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The Multi-Billion Dollar Business of
Investment Fraud
Americans are investors. We purchase stocks
and bonds, contribute to savings programs,
own real estate, participate in futures and
options markets, acquire collectibles,
provide
start-up capital for new business ventures,
buy franchises, and the list goes on. The
strength of our economy is in large measure
the product of our combined investments.
Perhaps more so than any people in the
world,
we enjoy an ever-expanding variety of
investments
to choose from, coupled with the freedom
to make our own investment decisions.
It’s our money and we can invest it as we
wish.
Unfortunately, some unscrupulous promoters
abuse our freedom to choose by concocting
investment schemes that have zero
possibility
of making money for anyone other than
themselves. Such persons promise investment
rewards they cannot possibly deliver
and have no intention of delivering.
They are swindlers. And many of them are
very successful. Their annual take through
lying and deceit is estimated to run in the
billions of dollars.
How do they do it? Successful investment
swindlers use every trick in the book, and
some that aren’t even recorded, to convince
you that none of the descriptions and
precautions
in the following pages applies to
them. After all, they are offering you a
once-in-a-lifetime opportunity to make a lot of money
quickly and you do trust them, don’t you? As
will be seen, some of their methods of
gaining
your trust are truly ingenious.
Who are the Investment Swindlers?
They are a faceless voice on a telephone. Or
a flashy web site on the Internet. Or a
friend
of a friend. They may perform surgery on
their victims’ savings from a dingy back
office or boiler-room or from the vast
reaches of cyberspace or from an opulent
suite in the new bank building. They may
wear three-piece suits or they may wear
hard hats. They may have no apparent
connection
to the investment business or they
may have an alphabet-soup of impressive
letters
following their names. They may be glib
or fast-talking or so seemingly shy and
soft-spoken
that you feel almost compelled to
force your money on them.
The first rule of protecting yourself from
an
investment swindle is thus to rid yourself
of
any notions you might have as to what an
investment
swindler looks like or sounds like.
Indeed, some swindlers don’t start out to be
swindlers. There are case histories in which
individuals who held positions of trust and
esteem—accountants, attorneys, bona fide
investment brokers and even doctors—have
sacrificed their ethics for the fast buck of
running an investment scam.
In still other cases, investment programs
that
began with legitimate intentions went sour
through happenstance or poor management,
leading the promoter to mishandle or
abscond with investors’ capital. Whether an
investment is planned as a scam or simply
becomes one, the result is the same.
This is why protecting your savings against
fraud involves at least three steps.
Carefully
check out the person and firm you would be
dealing with. Take a close and cautious look
at the investment offer itself. And continue
to
monitor any investment that you decide to
make. No one of these precautions alone maybe sufficient.
Who are the Victims of Investment
Fraud?
If you are absolutely certain it could never
be
you, the investment swindler starts with a
big advantage. Investment fraud generally
happens to people who think it couldn’t
happen to them.
Just as there is no typical profile for
swindlers, neither is there one for their victims.
While some scams target persons who are
known or thought to have deep pockets,
most swindlers take the attitude that
everyone’s money spends the same. It simply
takes more small investors to fund a large
fraud. In fact, some swindlers deliberately
seek out families that may have limited
means or financial difficulties, figuring
such
persons may be particularly receptive to a
proposal that offers fast and large profits.
A
favorite pitch is that small investors can
become rich only if they learn and employ
the investment strategies used by wealthy
persons. Naturally, the swindler will teach
them!
Although victims of investment fraud can
differ
from one another in many ways, they do,
unfortunately, have one trait in common:
Greed that exceeds their caution. They also
possess a willingness to believe what they
want to believe. Movie actors and athletes,
professional persons and successful business
executives, political leaders and
internationally
famous economists have all fallen victim
to investment fraud. So have hundreds of
thousands of others, including widows,
retirees and working people—people who
made their money the hard way and lost it
the fast way.
