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Authors: James Walsh

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A group of investors sued Chrysler First, arguing that the loans were part of the fraudulent scheme and, therefore, not enforceable.

Delaware courts didn’t show much sympathy to the investors. In a March 1991 decision,
James M. Burns, et al., v. John J. Ferro, et al., and Chrysler First
, a trial court ruled that Chrysler First was not responsible for the fact that its borrowers spent their money in a Ponzi scheme. It agreed with Chrysler First that the borrowers knew they were getting into an illegal scheme and did so willingly:

It would be far easier to turn straw into gold than to turn $5,000 into $40,000 legally under this scheme. The fact that [investors] had knowledge of the pyramid scheme is not in dispute. The promotional materials made it plain that the investment idea was a pyramid scheme from the beginning. They participated in promoting the “airplane” by recruiting new members to perpetuate the scheme. [They], therefore, may not seek relief.

“Commonality” and “Efforts of Others”

In the 1974 federal court decision
SEC v. Koscot Interplanetary, Inc.,
the Fifth Circuit Court of Appeals defined some basic issues and terms. Koscot was a subsidiary of Glenn W. Turner Enterprises (an umbrella organization that owned a number of Ponzi and pyramid operations). Through Koscot, investors could make money both by selling cosmetics and by recruiting them as “supervisors” and “distributors” to sell cosmetics and recruit others.

To obtain the right to make money through the recruitment of others required an investment of at least $1,000. That investment qualified a person as a “supervisor” who could then recruit other supervisors. For every supervisor recruited, the recruiting supervisor received $600 of the $1,000 paid by the new supervisor. For $5,000, an investor could become a “distributor” who could then recruit both supervisors and distributors in return for a share of their investments.

The details of the scheme were fairly standard. But the court decided that it was important to distinguish whether the Koscot distributorships counted as a security—like a stock, bond or promissory note— and, therefore, whether Ponzi scheme precedents could be applied.

In order to be a security, an investment needs to be made in a common enterprise in which investors give over control of assets to another entity. In discussing the
common enterprise
element of the scheme, the court recognized that “[t]he critical factor is not the similitude or coincidence of investor input, but rather the uniformity of impact of the promoter’s efforts.”

It quoted an earlier appeals court decision which held:

A common enterprise managed by...third parties with adequate personnel and equipment is therefore essential if the investors are to achieve their paramount aim of a return on their investments.

This may sound like a pretty generic description of any investment vehicle—but, in the context of a Ponzi scheme, it’s what distinguishes an elegant con from simply sticking a gun in someone’s face and taking his money.

Using this analysis, the Fifth Circuit ruled that “the requisite commonality is evidenced by the fact that the fortunes of all investors are inextricably tied to the efficacy of the Koscot meetings and guidelines on recruiting prospects and consummating a sale.” These meetings and guidelines were very much like those of most pyramid schemes— they were almost evangelical in their intensity and they focused more on getting paid than on the substance of the investment.

This left one other key pyramid scheme issue for the
Koscot
court to consider. Ponzi perps often argue that an investor’s losses are the result of investors not working hard enough to keep the scheme going. In other words, the reason that Grandma lost the $20,000 she pumped into her cosmetics distributorship is that she didn’t do enough to sell lipstick or recruit salespeople. She
deserved
to lose the money. And, technically, the fact that she had to do some work to keep the scheme afloat means that the cosmetics distributorships didn’t count as securities in the first place.

In this narrow sense, the perps might have a point. The Securities and Exchange Acts of 1933 and 1934 defined
securities
in part as investments whose success or failure came “solely from the efforts of others.” But some courts had allowed broader interpretations of that phrase.

The
Koscot
court agreed that “solely from the efforts of others” wasn’t meant to be a tool for protecting Ponzi perps. It ruled that a literal interpretation of the requirement would frustrate the original intent of the law. Instead, “the critical inquiry is whether the efforts made by those other than the investor are the undeniably significant ones, those essential managerial efforts which affect the failure or success of the enterprise.”

