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AP: Ponzi Busts Nearly Quadrupled In 2009

First Posted: 03/18/10 06:12 AM ET Updated: 05/25/11 04:05 PM ET

Ponzi Schemes
The Number Of Ponzi Schemes That Got Busted In 2009 Was Four Times Higher Than In 2008, According To The AP

(AP -- CURT ANDERSON) - It was a rough year for Ponzi schemes. In 2009, the recession unraveled nearly four times as many of the investment scams as fell apart in 2008, with "Ponzi" becoming a buzzword again thanks to the collapse of Bernard Madoff's $50 billion plot.

Tens of thousands of investors, some of them losing their life's savings, watched more than $16.5 billion disappear like smoke in 2009, according to an Associated Press analysis of scams in all 50 states.

While the dollar figure was lower than in 2008, that's only because Madoff -- who pleaded guilty earlier this year and is serving a 150-year prison sentence -- was arrested in December 2008 and didn't count toward this year's total.

In all, more than 150 Ponzi schemes collapsed in 2009, compared to about 40 in 2008, according to the AP's examination of criminal cases at all U.S. attorneys' offices and the FBI, as well as criminal and civil actions taken by state prosecutors and regulators at both the federal and state levels.

The 2009 scams ranged in size from a few hundred thousand dollars to the $7 billion bogus international banking empire authorities say jailed financier Allen Stanford orchestrated, as well as the $1.2 billion scheme they say was operated by disbarred Florida lawyer Scott Rothstein. Both have pleaded not guilty.

While enforcement efforts have ramped up -- in large part because of the discovery of Madoff's fraud, estimated at $21 billion to $50 billion -- the main reason so many Ponzi schemes have come to light is clear.

"The financial meltdown has resulted in the exposure of numerous fraudulent schemes that otherwise might have gone undetected for a longer period of time," said Lanny Breuer, assistant attorney general for the U.S. Justice Department's criminal division.

A Ponzi scheme depends on a constant infusion of new investors to pay older ones and furnish the cash for the scammers' lavish lifestyles. This year, when the pool of people willing to become new investors shrank and existing investors clamored to withdraw money, scams collapsed across the country.

"Some portion of the investors in the Ponzi scheme always get the short end of the stick and do not get paid," said Elizabeth Nowicki, a former Securities and Exchange Commission attorney who now teaches law at Boston University.

Even those who say they did their homework before investing ended up losing everything.

A retired Air Force sergeant, Tom Annis searched the Internet for red flags like complaints or lawsuits involving Minneapolis-based host Patrick Kiley after hearing about his investment on a weekly Christian radio show called "Follow The Money."

Finding none, the 63-year-old from Jacksonville, Fla., invested his $270,000 nest egg -- money that has since evaporated after federal regulators shut down what they've called an elaborate, $190 million Ponzi scheme.

"I tried to do my level of due diligence," Annis said. "How could I be duped like this after years of investing?"

Ponzi schemes, named for infamous swindler Charles Ponzi, are extremely simple: Investors attracted by promises of high profits are paid with money from an ever-increasing pool of new investors, with the scammer skimming off the top. Sometimes the investments are at least partially legitimate but more often are completely fictional. There's no reserve fund for lean times, or for when droves of investors start demanding their money.

Ponzi himself was an Italian immigrant who concocted a scheme in 1919 involving bogus investments in postal currency. He cheated thousands of people out of $10 million, eventually going to jail for wire fraud before being deported back to Italy in 1934.

Eighty years after his scheme, federal statistics paint the picture of a Ponzi nation:

_The FBI opened more than 2,100 securities fraud investigations in 2009, up from 1,750 in 2008. The FBI also had 651 agents working in 2009 on high-yield investment fraud cases, which include Ponzis, compared with 429 last year.

_The SEC this year issued 82 percent more restraining orders against Ponzi schemes and other securities fraud cases this year than in 2008, and it opened about 6 percent more investigations. Ponzi scheme investigations now make up 21 percent of the SEC's enforcement workload, compared with 17 percent in 2008 and 9 percent in 2005.

_The Commodity Futures Trading Commission filed 31 civil actions in Ponzi cases this year, more than twice the 2008 amount.

Many of the 2009 cases have yet to head to trial. In its tally, the AP counted schemes in which prosecutions were initiated or in which regulators filed civil cases in 2008 and 2009.

The Justice Department does not have totals of how many people were convicted in Ponzi schemes for either year, or for previous years.