How Investment Swindlers Find (or
Attract) Their Victims
Swindlers attempt to mimic the sales
approaches
of legitimate investment firms and
salespersons. Thus, the fact that someone
may
contact you in a particular way—by phone, mail,
electronic mail or even a referral
should not in itself be viewed as an
indication
that the investment is or isn’t shady.
Many totally reputable firms also use the
same methods to effectively and economically
identify individuals who may have an
interest in their investment products and
services.
Bearing in mind that “investigate before you
invest” is good advice no matter how you are
approached, these are some of the methods
con men (and women) commonly employ to
contact their victims-to-be.
Telephone
So-called telephone boiler-rooms remain a
favorite way for swindlers and their sales
squads to quickly contact large numbers of
potential investors. Even if a swindler has
to
make 100 or 200 phone calls to find a mooch
(one of the terms swindlers use for their
victims),
he figures that the opportunity to
pocket thousands of dollars of someone’s
savings is still good pay for the time and
cost involved.
Mail
Some sellers of fraudulent investment deals buy bona fide mailing lists—names and
addresses of persons who, for example,
subscribe
to a particular investment-related
publication,
who have responded to previous
direct mail offers, or who have other
characteristics
that swindlers look for. In the hope
of avoiding notice by postal authorities,
mail
order swindlers may not make a direct or
immediate pitch for your money. Rather, they
often seek to entice you to write or phone
for more information. Then comes a call from
the salesperson or the person who closes the
deal. Some may phone even if you didn’t
respond to the mailing.
The Internet
Access to the Internet has increased
dramatically
in the past few years and consumers are becoming more comfortable conducting
business
(shopping, banking, even investing) online. But crooks also recognize the
potential
of cyberspace. The same scams that have been conducted by mail or phone can now
be found on the Internet, and new
technologies
are resulting in new ways to commit
crimes against consumers.
Advertisements
A newspaper or magazine ad may offer (or at
least hint at) profit opportunities far more attractive than available through
conventional
investments. Once you’ve taken the bait, the
swindler will then attempt to “set the
hook. ”Even though investment crooks know that
regulatory agencies regularly monitor ads in
major publications, some nevertheless use
such publications in the hope of being able
to hit-and-run before an investigator shows
up. Others advertise in narrowly circulated
publications they think regulators may be
less likely to see.
Referrals
One of the oldest schemes going involves
paying fast, large profits to initial
investors (actually from their own or other peoples’
investments) knowing that they are likely to recommend the investment to their friends. And these friends will tell their friends. Soon, the swindler no longer needs to find
new victims; they will find him.
The “Reputable” Business
Some swindlers go first class. Using profits
from previous swindles, they rent plush
offices, hire an interior decorator and
professional-sounding receptionist and open
what has the appearance (but not the
reality)
of a reputable investment firm. You may even
have to phone for an appointment, and once
there don’t be surprised to be kept waiting
(that’s intended to make you all the more
eager). This kind of swindler’s success
depends on how long he can keep his victims
from knowing they are being cheated.
Investors
are assured that their large profits are
being reinvested to earn even larger
profits.
Such a swindler may join local civic groups,
contribute to charities, and generally play
the
role of solid citizen.
Techniques Investment Swindlers
Use
Their techniques are as varied as their
methods
of establishing contact. What they all
have in common, however, is their ability to
be convincing. The skills that make them
successful
are essentially the same skills that enable
any good salesperson to be successful.
But swindlers have a decided advantage: They
don’t have to make good on their promises.
In
the absence of this responsibility, they
have no
reluctance to promise whatever it takes to
persuade
you to part with your money. These are
some of their techniques:
Expectation of Large Profits
The profits a swindler talks about are
generally
large enough to make you interested and eager to invest—but not so large as to make
you overly skeptical. Or he may mention a profit figure he thinks you will consider
believable and then, as a further
enticement,
suggest that the potential profit is
actually far
greater than that. The latter figure, of
course, is the one he hopes you will focus on.
Generally
speaking, if an investment proposal
sounds too good to be true, it probably is.
