Busted! Another Ponzi Scheme Promoter Gets Caught


by Brian Mahany

The United States Securities and Exchange Commission has charged Raymond Morris with an offering fraud. Morris, a Draper, Utah, resident is charged with defrauding investors out of at least $60 million.

According to the federal complaint filed, Morris sold unregistered and non-exempt promissory notes to dozens of investors between March 2007 and January 2009. Investors were told they were investing in "risk free" high-yield notes. The principal was to be deposited into a secure account and only used for "verification of deposit" purposes. Leveraging the money in the account, Morris promised returns of 20% per month.

Morris guaranteed the deposits would never leave his account. According to the SEC, Morris used the money to purchase a luxury home and several sports cars. Like most Ponzi schemes, Morris also used a portion of the money to pay early investors who wished to cash out.

Fraudsters will frequently pay a few investors the promised rate of return. These happy customers create an illusion of safety for the investors that follow.

Morris isn't the only one charged in this Ponzi scheme. He had help. The government has charged James Haley, Jay Linford, Cornerstone Capital Fund and Vantage Point Capital with selling the bogus high yield notes. Morris' own lawyer, Luc Nguyen, was also charged in the scheme.

Although every Ponzi scheme has common characteristics, the greed in this case is exceptional. The government says that co-defendant James Haley was himself scammed by Morris, although that didn't stop Haley from compounding the fraud.

Prosecutors says that Morris told Haley that he had come across an "exclusive investment opportunity" started by the owner of the Houston Astros. The fund was closed to new investors and was claimed to have generated 20% monthly returns for the preceding 8 years. Conveniently, Morris called Haley several days later and said one of the investors had died creating an opening.

Without performing any due diligence, Haley began soliciting investment funds from his friends and neighbors. The government says that Haley simply repeated Morris' ridiculous claims. At some point, Haley crossed the line from negligence and became an active fraudster himself by telling later investors that he "owned" the fund.

The greed doesn't stop there. Around June of 2007, Morris and Haley hired Nguyen to perform legal work. Nguyen apparently did more than just represent the two. He began soliciting additional investors, telling them that he had verified the legitimacy of the fund and had spoken with the banks and private traders involved in the fund. He also told investors that he had invested his own money in the fund. All false says the SEC.

Nguyen was paid $58,000 for his legal work but received an additional $330,000 in commissions.

The greed still doesn't end. Morris met co-defendant Jay Linford at an investor seminar. Not satisfied with claims of 20% returns in just 30 days, Linwood raised another $1 million by telling some investors that the fund paid returns as high as 100% in just 7 days. That is an annual rate of return of over 5000% without compounding!

No Ponzi scheme can last long with the rates that Morris and the others were advertising. The scheme began to unravel in April 2008 when some investors were unable to cash out. Morris began spinning a variety of tales including a story that "Homeland Security" had frozen the accounts. By October of 2008, Morris was allegedly forging phony bank statements in an effort to buy time. Even while the fraud was unraveling, Morris continued to take in additional funds.

The government has charged the group with multiple counts of securities fraud. The FBI and local officials are assisting in the investigation.

Unfortunately many of the investors who lost their money had minimal net worth and marginal earnings. Some even borrowed money to fund their investment. Many lost their entire life savings. Note: This story is based on court records and published reports. The case was just filed on January 7th of 2011

About the Author

Brian Mahany is a partner at the Milwaukee law firm of Mahany & Ertl, a full service boutique firm concentrating in asset recovery and stock broker fraud. Their securities fraud lawyers help victims get back their hard earned money anywhere in the U.S. Contact Brian Mahany at (414) 704-6731 or through his website, http://www.mahanyertl.com

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