Experts believe the recession was the main reason for the collapse of so many Ponzi schemes, though the Madoff case brought greater regulatory scrutiny and heightened public awareness. More people are inclined to raise questions when things don't look right.

"We do get a lot more questions from investors now," said Denise Voigt Crawford, Texas Securities Comissioner. "They are really worried about Ponzi schemes. That's a good thing."

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08:09 PM on 12/29/2009
The masterminds of Ponzi schemes should be put on death row.
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12:52 PM on 12/30/2009
...Climate Change deniers should be first in that line
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Aldyth
Advocating for those who cannot defend themselves.
01:16 PM on 12/29/2009
And how many of these guys would have been caught if the economy hadn't crashed? People wanted their money out and they couldn't produce it. If not for that, Madoff and Sanford would probably still be getting away with it.

Come to think of it, Madoff and Sanford have as much reason to blame Wall Street for their financial woes as the rest of us.
10:55 AM on 12/29/2009
When the tide goes out...you know who's swimming naked.
http://yieldpig.blogspot.com/
10:51 AM on 12/29/2009
I read a great piece in Utne about how societie's relationship with the nature world mimics a Ponzi sceme. We take undue amount of resources with wonton disregard for the future and how those resources will be replenished. We are a culture that consumes beyond our means and future generations will foot the bill.
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yakmeat
Nearly all of us are both makers and takers.
10:47 AM on 12/29/2009
Oops... Nearly quadrupled.
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yakmeat
Nearly all of us are both makers and takers.
10:46 AM on 12/29/2009
Wow, the number of Ponzi scheme busts nearly tripled?

Too bad they missed the biggest one, A.K.A. Wall Street.
10:55 AM on 12/29/2009
I concur. Ponzi schemes tripled? What a surprise...
How much responsibility should the SEC take? Aren't these asshats enabling these schemers?
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amaycatbaker
08:28 AM on 12/29/2009
Good. Business is built on basic trust, these guys ruin that trust. Nice to see something done about these crooks, now for others on Wall Street.
12:03 AM on 12/29/2009
"Labor is prior to, and independent of, capital. Capital is only the fruit of labor, and could never have existed if Labor had not first existed. Labor is superior to capital, and deserves much the higher consideration." ABRAHAM LINCOLN

"The nobility system of other countries having been established by force,and being supported by force, can perhaps be go rid ofonly by force.

But our American Nobility system being founded in fraud and supported by fraud, can be rid of in no other way than by effectually exposing the nature of that fraud...", US Democratic Review 1839

But if you are a Corporation that makes substantial campaign contributions(bribes) you will be bailed out.
schatsie
Wall Street is Worse than Vegas
07:09 AM on 12/29/2009
Well you can certainly see that the tables have turned and that Labor is taxed 3 times more heavily than passive income.......
11:51 PM on 12/28/2009
Ponzi schemes are a product of pure greed and definitely a by-product of the Reaganomics reduction of regulations within the economy. Granted the schemes have been around long before Reagan, but its these type of recent poor decisions that produce unintended consequences. Smaller government is the equivalent of sending the lifeguards home earlier – something is bound to happen.
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FoonTheElder
Always choosing between the lesser of two evils
10:45 PM on 12/28/2009
That only happened because, due to the recession, the people who invested in the Ponzi schemes needed their money to make up for losses in stocks and homes. As soon as more money needed to go out of the Ponzi scheme than was coming in, the game is over.
09:12 PM on 12/28/2009
Good articles 4 slow news day: http://iamned111.blogspot.com
08:52 PM on 12/28/2009
Goldman Sachs is managing the biggest ponzi scheme.
07:42 PM on 12/28/2009
Ponzi schemes and people who invest in them are a symptom of Capitalist greed - the idea that you can get rich quick by manipulating or having someone else manipulate your money.

Sorry, but I have no sympathy for either.
schatsie
Wall Street is Worse than Vegas
07:11 AM on 12/29/2009
I do have sympathy....i was able to invest in an IPO when my credit union went public and in less than 5 years my money had gone from 5 grand to over 25 grand.....It was a good bit of investing but just luck....
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vippy
Carpe Diem!
07:15 PM on 12/28/2009
With Wall Street leading the way why are we surprised? Wall Street is fighting any type of regulation and we know what that means. Other people are sure to follow with their own scheme.
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06:57 PM on 12/28/2009
Stephen C. Rose and Kim Inman, your day is overdue.
http://www.worldlawdirect.com/forum/ymmss-sta-complaints/21119-ymmss-perps-still-livin-good-lie.html