Low Risk
Some are so blatant as to suggest there’s no risk—that the investment is a sure money
maker. Obviously, the last thing a swindler
wants you to think about is the possibility
of
losing your money. (If you ask how you can
be
certain your money is safe, you can count on
a
plausible-sounding answer. Besides, at this
point, he figures you will believe what you
want to believe.)
To make his pitch more credible, a swindler
may acknowledge that there could be some
risk—then quickly assure you it’s minimal in
relation to the profits you will almost
certainly
make. A con man may become impatient
or even aggressive if the question of
risk is raised—perhaps suggesting that he
has
better things to do than waste time with
people who lack the courage and foresight needed to make money! With this kind of put
down, he hopes you won’t bring up the
subject
again.
Urgency
There’s usually some compelling reason why
it’s essential for you to invest right now.
Perhaps
because the investment opportunity can
“be offered to only a limited number of
people.” Or because delaying the investment
could mean missing out on a large profit
(after all, once the information he has
confided
to you becomes generally known, the
price is sure to go up, right?.
Urgency is important to a swindler. For one
thing, he wants your money as quickly as
possible with a minimum of effort on his
part. And he doesn’t want you to have time
to think it over, discuss it with someone
who
might suggest you become suspicious, or
check him or his proposal out with a
regulatory
agency. Besides, he may not plan on
remaining in town very long.
Confidence
Swindlers sound confident about the money
you are going to make so that you will
become
confident enough to let go of your savings.
Their message is that they are doing you a
favor
by offering the investment opportunity. A swindler may even threaten (pleasantly or
otherwise)
to end the discussion by suggesting
that if you are not really interested there
are
many other people who will be. Once you
protest
that you are interested, he figures your
savings
are practically in his pocket.
Although you can’t necessarily spot a con
man
by the way he talks, most are strong-willed,
articulate
individuals who will dominate the
conversation.
The more they talk, the less chance
you have to ask questions.
Specific Investment Swindles and How
They Worked
There’s a saying among swindlers that it’s
not
the scam that counts, it’s the sell. Judging
from
the number of arcane and often outlandish schemes that have been employed to separate
otherwise prudent people from their money,
the saying would seem to reflect reality.
The
evidence is that if people can be made
believers, they can be sold practically anything. Here
are just two of the ways in which hustlers
of
phony investments have won the confidence of
persons whom they planned to victimize.
The Old-Fashioned Ponzi SchemeIt’s become one of the oldest and most often
employed investment schemes because it’s proven to be one of the most lucrative.
While
there are innumerable variations, here is
how
a person we will call Frank C. practiced it.
At
the outset, Frank approached a relatively
small number of influential persons in the
community and offered them the opportunity
to invest—with a guaranteed high return—in
a computer-generated program of arbitrage in
foreign currency fluctuations. To be sure,
it
sounded high tech and sophisticated but
Frank had his eye on sophisticated and
well heeled
victims.
Within a short period of time, he approached
and sold the scheme to still other investors
then promptly used a portion of the money
invested by these persons to pay large
profits to the original group of investors. As word
spread of Frank’s genius for making money
and paying profits, even more would-be investors anxiously put up even larger sums
of money. Some of it was used to recycle the fictitious profit payments and, like a
pebble in the water, the word of fast and fabulous rewards produced an ever-widening circle of
eager
investors. And more money poured in.
And Frank C. left town a wealthy man.
The Infallible Forecaster
Jim L. had a full-time job in the daytime,
but
with assets that consisted only of a phone,
patience and an easy way of talking he
managed
to parlay a nighttime sideline into an
ill-gotten
fortune. The routine went like this.
Jim would phone someone we’ll call Mrs.
Smith and quickly assure her that, “No”, he
didn’t want her to invest a single cent. “Never invest with someone you don’t
know,” he preached. But he said he would
like to demonstrate his firm’s “research
skill” by sharing with her the forecast that
such and
such a commodity was about to experience
a significant price increase. Sure enough,
the price soon went up.
A second phone call didn’t solicit an
investment
either. Jim simply wanted to share with
Mrs. Smith a prediction that the price of such-and-such a commodity was about to go
down. “Our forecasts will help you decide whether ours is the kind of firm you might
someday want to invest with,” he added. As
predicted, the price of the commodity
subsequently
declined.
