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'Operation Broken Trust' Targets Hundreds In Financial Fraud Sweep, Seeking Billions

PETE YOST   12/ 6/10 06:29 PM ET   AP

Eric Holder

WASHINGTON — A nationwide law enforcement crackdown targeting financial fraud has led to cases against 343 criminal defendants involving $8.3 billion in estimated losses, Attorney General Eric Holder announced Monday.

"Operation Broken Trust" is the first national effort of its kind aimed at a broad array of investment fraud schemes and the 3 1/2-month campaign was organized by the Obama administration's Financial Fraud Enforcement Task Force.

The schemes that were uncovered highlight "the pervasiveness of the threat," Shawn Henry, the FBI's executive assistant director, told a news conference.

In one case in Texas, an oil and gas investment Ponzi scheme defrauded 7,700 investors of more than $485 million. In another case, in Chicago, the operator of a Ponzi scheme victimized elderly Italian immigrants and hundreds of others after promising them annual returns of 10 to 15 percent.

Seventy-five investors lost $89 million in a Ponzi scheme in Florida. Nevin Shapiro, who pleaded guilty for his role in the scheme, used some of the money to pay illegal sports gambling debts, to buy floor seats at Miami Heat basketball games and to make payments on his yacht and his residence in Miami Beach.

Two Florida-based hedge fund managers, Bruce Prevost and David Harrold, were accused by the Securities and Exchange Commission of fraudulently putting more than a billion dollars' of investors' money in a Ponzi scheme operated by Minnesota businessman Thomas Petters. The SEC says that when Petters was unable to make payments, Prevost and Harrold concealed it from investors.

Yet another Ponzi scheme targeted members of the Haitian community in Florida, claiming 500 victims who lost $14 million after being promised that they would double their money in 90 days. A participant in the scheme, Ronnie Bass Jr., was convicted in federal court in October.

The law enforcement operation is a warning that cheating investors out of their earnings and savings "is no longer a safe business plan," said Holder.

In addition to the criminal cases arising from the probe, civil cases involved estimated losses of more than $2.1 billion.

In all, the schemes harmed more than 120,000 victims. Eighty-seven defendants have been sentenced to prison. There were 231 criminal cases and 60 civil enforcement actions.

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WASHINGTON — A nationwide law enforcement crackdown targeting financial fraud has led to cases against 343 criminal defendants involving $8.3 billion in estimated losses, Attorney General Eric H...
WASHINGTON — A nationwide law enforcement crackdown targeting financial fraud has led to cases against 343 criminal defendants involving $8.3 billion in estimated losses, Attorney General Eric H...
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
USNDC
Smartest President ever ? ... not even close.
03:43 PM on 01/02/2011
Our black President ... and his black Attorney General ... refuse to address the runaway foreclosure crisis ... which is disproportionately impacting black families.

Why are Obama & Holder enabling their predominantly white Banker friends by refusing to invesigate the monumental fraud surrounding the foreclosure crisis ?

