Source:
BloombergTwo officers of WG Trading, a broker- dealer based in Greenwich, Connecticut, were charged with conspiracy in what authorities called a $550 million securities- fraud scheme dating to 1996. The two, Paul Greenwood and Stephen Walsh, were among four suspects arrested today by the Federal Bureau of Investigation after three securities-fraud complaints were unsealed in U.S. District Court in New York, said Jim Margolin, an FBI spokesman.
The scheme continued until Feb. 6, when the men obtained a $21 million investment from the University of Pittsburgh, according to the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission, which also sued the men for fraud. The University of Pittsburgh and Carnegie Mellon University, also located in Pittsburgh, sued the men Feb. 20, claiming they misrepresented their trading in commodity futures contracts, leading to $114 million in investment losses.
The men “defrauded their investors by misrepresenting and/or omitting the material amount and nature of the assets under investment,” according to the complaint. The University of Pittsburgh claims it lost $65 million; Carnegie Mellon, $49 million.
Of $667 million invested in WG Trading Investors, Greenwood and Walsh misappropriated as much as $554 million, according to the SEC complaint. They used investors’ money on lavish lifestyles that include multimillion-dollar homes, a horse farm, cars, horses and collectibles such as Steiff teddy bears, according to the SEC.
A third man, James Nicholson, 42, founder of Westgate Capital Management, was taken into custody by FBI agents. He was accused of conducting a scheme dating to 2004. Fourth Arrest - Mark Bloom of New York, who once worked for Greenwood and Walsh and now heads his own firm, was also arrested, the FBI’s Margolin said.
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How many is that so far?