By the time Mrs. Smith received the third
call, she was a believer. She not only
wanted
to invest but insisted on it with a big
enough investment to make up for the
opportunities she had already missed out on.
What Mrs. Smith had no way of knowing was
that Jim had begun with a calling list of
200
persons. In the first call, he told 100 that
the
price of such-and-such a commodity would
go up and the other 100 were told it would
go
down. When it went up, he made a second call
to the 100 who had been given the “correct
forecast.” Of these, 50 were told the next
price
move would be up and 50 were told it would
be down. The end result: Once the predicted price
decline
occurred, Jim had a list of 50 persons eager to invest. After all, how could they go
wrong with someone so obviously infallible
in forecasting prices?
But go wrong they did, the moment they
decided to send Jim a half million dollars
from their collective savings accounts.
Questions That Can Turn Off an
Investment Swindler
The first line of defense against investment
fraud is your inalienable right to ask
questions and—until you get the right answers
to say “no.” And mean no. Not surprisingly,
this
is usually an investment swindler’s first
point of
attack. To keep you from asking questions,
he
asks them! Invariably, the questions have
“yes”answers, such as “You would at least be
interested
in hearing about such a fantastic investment
opportunity, wouldn’t you?” or, “You
would like to make a large amount of money
in a short period of time with little or no
risk,
right?”
One difference between a reputable
investment
firm and a swindler is that reputable
firms encourage you to ask questions, to
obtain
as much information as possible, to clearly
understand
the risks involved, and to be entirely
comfortable with any investment decision you
make. The only thing a swindler wants is
your
money. These are some of the questions that
swindlers don’t like to hear:
1. Where did you get my name? If the response is that you were chosen from
a “select list of intelligent and prudent
investors, ”that select list may be the telephone
directory, or a purchased list of persons who’ve bought certain types of books,
subscribed
to particular magazines, or responded
to newspaper ads. If you have made
ill-advised
investments in the past, you can be
pretty sure your name is on someone’s
alumni list. It’s the list swindlers prize
most.
Easy preys who are eager to recoup (but are
doomed to repeat) their earlier losses.
2. What risks are involved in the proposed
investment? Except for obligations of the U.S. Treasury,
which are considered risk-free, all
investments involve some degree of risk. And some investments, by their nature, involve greater
risks
than others. Keep in mind that if the
salesman
had knowledge of a sure-thing, big-profit
investment
opportunity, he wouldn’t be on the
phone talking with you.
3. Can you send me a written explanation of
your investment so I can consider it at my
leisure?
For someone peddling fraudulent investments,
that can be a double turn-off. For one
thing, most crooks are reluctant to put
anything
in writing that might cause them to run
afoul of postal authorities or provide
material
that, at some point, might become evidence
in a fraud trial. Secondly, swindlers don’t
want you to do anything at your leisure.
They
want your money now.
It’s a good rule of thumb that any
investment
which “absolutely has to be made
immediately”
shouldn’t be made at all.
4. Would you mind explaining your investment
proposal to some third party, such as
my attorney, accountant, investment advisor
or banker? If the answer goes something along the lines
of “normally, I’d be glad to, but there
isn’t
time for that,” or if the salesman snaps
back
by asking “can’t you make your own
investment
decisions,” these are virtually certain
clues that your final answer should be an
emphatic “no.”
5. Can you give me the names of your firm’s
principals and officers?
Although some persons who establish and
operate dishonest firms change their own
names as often as they change their firms’ names, even the hint that you are the kind
of
investor who checks into things like that
can
be a fast turn-off for a swindler.
6. Can you provide references?
Not just another list of other investors who
supposedly became fabulously wealthy (the
names you get may be the salesman’s boss or
someone sitting at the next phone), but
reputable
and reliable recommendations such as a
bank or well-known brokerage firm that you
can easily contact.
7. Do you have any documents such as a
prospectus
or risk disclosure statement that you
can provide?