Is this a subtle form of black on black crime ?
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Independent66
www.linkedin.com/in/harveyring
01:59 PM on 01/02/2011
Holder ought to look at Medicare and Medicaid fraud! The focus need to be on fraud prevention! That has been estimated to be over $100B a year in Medicare and could be $200B, no one knows. Then SS, then Fannie and Freddie, then Farm subsidies, then oil and gas royalties in Commerce I think. Then there is Defense, procurement and cash management in foreign countries, especially in war zones. Then he should look at how states actually spend transfer payments from the Feds. I'll bet we are looking at saving $1T or more per year and there are still a lot more agencies and programs to go! Gosh, does anyone believe we need to transfer more money to Government. Let them clean up their inside controls before they get anymore. Sarbanes Oxly applied to government might be a first step.
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Independent66
www.linkedin.com/in/harveyring
01:42 PM on 01/02/2011
All the Departments that are responsible for financial regulation are a joke. This isn't a Republican or Democratic administration problem, it is a big government problem where people who are responsible aren't. Look at the housing problems we are experiencing. Look at the Ponsi schemes that were known and ignored by all the regulators. Then there is still so much illegal activity hidden inside corporations, insider trading, bonus manipulation for executives, accounting manipulation, etc. If we have a law, it should be enforced, or changed or eliminate it. Department regulations need to be reviewed by Congress and approved. There are so many regulations on everything we do in this country, that just sitting at my computer is probably violating some rule in some department! Rules that are not enforced and have little or no reason to exist undermines American's trust in government.
01:32 PM on 12/07/2010
Somewhere in this sweep there will need to be Attorneys who seem to always skirt by claiming "I know nothing" or Attorney Client Privilege". We did not commit the crime we just helped our paying clients do so. Our advantage is they keep paying us. You can not possibly believe that all this activity went unnoticed by the legal beagles do you? bankalchemist.
11:49 AM on 12/07/2010
Hah, "The law enforcement operation is a warning that cheating investors out of their earnings and savings "is no longer a safe business plan," said Holder" - when does he go after Goldman and AIG? When will he work on ending the racist New Jim Crow of mass incarceration of black men? The Feds (the Justice Dept. under Holder) pay local law enforcement to stop and frisk black men for imagined drug offences while ignoring white drug trafficking, as persecutors, I mean prosecutors at the Federal level accept streams of black men into harsh Federal mandatory sentencing while whites get mild state prosecution and sentencing. Read Michelle Alexander's "The New Jim Crow: Mass Incarceration in the Age of Colorblindness" and then look at Holder's personal role in promoting racist law enforcement in the specious "War on Drugs."
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Harvee Wallbanger
Republicans... I got no use for you.
11:25 AM on 12/07/2010
I trust you have ferreted out your moles. Otherwise, you aren't going to get the real bad guys.
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studana51
Old and tired
11:02 AM on 12/07/2010
This guy couldn't prosecute a jay-walker, not only for lack of interest but lack of skills.
If it's broken trust he's worried about, he should prosecute his boss.
10:56 AM on 12/07/2010
Not holding Bush accountable for war crimes set the tone. It's too much trouble and will be messy to accuse and try high profile people. What about all the mortgage companys who stole people's homes? Either we live by the same laws for everyone or we become a chaotic nation. For the few they have caught, there must be many more, because obviously it was easy to get away with this. Good start for the Obama administration. Keep going. And for the rest of us; why is anyone still investing money in Wall Street or anywhere else? (except maybe local, green businesses)
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
lmktacwa
Progressive Dissident
10:51 AM on 12/07/2010
This is all fine, but where are the REAL criminals of Wall Street? oh, that's right, eating cake and enjoying their million dollar bonuses while the they begrudge the unemployed a measly 300 a week.

I'm not impressed by this DOJ. Why hasn't CHENEY been turned over to INTERPOL?
Why hasn't the admitted torture president, Bush, been indicted.

The DOJ is a joke.
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pjordan52
We are the government we detest
10:46 AM on 12/07/2010
I'll believe it when I see it.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Dave Thinkster Paulson
A concerned American moderate
10:23 AM on 12/07/2010
The problem is that they never go after the real crooks -- the thieves on Wall Street and the multinational corporations. When you compare the frauds involved in these Ponzi schemes to the villains who extracted a quarter of the wealth of America's middle class or those who have already sent millions of American jobs overseas, many of whom pay no federal income tax, you're talking about petty thieves.

This is smoke and mirrors designed to distract the public from the fact that NONE of the uber-frauds on Wall Street have been charged with anything. In 21st Century America, too-big-to-fail means too powerful to be held accountable under the law.
10:43 AM on 12/07/2010
He`s too busy going after those stoners and hippies in California.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
nappyman
Hatred is gained as much by good works as by evil
10:05 AM on 12/07/2010
Stop ya complaining. Everything can be better. Is this a good thing...yes. Just take it as your good news of the day.
10:02 AM on 12/07/2010
We'll see if the Justice Department is capable of enforcing actual justice and the law. So far they seem to spend most of their time covering up the crimes of Cheney/Bush Inc. A full time job it is.
10:52 AM on 12/07/2010
Care to explain that?
11:10 AM on 12/07/2010
If you don't know what I am talking about you have not been paying attention.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Rixar13
U.S. Coast Guard Veteran and University
10:01 AM on 12/07/2010
U.S. Navy Veterans former lawyer: "I was duped" St. Petersburg Times...
Conservative Politics business as usual... sign
09:50 AM on 12/07/2010
Divert, Distract, Deflect and Distort.
And the Guilty will walk free while the lambs are slaughtered and the sheep are fleeced!
10:53 AM on 12/07/2010
Who says?
11:50 AM on 12/07/2010
ME for one!
Do you need to ask directions?
Or can you find your way with a flashlight!