North Carolina
Related: About this forumRaleigh Investment Advisor Sentenced to 40 Years for Orchestrating Ponzi Scheme, Obstructing the SEC
Raleigh Investment Advisor Sentenced to 40 Years for Orchestrating Ponzi Scheme, Obstructing the SEC, and Committing Aggravated Identity TheftRALEIGH United States Attorney Robert J. Higdon, Jr. announced that today in the United States District Court in Raleigh, Judge James C. Dever III sentenced STEPHEN CONDON PETERS, 45, of Raleigh, North Carolina, to serve a total term of 40 years in federal prison on charges of Investment Advisor Fraud, Fraud in the Sale of Unregistered Securities, Wire Fraud, Conducting Monetary Transactions in Criminally Derived Property, and Aggravated Identity Theft. The court also ordered that Peters make restitution in the amount of $15,063,624.30 to his numerous victims. The court also ordered forfeiture as part of the sentence.
United States Attorney Robert J. Higdon, Jr. stated, With what is effectively a life sentence for Mr. Peters, the Court in this case gave a clear message: Investment advisors who steal their clients money with lies, and use it to fund their own greed, will pay for their crimes in decades -- not days, months or years. This office will continue its mission to protect the elderly and others who place their trust in financial professionals.
"Stephen Peters will spend the next 40 years right where he belongs, behind bars. Peters cheated hundreds of hardworking people out of their life savings so he could fund his own lavish lifestyle. This is a case about greed and abuse of trust. The FBI will continue to work with our partners to ensure this kind of malicious behavior is investigated and those guilty offenders are held accountable, said John Strong, Special Agent in Charge of the FBI in North Carolina.
At trial and through the sentencing process, the evidence showed that Peters, in his role as a Registered Investment Advisor, defrauded his numerous clients by steering them into investments in which Peters had a direct financial interest. He then compounded his crimes by attempting to defraud the SEC with false documents and statements. According to the Court, Peterss crimes were breathtaking, but were proven with a tsunami of evidence. In issuing its 40 year sentence, the Court also noted that Peters quadrupled down on the crime by, among other things, perjurying himself at trial.
Read more: https://www.justice.gov/usao-ednc/pr/raleigh-investment-advisor-sentenced-40-years-orchestrating-ponzi-scheme-obstructing
sprinkleeninow
(20,546 posts)NurseJackie
(42,862 posts)What's the difference between perjurying and perjuring? Is that a typo, or an uncommon spelling, or is there a distinction that I'm unaware of?
usaf-vet
(6,919 posts)IMO that would be a nice benchmark for future criminals.
Steal $7.5M and you get 20 years. With full restitution.
Steal $3.75M and you get 10 years. With full restitution.
That seems fair to me as a benchmark.
If the current evidence of the financial cons being run by Trump and his fellow grifters are true.
We've got a lot to look forward to. Most of the Trump grifters will die in prison.
Or at least that would be the case IF there was any justice in our current justice system.
bucolic_frolic
(47,005 posts)He might get, you know, the right to refuse discovery or subpoenas, or a judge he appointed.
Hope he's done "perjurying" himself.
Relative to other violent crimes, seems harsh sentence to me, he really should have created his own court like the guy in Florida.