This may not be available in connection with
all types of investments but in many
investment
areas—such as securities, futures and
options trading—it’s required. And there can
be requirements that you be provided with this information and acknowledge in writing
that you have read and understood it.
Obviously,
it’s not the sort of information a swindler
is likely to distribute.
8. Are the investments you are offering
traded on a regulated exchange, such as a
securities or futures exchange?
Some bona fide investments are and some
aren’t, but fraudulent investments never
are.
Exchanges have strict rules designed to
assure fair dealing and competitive price
determination. There are also mechanisms to
provide for rule enforcement and to impose
severe sanctions against those who fail to
observe the rules.
9. What governmental or industry regulatory
supervision is your firm subject to?
If the salesman rattles off a list that
ranges
from the FBI to the Boy Scouts, tell him
you’d
like to check the firm’s good standing
before
making an important investment decision.
Then verify the response. Few things
discourage
a swindler faster than the thought that
his first visitor the next morning may be
from a regulatory agency.
If, on the other hand, you are told his
particular
area of investment isn’t subject to
regulation
(perhaps because everyone in his business
is an ethical, upstanding citizen), take
that ex17
explanation for whatever you think it’s worth.
At
the very least, keep in mind that any
ongoing
supervision which isn’t being provided by a
regulatory organization or agency will have
to
be provided to you.
10. How long has your company been in
business?
In any kind of business activity, there can
be
advantages to dealing with a known,
established
company. This isn’t to say that new
businesses aren’t starting up all the time
or
that the vast majority aren’t perfectly
reputable.
But if you find yourself talking with
someone who doesn’t seem to have a past, it
can be worthwhile to find out why. Many
swindlers have been running scams for years
but understandably aren’t anxious to talk
about it.
11. What has your track record been?
Before you accept a salesman’s assurance
that
he can make money for you, you have the
right to know what his performance has
been in making money for others. And ask
to have the information (if there is any) in
writing. Boasting over the phone is one
thing;
putting it down on paper is quite another.
In
any case, even if you are able to obtain a
documented performance record, don’t lose
sight of the fact that past performance in
itself provides no assurance of future
performance.
12. When and where can I meet with you or
with another representative of your firm?
Chances are a crooked operator particularly
if he is operating out of a telephone
boiler-room
isn’t going to take the time to visit
with you and even more certainly doesn’t
want you to see his place of business.
13. Where, exactly, will my money be? And
what type of regular accounting statements
do you provide?
In many investment areas, such as futures
trading, firms are required to maintain
their
customers’ funds in segregated accounts at
all
times. Any mingling of investors’ funds with
those of the firm or its principals is
prohibited.
You might also want to find out what, if
any,
routine outside audits the firm’s account
records are subject to.
14. How much of my money would go for
commissions,
management fees and the like?
And ask whether there will be other costs
such
as interest or storage charges, or whether
the
investment agreement involves any type of
profit sharing arrangement in which the
firms’
principals participate. Insist on specific
answers,
not glib and evasive responses such as
“that’s not important” or “what’s really
important
is how much money you are going to
make.” And, again, get it in writing, just
as you
would any other type of contract.
15. How can I liquidate (i.e., sell the item
I’d
be investing in) if and when I decide I want
my money?
If you find that the investment is illiquid,
or
there would be substantial costs if
liquidated,
or that you are unable to get straight and
solid answers, these are all things to
consider
in deciding whether you want to invest.
16. If disputes should arise, how can they
be
resolved?
Short of having to go to court to sue
someone,
does the company or regulatory organization
provide a mechanism for resolving
disputes equitably and inexpensively through
arbitration, mediation, or a reparations
procedure?
Aside from seeking important information,
you may be able to detect whether the
salesperson is uncomfortable or impatient
with this line of questioning. Swindlers
generally
will be.
Before You Invest Investigate
Asking some or even all of the questions
just
suggested isn’t likely to produce straight
answers
from a crooked investment promoter
but, as indicated, the very fact that you
are
asking such questions can be a turn-off.
