Historical investment fraud sweep compels numerous civil and criminal actions
On December 6, 2010, the Financial Fraud Enforcement Task Force announced the conclusion of Operation Broken Trust, the largest investment fraud sweep ever conducted in the United Stated. Started August 16, 2010, the operation captured 343 criminal defendants and 189 civil defendants who were involved in fraud schemes that harmed more than 120,000 victims throughout the country. The criminal cases involved more than $8.3 billion in estimated losses and the civil cases more than $2.1 billion. Eighty-seven defendants have been sentenced to prison, including several who will serve more than 20 years.
The sweep focused on fraudsters who offered “investment opportunities” that were either completely fictitious or not structured as advertised. An overwhelming number of these were high-yield investment frauds and Ponzi schemes. Others involved commodities fraud, foreign exchange fraud, market manipulation (pump-and-dump schemes), real estate investment fraud, business opportunity fraud, and affinity fraud. Some of the perpetrators filed for bankruptcy in an attempt to avoid claims by victimized investors. In many instances, the criminals were trusted people within their communities—neighbors, co-workers, fellow church members—who betrayed that trust in order to line their own pockets.