SEC Charges Florida and Canadian Residents Over $300 Million Gold Mining Investment Ponzi Scheme

The U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission charged four Canadian citizens and two Florida residents for an alleged Ponzi scheme which defrauded more than 3,000 investors across the U.S. and Canada of approximately $300 million, according to an SEC press release. The SEC has filed a complaint alleging that Milowe Allen Brost and Gary Allen Sorenson of Calgary, Alberta, devised the scheme in which the defendants claimed to be an independent financial education which had discovered investment opportunities in certain companies engaged in gold mining. The defendants held seminars in which they promised investors they could earn 18 to 36 percent annual returns. Brost, Sorenson and the other defendants are alleged to have concealed the fact that the companies, Syndicated Gold Depository (SGD) and Merendon Mining Corp., Ltd., were actually shell companies which the defendants owned or controlled. The defendants claimed that Merendon was a successful gold mining and refining company.

Brost and Sorenson allegedly used various aliases, shell corporations and trust agreements to conceal their ownership of SGD. They would transmit investor money to accounts in Europe, Asia and South America. The defendants allegedly used investor monies to make interest payments to other investors, and for lavish personal spending, including for a luxury fishing resort in South America. Sorenson also allegedly took investors on tours of an alleged refinery in Honduras where they were shown the pouring of gold bars.

Larry Lee Adair of Fort Lauderdale, Florida, and Martin M. Werner of Boca Raton, Florida, are also charged in the complaint.
 

Florida Executive Sentenced in $10.5 Million Embezzlement Scheme

Although it may be considered small change when compared with the fraud of fellow Floridian Scott Rothstein, according to an FBI press release, Gary Ernest Williams, former Chief Financial Officer for Marian Gardens Tree Farm (MGTF) in Groveland, Florida, was sentenced to eight years imprisonment on Monday in the U.S. District Corut for the Middle District of Florida. Williams was charged with embezzling approximately 10.5 million from MGTF since 2000 through falsified checks, use of a credit card in the company's name and making large cash withdrawals which he told bank officials were to be used to pay “employee bonuses.” Willams spent the money on lavish homes, luxury cars, jewelry, drugs, and vacations by private jet. He also failed to failed to pay federal income taxes in the amount of $3,675,000 on the illegally obtained funds.

Williams entered a guilty plea in July. The District Court ordered Williams to pay more than 14 million in restitution to MGFT and to forfeit homes in North Carolina, Pennsylvania and the Bahamas.