -- Henry Jones delivered the good news
in a conference call with Tri Energy Inc.âs investors: The gold
deal the company had been working on for years was about to pay
off.
Jones, 55, a record producer in Marina del Rey, California,
and his two partners had raised more than $50 million from 735
investors, which they said they were using to broker the sale to
Arab buyers of 20,000 tons of gold owned by a group of Israelis.
They promised to triple investorsâ money -- if only Tri Energy
could overcome some last-minute glitches.
All the company needed to close the deal, Jones said on the
Dec. 20, 2004, conference call, taped by one of the
participants, was a âsafe-passage letterâ that would cost
$450,000. A few days later, on another call, he said Tri Energy
had to come up with $100,000 to open a âcommission account.â
Then, on Jan. 15, 2005, a new request: The bank handling the
deal wanted $125,000 to conduct an audit.
Like those caught up in other get-rich scams -- from
Bernard Madoffâs $65 billion Ponzi scheme, which initially
snared wealthy Jews, to an alleged $4.4 million fraud aimed at
deaf people -- Tri Energyâs investors had something in common.
Many were Mormons and born-again Christians who shared dreams
and prayers on nightly conference calls. They vowed to use the
profits for charitable works and kept raising funds, at times
taking out second mortgages, draining retirement accounts and
recruiting relatives.
While the delays and pleas for more money never stopped,
the charade did.
Restraining Order
In May 2005, the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission
obtained a temporary restraining order against Jones and his
partners, Robert Jennings, an associate pastor at the New Life
Fellowship Church in Perris, California, and Arthur Simburg, a
former marketing representative for sporting-goods manufacturer
Puma AG.
Jones, a native of Nigeria, and Jennings, 59, were later
convicted in federal court in Los Angeles on charges of mail,
wire and securities fraud. Jennings was sentenced last November
to 12 years in prison, and Jones got 20 years in April. Both men
have filed notices that they intend to appeal. Simburg, 64, who
pleaded guilty and cooperated with prosecutors, received a nine-
year sentence.
Neither Simburg nor Jennings responded to letters sent to
them in prison seeking comment. Jones replied in a hand-written
note that he had been asked by an Arab group to broker deals in
gold, crude oil and bank securities. He said the gold deal had
not closed because it was structured as an âinvestment
instrument,â not a one-time deal, and that, though the
prosecutors could find no records, it was genuine.
Affinity Fraud
While their scam was puny compared with Madoffâs, which
netted him 150 years in prison, it had much in common with the
largest Ponzi scheme in history and other so-called affinity
frauds. Such cons prey on like-minded or culturally connected
investors whose trust blinds them to the implausible in the
pursuit of profit.
The SEC has filed 86 enforcement actions involving Ponzi
schemes since the beginning of 2006, according to data compiled
by NERA Economic Consulting, a New York-based research firm. The
number more than tripled to 36 in the first six months of this
year from 11 in 2006.
Many of the scams, in which money from new investors is
used to repay others or siphoned off by the promoters, targeted
religious or ethnic groups.
Haitian Ponzi
In December, the SEC accused George Theodule of running a
$23 million Ponzi scheme aimed at fellow Haitian immigrants,
whose money he promised to double in 90 days. In April, it
obtained an injunction against Marvin Cooper, who is deaf and
who the SEC said was running a $4.4 million fraud based in
Hawaii that recruited deaf investors in the U.S. and Japan. In
June, it got a cease-and-desist order against Peter Son, a
Korean-American, who it said bilked Asian investors, mostly
Korean immigrants, out of $80 million.
Theoduleâs lawyer, Russell Weigel, says his client is
seeking a dismissal of the SEC case. Cooper consented to the
injunction, and his lawyer, Michael Glenn, says heâs trying to
make restitution. Son pleaded not guilty to criminal fraud
charges in federal court in Oakland in July.
âAffinity can be a powerful element,â says Mitchell
Zuckoff, a professor of journalism at Boston University and
author of âPonziâs Scheme: The True Story of a Financial
Legend,â a 2005 book about Charles Ponziâs 1920 fraud. âThatâs
what gets people to lower their inhibitions. Thereâs this
attitude, âHeâs like me. I can trust him.â Itâs almost hard-
wired into our DNA.â
âTotally Outlandishâ
While some Tri Energy claims were implausible -- the 20,000
tons of gold was more than twice the total U.S. bullion reserve,
the largest in the world -- investors rarely wavered in their
loyalty. One even invested more money after his brother,
despondent about being conned, committed suicide, prosecutors
say.
âThese deals sounded totally outlandish to me,â says
Stephen Cohen, an SEC lawyer in Washington who worked on the
case. âBut it was obvious that the people on their conference
calls were very sincere. They really cared about each other.
They prayed for each other. They talked about their families.
They just wanted to believe.â
For Kim Flanigan, 37, a Mormon who owns a furniture store
with her husband in Casper, Wyoming, being part of a spiritual
mission was addictive. She says she invested $10,000 in Tri
Energy at the suggestion of her mother and an aunt.
