Former Dead Pool Dealer Indicted
One of the very first forex dealers that the Savior shined his light on was One World Capital. Here is an excerpt from the summer of 2007:
http://www.fxstreet.com/forum/showpost.php?p=5102&postcount=6
Over the next several months One World rapidly circled the Bowl:
http://www.fxstreet.com/forum/showpost.php?p=5976&postcount=39
http://www.fxstreet.com/forum/showpost.php?p=7943&postcount=85
Finally, like that fat man in the Monty Python sketch who exploded upon eating a mint One Worldâs bloated and rotting gut burst into a million pieces in December of 2007 when regulators shut the firm down for good:
http://www.fxstreet.com/forum/showpost.php?p=8337&postcount=92
Now the Feds have swooped in and arrested John Walsh and friends. Leading the charge is Patrick Fitzgerald. Fitz can mount Walshâs head above the fireplace, right next to former kills like Scooter Libby and Governor Blago. Welcome to the party pal: http://www.chicagotribune.com/business/chi-winnetka-forex-fraud-arrest-jan07,0,405109.story
One of the very first forex dealers that the Savior shined his light on was One World Capital. Here is an excerpt from the summer of 2007:
http://www.fxstreet.com/forum/showpost.php?p=5102&postcount=6
As I continue to update the dead forex firms walking list I'm amazed how many people think fraud and undercapitalization are completely separate issues. Often times they are not. The reason is quite simple: firms that are committing fraud are not known for having legible books. And Vice versa. Firms that have a hard time maintaining their capital requirements will often cut corners and commit fraud to keep their firms from going under. Finally, smaller firms simply don't have the money to maintain the kind of large legal and compliance staffs necessary to keep up with the battery of regulations being issued by the NFA and CFTC. And of course some firms are just plain incompetent. All these factors have come to a head with Forex Dealer Dead Pool Member One World Capital, who is now in serious trouble with regulators.
To see the full report on One World's misdeeds you can click on the NFA's report yourself: http://www.nfa.futures.org/BasicNet/...px?seqnum=1190
In short, One World is a classic Dead Forex Firm walking. Firms like One World are the reason the NFA is going to raise capital requirements. And when they do, does anyone honestly believe the One World's of the world will survive?
Over the next several months One World rapidly circled the Bowl:
http://www.fxstreet.com/forum/showpost.php?p=5976&postcount=39
The word on the street is that the situation at One World has become so dire that a large chunk of their sales force resigned because they hadnât been paid for two months. Other traders are reporting non-responsive customer service, emails that go unanswered and phones that keep on ringing. All the signs of a firm in its last death throesâ¦
The bottom line is when you canât return a customerâs money when they ask for it you are finished in this business. One World may be able to limp on indefinitely but it is hard to see this firm making a comeback to respectability. Barring a fat sugar daddy willing to pump in ten million dollars this firmâs days appear to be numbered.
http://www.fxstreet.com/forum/showpost.php?p=7943&postcount=85
And the hits just keep on coming for One World Capital. The NFA just announced that One World has been fined $100,000 for the complaint brought against them last spring.
http://www.nfa.futures.org/basicnet/...17&contrib=NFA
In any case, I strongly recommend ANYONE who has an account with One World for the love of criminy get your money out of that firm once and for all- if you even still canâ¦
Finally, like that fat man in the Monty Python sketch who exploded upon eating a mint One Worldâs bloated and rotting gut burst into a million pieces in December of 2007 when regulators shut the firm down for good:
http://www.fxstreet.com/forum/showpost.php?p=8337&postcount=92
Now the Feds have swooped in and arrested John Walsh and friends. Leading the charge is Patrick Fitzgerald. Fitz can mount Walshâs head above the fireplace, right next to former kills like Scooter Libby and Governor Blago. Welcome to the party pal: http://www.chicagotribune.com/business/chi-winnetka-forex-fraud-arrest-jan07,0,405109.story
Feds arrest 2 Winnetka futures dealers on fraud charges
By James P. Miller
Tribune reporter
4:27 PM CST, January 7, 2009
Federal agents arrested two top executives of a Winnetka foreign-exchange futures dealer that collapsed over a year ago on federal fraud charges, the Justice Department disclosed Wednesday.
Both men were principals with One World Capital Group, which was effectively shut down in December of 2007 when the Commodity Futures Trading Commission â responding to a growing chorus of complaints from customers who said they'd been unable to withdraw funds from their accounts -- obtained a court order that froze One World's assets and barred the troubled foreign-currency trader from further trading activity.
Wednesday's actions, including agents' execution of "search and seizure" warrants at both officials' homes, represent the first criminal charges to emerge from the company's failure.
FBI agents arrested One World founder John E. Walsh at his Lake Forest home this morning, U.S. Attorney Patrick Fitzgerald's office said in a Wednesday statement.
Another One World principal, 43-year-old Charles G. Martin, of Glencoe, was arrested last night in the Los Angeles area. The government calls Martin a "de facto" official of the currency-trading concern, although he was prohibited from holding a position with the company.
A criminal complaint unsealed this morning charges both men with one count of wire fraud each, for improperly diverting to their own use customer funds that were supposed to be invested in foreign-currency trades.
The two men used customer funds they had misappropriated "to finance a lavish and extravagant lifestyle," racking up huge sums on corporate credit cards largely paid for by the company, the government's criminal complaint says.
Martin charged over $1 million "at a strip club and restaurants" over the course of 20 months, the government says, spent $50,000 at toy stores, and used his company credit card to finance $280,000 in jewelry-store purchases.
In addition, the complaint says that Martin and Walsh used hundreds of thousands of dollars they had diverted from One World to finance a never-released movie entitled "Order of Redemption."
The company, founded in 2006, hit turbulence in the spring of 2007, the government notes, when the National Futures Association found improprieties in the course of an audit.
The fallout from that audit sparked a rise in the number of customers who sought the return of money they had invested, the complaint notes, but the firm couldn't honor those requests because the two men had allegedly been dipping into margin funds as part of their misappropriation scheme.
Based on the company's refusal to honor those customer redemption requests, the federal regulatory agency known as the Commodity Futures Trading Commission filed a civil complaint against One World and Walsh in Chicago federal court in mid-December, 2007. That litigation led to the asset freeze that has been in place for the past year.
Chicago attorney Kevin Flynn, who is representing Walsh in the One World matter, said he hasn't had a chance to review the government's criminal complaint, but said "I don't believe that Mr. Walsh will admit guilt of any criminal conduct."
Indeed, said Flynn, Walsh has been cooperating with the CFTC's One World probe, and had this week reached an agreement in principle, in the courtroom of the judge hearing the civil case, on a possible resolution of the CFTC's complaint.
"We were shocked and surprised at the timing" of the government's decision to bring criminal charges, said Flynn, "coming as it does on the heels" of the tentative resolution of the civil complaint.
Martin, who was to appear Wednesday in Los Angeles federal court, couldn't immediately be reached for comment.