NEW YORK — A crew of con men sold worthless penny
stocks to people around the globe at pumped-up prices, then victimized the
investors again by setting up a fake law firm that charged them to try to get
their money back, federal authorities in New York said Tuesday.
The international scheme generated more than $140 million,
making it one of the largest penny stock fraud schemes in history, U.S.
Attorney Loretta Lynch said at a news conference announcing an indictment
charging nine defendants.
FBI agents arrested six of the defendants Tuesday in New
York, Arizona, New Jersey, Florida and California. A seventh was being held in
Canada and two were at large.
The indictment alleges that the defendants engaged in a
massive "pump and dump" scheme — buying controlling interests in
sketchy startup companies, then artificially inflating their value by promoting
them in fictitious emails, social media messages and news releases. The fraudulent sales campaign generated more than $120 million in investments by tens of thousands of people in the United States and 34 other countries, including Jamaica, South Africa, Ireland and China, authorities said.
Working out of boiler room phone centers in Canada, Thailand
and Britain, the defendants again victimized the same investors by convincing
them to pay $20 million in advance fees in return for helping them sell their
securities or join lawsuits to reclaim their losses, court papers said.
In some instances, the defendants pretended to be Internal Revenue Service employees who told victims they would have to pay a 30 percent tax before they could unload their penny stocks.
The defendants "picked (the investors') pockets yet
again as they promised to help them find a way out of their financial
straits," Lynch said.In some instances, the defendants pretended to be Internal Revenue Service employees who told victims they would have to pay a 30 percent tax before they could unload their penny stocks.
The victims were told to wire the advance fees to banks in
New York City and elsewhere. The funds eventually made their way to an account
in Lebanon, the papers said.
Authorities said the crew had plans to set up a new call
center in Brooklyn. In an intercepted phone call, one defendant remarked,
"I tell you what, man ... hitting the Americans would be like taking candy
from a baby," according to court papers.
Referring to the burned investors, the same defendant was
overheard saying, "A lot of these guys are dying to get rid of this crap.
... It's easy money."
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