High yields, insurance by Lloyd’s and a CPA firm vanish. Investigators say they’re uncovering a Ponzi schemehttp://www.sptimes.com/2007/02/05/Business/Pearlman_s_long_run.shtml<
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"Orlando entrepreneur Lou Pearlman relished the limelight, promoting ’N Sync and his other boy bands, jetting off to Europe and throwing lavish parties. But for dependable cash flow, he relied on retirees who trusted him with their life savings.
Now state investigators say they have found Pearlman operated little more than a classic Ponzi scheme, tapping new investors to pay off old investors, all assisted by a questionable accounting firm manipulated by the Orlando millionaire. One of the most remarkable thing about the scheme is that it lasted so long.
Dating to the 1980s, one of Pearlman’s companies, Trans Continental Airlines, offered what seemed to be a fabulous investment, a super safe high-yielding savings account. More than 1,000 investors, many from the Tampa Bay area, turned over more than $100-million to him, usually on the recommendation of a lawyer or insurance agent.
Reeling them in was easy. The “employee investment savings account,” as it was known, offered yields from 3 percent to 14 percent, depending on when, and from whom, you bought. The big selling point was a guarantee of FDIC insurance, with surplus insurance from Lloyd’s of London and AIG for amounts over $100,000.
Pearlman partied with his sales agents and when they asked about insurance coverage, he showed off a document purported to be from Lloyd’s, insuring the accounts up to $500-million.
“If they hadn’t said it was FDIC, I wouldn’t have put a penny in there,” said Bruno Baumanis of St. Pete Beach, 85, who invested $150,000. “I still have that piece of paper they gave me.”
But there was no insurance. Not with the FDIC. Not with AIG and not with Lloyds."