Since, in most Ponzi schemes, the answer to that question is
Yes
, the court concluded that the perps don’t have a right to Grandma’s $20,000.

Case Study: Elliott Enterprises

From 1980 to 1987, Charles Elliott managed a collection of investment companies that included Elliott Real Estate, Inc., Elliott Securities, Elliott Mortgage Company, Inc., and Elliott Group, Inc.

Elliott Securities was a stock brokerage. The other companies marketed investment vehicles created and managed by Elliott. The brokerage operated primarily as what one former employee called “a fish pond.” Clients with the money to buy and sell large amounts of stock were invited to meet Elliott. The sales pitch was simple: “We can get you 7 percent down here but if you want 18, you’ll have to go upstairs to see [Elliott].”

Most of Elliott’s 1,400 investors were retirees who believed they were gaining a high-yield tax haven for their life savings.

In fact, they were being sucked into a Ponzi scheme. Like many smart Ponzi perps, Elliott made a big show of religious devotion. In his newsletters, he often quoted the scriptures. “Every letter we got from him made me think this is one of the most religious men I’ve ever dealt with,” recalled one investor.

In his first newsletter of 1987, Elliott wrote floridly:

I am reminded of my strong commitment and relationship with God. I believe that spiritual strength is the only strength because it is capable of infinite renewal....I personally approach 1987 inspired to be honest, humble, courageous, clean-hearted, patient and noble.

In the meantime, he was using gullible investors’ money to collect conspicuous signs of God’s favor—flashy things like rare jewelry, vintage cars and trendy art. He threw lots of parties, including a big Christmas party every year for employees and investors.

Less piously, Elliott decorated his offices with photographs of himself with politicians and celebrities. He’d boast especially about his ties to Republican power-brokers. Some potential investors were told that Elliott was one of Ronald Reagan’s “personal financial advisers.”

The political boasts weren’t Elliott’s idea. He’d grown up in rural North Carolina and still saw most things—including confidence schemes— from a farm boy’s earnest perspective. William Melhorn, chief executive officer for Elliott Enterprises, was the man who saw the obvious connection between power and money.

Melhorn had begun as a special assistant to Elliott and quickly worked his way up to chief executive officer. The two men had met in the mid-1970s. Melhorn was out of a job, following the collapse of an earlier enterprise, and Elliott needed people with...particular...experience.

In public, Elliott said his special expertise was municipal bonds and other tax-advantaged investments—and that investments with his firms were insured by the Securities Investor Protection Corp. In private, though, the most common investments he peddled were socalled “repurchase agreements.” Essentially, these agreements were loans made by investors to Elliott (and, therefore, not insurable by SIPC). The loans may have been
collateralized
by municipal bonds— but investors never actually participated directly in the investments.

The SEC would later charge that most of the loans weren’t really collateralized at all. (Elliott kept a small portfolio of muni bonds, which he pledged dozens...and possibly hundreds...of times as collateral.)

Free to use investment proceeds any way he chose, Elliott tended toward speculative start-ups and boneheaded real estate deals. But he was disciplined about keeping payments current with investors. “Elliott paid like a slot machine,” said one associate. “He lulled everyone to sleep.”

He had to borrow extensively to maintain the appearance of a thriving business, though. And his precarious circumstances always pressured him to chase new investors to pay off old ones. All the while, Elliott used investor funds to pay for his personal living expenses— including medical expenses and mortgage payments on his various houses. His sole employment during the lifespan of the scheme was as president of Elliott Enterprises—for which he never received a salary. Instead, he compensated himself by commingling investors’ money with his own.

There was no legal mechanism to prevent him from doing this. Because Elliott Enterprises was an unincorporated business, Elliott could draw upon company bank accounts as though they were his personal funds. He kept a separate personal account on the books of Elliott Enterprises and moved money into this account whenever he needed it. At several points during the scheme, his account had a balance of more than $1 million.

