venerdì 9 aprile 2010

Former Polaroid owner Petters jailed for 50 years

Former Polaroid owner Tom Petters jailed for 50 years for Ponzi fraud

Tom Petters, a US businessman convicted of orchestrating a $3.65bn Ponzi scheme that included buying Polaroid as a cover, has been sentenced to 50 years in prison.

Former Polaroid owner Tom Petters has been jailed for 50 years.
Former Polaroid owner Tom Petters has been jailed for 50 years.

The 52-year-old was sentenced in a US District Court in St. Paul, Minnesota, four months after he was convicted on charges of wire fraud, mail fraud and money laundering.

In handing down the 50-year sentence, the longest jail term ever ordered in a financial fraud case in the state, Judge Richard Kyle said: "I'm not satisfied that if he were released early, he wouldn't re-offend."

Following a month-long trial, Petters was convicted on December 2, 2009 of 10 counts of wire fraud, three counts of mail fraud, one count of conspiracy to commit mail and wire fraud, one count of conspiracy to commit money laundering, and five counts of money laundering.

Petters, assisted by others, defrauded and obtained billions of dollars in money and property by inducing investors to provide Petters Company, Inc. (PCI), a sham company he created in 1994, with funds to purchase merchandise that was to be resold to retailers at a profit, Todd Jones, the US attorney in the District of Minnesota, said in a statement.

"However, no such purchases were made," he said.

Instead, Petters and his co-conspirators diverted the funds from PCI for other purposes, such as making "lulling" payments to investors, paying off those who assisted in the fraud scheme, and funding businesses owned or controlled by the defendants.

"Petters continued to purchase and operate companies in an effort to maintain the facade of a successful businessman and create a false air of legitimacy that would lure new investors," using the proceeds of the PCI fraud, Jones said.

The companies he bought included Polaroid, Fingerhut and Sun Country Airlines, which, collectively, became known as Petters Group Worldwide, or PGW, it said.

"In simplest terms, promoters of Ponzi schemes prey upon trusting investors and then steal their hard-earned money," Julio LaRosa, special agent in charge of the Internal Revenue Service's criminal investigation division, said in the statement.

"This case was a blatant example of this type of fraud."

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