Bear
in mind, however, that no matter how
persistently
or skillfully you pose the questions,
experienced con men are at least equally
skilled in evading them, in providing
downright
dishonest answers, and in refocusing
the conversation on your “tremendous profit
opportunity.”
Bear in mind also that, while separating you
from your money is the swindler’s primary
goal, the very last thing he wants you to do
is
check him out. That could cause you not to
invest
or, worse still, alert regulators that
someone
they know well has set up shop in a new
area or is running a new scam.
For this reason, most con men deliberately
make themselves difficult to investigate: By
tailoring
their schemes to operate in regulatory
cracks where federal or national regulatory
organizations
may lack clear-cut jurisdiction; by
operating in states or communities where
authorities
are known to be short-staffed or occupied
with more pressing criminal activities; by
changing their names or modus operandi; by
stressing the urgency of the investment so
you
won’t have time to investigate; and by
targeting
victims who may not know how or where to
check them out.
While there is no way to know for certain
whether a particular investment will make
money or lose money, there is one thing you
can be certain of: Any money you hand over
to
an investment swindler is lost the moment
you
part with it.
The question is, how do you
check
out someone who is offering what sounds like
an irresistible investment offer? Here are
some
of the ways:
Find out whether the local police department
or Better Business Bureau has complaints on
file.
If so, you can make your investment decision
accordingly. But be aware that the absence
of
local complaints doesn’t necessarily mean a
firm or individual is on the up-and-up. It
may
simply mean that investors haven’t yet
become aware that they’ve been bilked. Or it
may mean you will have the distinction of
becoming the first victim in town. It could
also mean that other victims have been too
embarrassed to report their losses.
Regrettably,
that’s not uncommon.
Make a phone call to the financial editor of
your local newspaper.
Although newspapers don’t give endorsements
or make investment recommendations,
they may be aware of a swindler who is
working a scam in the area—and may even
have published a warning article that you
happened to miss. Then too, if readers are
being pitched with suspicious-sounding
investment offers, that’s something an
investigative
reporter might want to look into.
If the investment offer isn’t local, don’t
be
reluctant to make a long distance phone
call or two.
It could be that the police, Better Business
Bureau or newspaper in the community
where the offer is coming from will be able
to provide information. Again, however, even
the absence of such complaints doesn’t
necessarily
mean the firm is legitimate. Some
swindlers—particularly telephone boiler-room
operators—try to maintain a low profile
in their local areas. That lessens the
likelihood of their coming to the attention
of
local authorities; it prevents prospects
from
dropping by to see their operations; and it
makes it more difficult for out-of-towners
to
discover what they are up to.
Check to see if your city or state has a
consumer protection agency.
Many do. If so, there may be information
there
about the person of firm that’s offering the
investment
you are interested in. In any case, the
agency should be able to provide names,
addresses
and phone numbers of other places
you can check.
If you’re not sure what agency to call, a
good
place to start is the National Fraud
Information
Center (NFIC), a service provided by the National Consumers League. The NFIC
accepts reports about attempts to defraud
consumers on the telephone or the Internet.
When you call the NFIC’s toll-free number
(800-876-7060), a trained counselor will ask
you some questions and direct you to the appropriate agency for more information.
Contact regulators
The majority of individuals and companies
offering investments to the public are
subject
to some sort of regulation—and may be
subject
to multiple regulation. Those which trade
in futures contracts and options on futures
contracts are regulated by the Commodity
Futures Trading Commission, a federal
agency,
and by National Futures Association (NFA),
an
industry wide self-regulatory
organization authorized by Congress. NFA maintains a database
of futures-related disciplinary information
which investors can access by calling the
Disciplinary
Information Access Line at 800-676-
4NFA. You also can conduct background
checks by accessing NFA’s online Background
Affiliation Information Center (BASIC) or
NFA’s web site
www.nfa.futures.org.
In the securities and securities options
business,
the federal regulatory agency is the
Securities
and Exchange Commission. There is
also an industry self-regulatory
organization,
the National Association of Securities
Dealers
Regulation (NASDR). NASDR operates a Public
Disclosure Program which investors can
access
by calling 800-289-9999 or by visiting their
web site (www.nasdr.com).