The SEC was first alerted to Elliott in 1986. During the summer of that year, Elliott Realty employee James Gersonde convinced his mother to invest about $400,000 with Elliott. Gersonde’s brother John, who lived in Michigan, felt the deal was too good to be true. John asked questions but didn’t like the answers he heard. His mother and brother claimed that they were earning a guaranteed 10 percent on money placed with Elliott—and that this income was tax-free. John rightly suspected a tax-free investment which paid as much as 10 percent—let alone a “guaranteed” 10 percent. So, he contacted the SEC office in Miami. (Though his mother was later happy she’d been able to get her money out of Elliott Enterprises, John Gersonde said at the time “she was furious with me for ruining her tax-free investment. Livid.”)

The Feds called Elliott to their Miami office for questioning. He showed up at their offices but refused to explain his operations in any detail. Surprised by Elliott’s brashness, the SEC agents let him go. But Elliott Enterprises was in their investigative sights.

In the early part of 1987, which was the peak of its success, Elliott Enterprises owed approximately 940 investors about $60 million in repurchase agreements and other loans. However, word was spreading fast through south Florida that the Feds were after Elliott. And interest checks started coming less reliably. Through this all, Elliott maintained a kind of crazy impetuousness. One worried investor who telephoned the company was told by an Elliott Enterprises employee that Elliott had been called to Washington by President Reagan for emergency financial advice.

There’s no question that personal charisma was one of Elliott’s keenest tools. “He would make decisions that weren’t logical at all,” one former associate said. “You’d wonder. Then you’d look around at the office, and all he had put together, and you’d say ‘This guy must know what he’s doing. Maybe he sees a bigger picture than I do.’”

Like many persuasive Ponzi perps, Elliott was able to convince some investors that the Feds were the villains. “I don’t think the SEC is being very nice to Mr. Elliott,” one investor told a local newspaper. “We honestly feel he hasn’t done anything all that wrong.”

Nice or not, the SEC filed a civil suit against Elliott and his firms in early 1987. The SEC suit was the final blow for Elliott Enterprises. The Ponzi scheme collapsed and interest payments ceased.

In the immediate aftermath of a court-ordered receivership, Elliott’s investors and creditors stood to recover a little more than 10 cents on the dollar. For any more, they would have to sue someone. Within a few months, Elliott and Melhorn were facing a major criminal indictment—which included 22 counts of fraud under the Investment Advisers Act, six counts of securities fraud under the Securities Act, 10 counts of mail fraud, and one count of conspiracy.

“I’m not sure that apart from market forces and unwise investments that he has an explanation for what happened,” said David Pollack, Elliott’s lawyer. “I think [it was] just a series of investments that didn’t work out the way he thought they would.”

But one former Elliott employee offered a more likely explanation: “His ego told him he could stay ahead of the game and it would all pay off. I don’t think he had any criminal intent. He really thought he could give them what he promised.”

The legal proceedings didn’t go well for Elliott. In August 1988, a federal judge ordered him to “disgorge” $1 million for the receiver’s benefit. Elliott was not able to comply because he didn’t have any money. In January 1989, he was ordered in a civil suit to turn over his personal jewelry and household effects to the SEC. In March 1990, a federal trial jury returned a verdict of guilty on all but two of the criminal charges Elliott and Melhorne faced. Elliott was sentenced to three consecutive five-year prison terms. Melhorn received three consecutive four-year prison terms.

In April 1994, a federal appeals court considered Elliott’s last gasp at arguing his innocence. Elliott claimed that the trial court should have listened to testimony from his
satisfied
customers when considering his intent to defraud. The appeals court didn’t agree:

No amount of testimony from satisfied customers could “average out” Elliott and Melhorn’s intent to defraud when they continued to solicit new investments and reassure old investors while concealing millions of dollars in losses per year with fictitious audits and phantom collateral....

But Elliott remained free on bail while he filed other appeals. “Last time I heard, he was living up in Tallahassee,” one burned investor said. “They just keep appealing and appealing. He’s never served a day. I hope he winds up in jail, though. He should serve some time.”

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