2009-09-01 04:01:00.0 GMT
By James Sterngold
Sept. 1 (Bloomberg) -- Henry Jones delivered the good news
in a conference call with Tri Energy Inc.âs investors: The gold
deal the company had been working on for years was about to pay
off.
Jones, 55, a record producer in Marina del Rey, California,
and his two partners had raised more than $50 million from 735
investors, which they said they were using to broker the sale to
Arab buyers of 20,000 tons of gold owned by a group of Israelis.
They promised to triple investorsâ money -- if only Tri Energy
could overcome some last-minute glitches.
All the company needed to close the deal, Jones said on the
Dec. 20, 2004, conference call, taped by one of the
participants, was a âsafe-passage letterâ that would cost
$450,000. A few days later, on another call, he said Tri Energy
had to come up with $100,000 to open a âcommission account.â
Then, on Jan. 15, 2005, a new request: The bank handling the
deal wanted $125,000 to conduct an audit.
Like those caught up in other get-rich scams -- from
Bernard Madoffâs $65 billion Ponzi scheme, which initially
snared wealthy Jews, to an alleged $4.4 million fraud aimed at
deaf people -- Tri Energyâs investors had something in common.
Many were Mormons and born-again Christians who shared dreams
and prayers on nightly conference calls. They vowed to use the
profits for charitable works and kept raising funds, at times
taking out second mortgages, draining retirement accounts and
recruiting relatives.
While the delays and pleas for more money never stopped,
the charade did.
Restraining Order
In May 2005, the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission
obtained a temporary restraining order against Jones and his
partners, Robert Jennings, an associate pastor at the New Life
Fellowship Church in Perris, California, and Arthur Simburg, a
former marketing representative for sporting-goods manufacturer
Puma AG.
Jones, a native of Nigeria, and Jennings, 59, were later
convicted in federal court in Los Angeles on charges of mail,
wire and securities fraud. Jennings was sentenced last November
to 12 years in prison, and Jones got 20 years in April. Both men
have filed notices that they intend to appeal. Simburg, 64, who
pleaded guilty and cooperated with prosecutors, received a nine-
year sentence.
Neither Simburg nor Jennings responded to letters sent to
them in prison seeking comment. Jones replied in a hand-written
note that he had been asked by an Arab group to broker deals in
gold, crude oil and bank securities. He said the gold deal had
not closed because it was structured as an âinvestment
instrument,â not a one-time deal, and that, though the
prosecutors could find no records, it was genuine.
Affinity Fraud
While their scam was puny compared with Madoffâs, which
netted him 150 years in prison, it had much in common with the
largest Ponzi scheme in history and other so-called affinity
frauds. Such cons prey on like-minded or culturally connected
investors whose trust blinds them to the implausible in the
pursuit of profit.
The SEC has filed 86 enforcement actions involving Ponzi
schemes since the beginning of 2006, according to data compiled
by NERA Economic Consulting, a New York-based research firm. The
number more than tripled to 36 in the first six months of this
year from 11 in 2006.
Many of the scams, in which money from new investors is
used to repay others or siphoned off by the promoters, targeted
religious or ethnic groups.
Haitian Ponzi
In December, the SEC accused George Theodule of running a
$23 million Ponzi scheme aimed at fellow Haitian immigrants,
whose money he promised to double in 90 days. In April, it
obtained an injunction against Marvin Cooper, who is deaf and
who the SEC said was running a $4.4 million fraud based in
Hawaii that recruited deaf investors in the U.S. and Japan. In
June, it got a cease-and-desist order against Peter Son, a
Korean-American, who it said bilked Asian investors, mostly
Korean immigrants, out of $80 million.
Theoduleâs lawyer, Russell Weigel, says his client is
seeking a dismissal of the SEC case. Cooper consented to the
injunction, and his lawyer, Michael Glenn, says heâs trying to
make restitution. Son pleaded not guilty to criminal fraud
charges in federal court in Oakland in July.
âAffinity can be a powerful element,â says Mitchell
Zuckoff, a professor of journalism at Boston University and
author of âPonziâs Scheme: The True Story of a Financial
Legend,â a 2005 book about Charles Ponziâs 1920 fraud. âThatâs
what gets people to lower their inhibitions. Thereâs this
attitude, âHeâs like me. I can trust him.â Itâs almost hard-
wired into our DNA.â
âTotally Outlandishâ
While some Tri Energy claims were implausible -- the 20,000
tons of gold was more than twice the total U.S. bullion reserve,
the largest in the world -- investors rarely wavered in their
loyalty. One even invested more money after his brother,
despondent about being conned, committed suicide, prosecutors
say.
âThese deals sounded totally outlandish to me,â says
Stephen Cohen, an SEC lawyer in Washington who worked on the
case. âBut it was obvious that the people on their conference
calls were very sincere. They really cared about each other.
They prayed for each other. They talked about their families.
They just wanted to believe.â
For Kim Flanigan, 37, a Mormon who owns a furniture store
with her husband in Casper, Wyoming, being part of a spiritual
mission was addictive. She says she invested $10,000 in Tri
Energy at the suggestion of her mother and an aunt.
