Vancouver man gets more than 6 years for Ponzi scheme that cost investors $4.3 million
Jan. 6—A Vancouver man was sentenced Friday to 6 1/4 years in federal prison for a Ponzi scheme that defrauded 32 investors, most of them close friends and family, of
The charging information, filed
When people agreed to invest, Burgess instructed them to create a self-directed IRA account and wire money from that account to an account controlled by Burgess, according to the information.
Between about
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Instead, the information states Burgess "overstated the past performance of the fund, misrepresented the value of investors' investments on monthly statements, used funds provided by new investors to repay earlier investors and took for himself far more than the agreed 50 percent of pool profits."
Prosecutors requested Burgess, 67, be sentenced to 97 months in prison, citing aggravating factors of betraying a position of trust, the duration of the crime spanning many years and the amount of money lost. Assistant
"To put it simply, the defendant knowingly wrecked people's lives," Wilkinson said. "He lied to people who trusted him to get their money. He lied to them about where the money had gone. He did this day after day, month after month, year after year. And then, when it was too late — many of these victims were near retirement, in retirement — he told them it was all gone."
Although the investments lost totaled just more than
"He told them that, collectively, they had
Burgess' defense attorney,
U.S. District Judge
When ordering Burgess' 75-month sentence, Estudillo acknowledged Burgess' age, his recent medical issues, the fact any substantial sentence could be a life sentence and the unlikelihood he would reoffend.
The judge also said he wished he had words of wisdom for Burgess' victims, many of whom he said Burgess placed in a financial crisis, but that the impact on them will likely be long lasting.
"Like anything, once sentencing has been imposed, hopefully that brings some sort of closure to all the people that have been involved," Estudillo said. "But certainly, it won't bring the relief that everybody would want to have, if it was a perfect world for them."
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