Even after Madoff, Ponzi Schemes Touting Promissory Notes Proliferate

By Pam Martens and Russ Martens: June 11, 2018 ~  

Broken Piggy BankMost Americans are not aware that the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) had the opportunity to stop Bernie Madoff’s Ponzi scheme 16 years before he confessed in 2008. In 1992, the SEC settled an investigation against two Florida accountants, Frank Avellino and Michael Bienes. The duo had been raising money for Bernie Madoff to “invest” for their clients for 30 years by handing out promissory notes to investors that promised returns of 13.5 percent or higher. Avellino and Bienes sold over $440 million in these unregistered notes to thousands of unwitting investors.

The Avellino and Bienes matter was settled by the SEC with an order for the accountants to stop selling unregistered securities and with Madoff returning the money. No inquiry was made into where Madoff obtained the funds to pay back investors. The SEC did not lay a finger on Madoff because the investigators assigned to the case simply accepted Madoff’s client statements as proof that the investment securities existed rather than going to the Depository Trust Company (DTC), the outside clearing entity that could have confirmed that they did not exist.

After the 1992 missed opportunity, multiple more Madoff investigations were equally inept by the SEC, leading its Inspector General to conclude in a 457-page report released in August 2009 that “there were systematic breakdowns in the manner in which the SEC conducted its examinations and investigations….”

As interest rates on safe fixed income investments (like FDIC-insured bank Certificates of Deposits and U.S. Treasury Notes where interest payments and return of principal at maturity are guaranteed by the U.S. government) have dwindled over the past decade since the financial crash in 2008, Ponzi schemes offering promissory notes have proliferated across the U.S. The SEC and state regulators have caught dozens of these Ponzi operators but there is no question that many more have gone undetected and are operating in broad daylight today.

Most of these promissory note Ponzi scheme operators are content to swindle millions or tens of millions of dollars from investors. But on December 21 of last year the SEC announced that it had uncovered a $1.2 billion Ponzi scheme using promissory notes that had defrauded more than 8,400 investors, mostly senior citizens. The scheme was operated by Robert H. Shapiro and the Woodbridge Group of Companies LLC, formerly headquartered in Boca Raton, Florida. The SEC explained the scheme as follows:

“Woodbridge advertised its primary business as issuing loans to supposed third-party commercial property owners paying Woodbridge 11-15 percent annual interest for ‘hard money,’ short-term financing.  In return, Woodbridge allegedly promised to pay investors 5-10 percent interest annually. Woodbridge and Shapiro allegedly sought to avoid investors cashing out at the end of their terms and boasted in marketing materials that ‘clients keep coming back to [Woodbridge] because time and experience have proven results.  Over 90% national renewal rate!’ While Woodbridge claimed it made high-interest loans to third parties, the SEC’s complaint alleges that the vast majority of the borrowers were Shapiro-owned companies that had no income and never made interest payments on the loans.”

The SEC says Shapiro and Woodbridge simply used new investors’ money to pay other investors who wanted to cash out in a classic Ponzi scheme structure.

Preying on senior citizens in Florida is considered a target-rich environment for Ponzi schemers. In May 2012 the SEC charged that George Levin and Frank Preve, who lived in the Fort Lauderdale area of Florida, had raised more than $157 million from 173 investors by issuing promissory notes from Levin’s company and interests in a private investment fund they operated. The SEC charged that the two had used the investors’ money “to purchase discounted legal settlements from former Florida attorney Scott Rothstein through his prominent law firm Rothstein Rosenfeldt and Adler PA.” Unfortunately for investors, Rothstein’s representations were just a scam with Rothstein using the funds to “support his lavish lifestyle.”

The promissory note/Ponzi scheme has become such a problem that in April of this year the SEC issued an “Investor Alert” detailing the following “classic warning signs”:

“Promises of High Returns with Little or No Risk. Guaranteed high investment returns are the hallmark of a Ponzi scheme. Every investment has risk, and the potential for high returns usually comes with high risk. If it sounds too good to be true, it probably is.

“Unlicensed and Unregistered Sellers. Most Ponzi schemes involve individuals or firms that are not licensed or registered. Even if an investment professional comes across as likeable or trustworthy, use the free search tool on Investor.gov to check whether the person is licensed and registered.

“Overly Consistent Returns. Investment values tend to fluctuate over time. Be skeptical of an investment that generates steady positive returns regardless of market conditions.

“If you or someone you know has been pitched an investment with any of these red flags, report it to the SEC. Also, be wary of aggressive sales ploys such as pressure to buy immediately and persuasion tactics such as offering investment seminars with a free meal. Take your time deciding whether an investment is right for you and don’t give any money until you have confirmed for yourself that the seller is licensed and registered.

“For investments that you already have, be suspicious if you have problems getting paid or if you are pressured to rollover your investments. Ponzi scheme promoters sometimes try to prevent investors from cashing out by offering even higher returns for staying invested.”

Here’s another warning from Wall Street On Parade: if you sense that something is amiss, don’t just report it to the SEC. (Remember, Madoff ran his scheme for almost half a century right under the nose of the SEC while multiple whistleblowers pounded on its doors attempting to expose Madoff.) In addition to the SEC, send a (registered, signature-receipt required) detailed letter to your State Attorney General. If you don’t hear anything after a few weeks, call the top financial investigative reporter at your largest area newspaper and hand him or her the written material you provided to the SEC and State Attorney General’s office.

It’s up to all of us to do our part in protecting the life savings of ourselves and our fellow Americans.

Bookmark the permalink.

Comments are closed.