By contacting the appropriate regulatory
organization,
you can generally find out whether
the firm or person is properly registered to
engage
in that type of business and whether any
public disciplinary actions have been taken
against them.
Write or phone law enforcement agencies.
Whether or not a person or firm is subject
to
the scrutiny of a regulatory organization,
the
fact is that fraud is against the law in
every
state of the nation. And if it involves
interstate
commerce including the use of the
mails or phone lines—federal criminal
statutes
apply. If an investment sounds suspicious,
check with the appropriate agency.
They may be able to furnish information or
conduct an investigation of their own.
The
following are some you could contact:
The office of the local public prosecutor,
the
state attorney general, and the state
securities
administrator. Someone in the location
courthouse should be able to give you names,
addresses and phone numbers.
If the mails are used in promoting or
operating
a phony investment scheme, federal
Postal Inspectors want to know about it. The
postmaster in your community can put you
in touch with them. Fraud involving any
form of interstate commerce is also of
interest
to the Federal Bureau of Investigation.
The nearest office should be listed in your
phone directory.
Sure it can take some time, effort and
possibly
expense to check out an investment proposal
thoroughly, but if you have any doubt
about whether it’s worth the trouble, talk
with people who didn’t and wish they had!
Finally, Don’t Lose Touch with
Your Money
The need to exercise good financial sense
doesn’t stop once you’ve decided to invest.
It’s important to continuously monitor your
investments and to be alert for any telltale
signs that things aren’t quite the way they
should be. The person who sold you the
investment,
for example, may suddenly become
inaccessible continuously tied up on the
telephone or unwilling to return your calls,
busy with clients, or out-of-town on
important
business matters. Or various documents
or accounting statements you were promised
don’t arrive. Or information you do receive
is
vague or different than what you had been
led to expect. Or money that was supposed
to have been paid to you isn’t received, and
instead of checks you get excuses.
If you become suspicious of an investment
you’ve made—and if you are unable to totally
resolve your concerns, the best thing you
can
do is try to get out of it as quickly as
possible.
That means demanding your money back,
accompanied,
if necessary, by threats to contact
authorities.
You might or might not get it. The best you
can
hope for, if indeed there’s fraud involved,
is that
the swindler may decide to refund your money
rather than risk having you blow the whistle
while he is still on the prowl for new
investors.
If that happens, consider yourself more
fortunate
than most.
Be aware, if you decide to try and get a
refund,
that the person who was smooth- talking enough to get your money in the first place
will unleash all his skills to persuade you
to leave it with him. No doubt, he will have
some
answer for all of your concerns. as well as
some explanation for all apparent
irregularities. And, no doubt you will be told that
backing
out now would be anything from contractually
illegal to a terrible financial mistake.
Swindlers
figure that every once in a while some of
their
more fidgety investors simply have to be
re-convinced. He may tell you that you are so
close to making really big money, or the
investment
now looks even more profitable than
originally expected.
Believe him at your own peril.
If you do insist on a refund of your
investment,
insist on it immediately. Ask to pick it up
yourself,
or offer to pay the cost of having it sent
by
overnight mail or wired directly to your
bank.
Don’t settle for “it will take a week or
two” or
“the check is in the mail.” As everyone
knows,
checks seem to be lost more often than any
other type of mail!
If you don’t get your investment back (and
chances are you won’t), or even if you do
and still suspect a swindle, report it
promptly
to the appropriate authorities and
regulatory
officials. They may be able to conduct an
investigation
and, if called for, seek legal action
to impound whatever funds the firm still
has.
Bottom line, the unfortunate reality is that
very few victims of investment fraud ever
again see a cent of their money. It’s also a
reality that the business of swindling will
continue to flourish as long as unwary
investors provide prey for unscrupulous
promoters. Hopefully this information if heeded will help to assure that
a swindler’s next fortune won’t be made at
the expense of your misfortune.
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