{"id":21872,"date":"2019-10-28T09:35:10","date_gmt":"2019-10-28T16:35:10","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/moneyppl.com\/?p=21872"},"modified":"2023-04-30T00:32:53","modified_gmt":"2023-04-30T07:32:53","slug":"30-costly-scandals-of-business-financial-fraud","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/dev.moneyppl.com\/30-costly-scandals-of-business-financial-fraud\/21872\/","title":{"rendered":"30 Costly Scandals Of Business & Financial Fraud"},"content":{"rendered":"
When you think of the word “criminal,” you might imagine a shadowy figure who is ready to mug you in the middle of the night. But the real troublemakers can often be people who hide in plain sight. <\/span><\/p>\n Many white-collar criminals look the part and seem incredibly trustworthy. They have college degrees, wear a suit and tie, and will greet you with a friendly smile. You would never know that they were about to rob you blind. Here at Self-Made, we gathered 30 of the most scandalous stories about business and financial fraud.<\/span><\/p>\n You may have heard of a “Ponzi Scheme.” It all started because of Charles Ponzi. Born in Italy as Carlo Pietro Giovanni, he moved to the United States and renamed himself the alias Charles Ponzi. While he was in the US and Canada in the 1920s, Ponzi promised investors that if they gave him money, he could promise a 50% profit within 45 days or a 100% profit in 90 days. He claimed that he could buy postal reply coupons in another country at a discount and sell them for their full value when he came back to the United States.<\/span><\/p>\n However, this was all a lie. Ponzi took the money from new investors to pay the old. For example, let’s say Person A gave him $10 and he promised to double their money. He goes to person B, and they give him $20. So he gives person B’s money to Person A. Suddenly, they believe his business is legitimate, so they trusted him with more and more of their life savings. Ponzi tricked so many people that he collected over $20 million as a result. Remember that this was back in the 1920’s. After inflation, that’s like $256 million in today’s money. <\/span><\/p>\n Today, there are still plenty of “Ponzi Schemes” around that you need to look out for due to their risks. If you can learn anything from this story, it’s that if an investment sounds too good to be true, it probably is.<\/span><\/p>\n <\/p>\n In 2003, an ambitious and manipulative young woman named <\/span>Elizabeth Holmes<\/span><\/a> claimed to have invented a technology that would provide blood tests for multiple diseases with just a small amount of blood. She launched a startup called Teranos in Silicon Valley along with other tech companies. At the moment, it takes an entire vile of blood just to test for one illness at a time. So of Theranos could fulfill their promise, it would have been a revolutionary medical technology.<\/span><\/p>\n Holmes raised over $700 million from investors, and the company was valued at $9 billion by 2013 thanks to her efforts. People were so impressed that politicians, hospitals, and patients all got on board to see what Theranos could do. However, this was all just a front. Elizabeth Holmes was a teenage girl with a bright idea, but absolutely no way of actually making that technology a reality. <\/span><\/p>\n She hired a huge team of scientists, yet none of them could invent these magical blood tests that she promised the world. In 2018, Holmes had to go to court to answer for fraud charges. If you want to know more about the story, there’s an HBO documentary series called <\/span>The Inventor: Out For Blood in Silicon Valley<\/span><\/a>. There’s also a book called <\/span>Bad Blood: Secrets and Lies in a Silicon Valley Startup<\/span><\/i><\/a>, and an upcoming movie, all due to Holmes’ false claims.<\/span><\/p>\n <\/p>\n In 2016, it was discovered that Wells Fargo created millions of fraudulent checkings and savings accounts in their customer’s names without their consent. Customers were shocked to find unexplained fees for these additional accounts. The corporation tried to blame the employees of the individual branches for “accidentally” creating the accounts as a result. They were also adding on unnecessary fees to car insurance and mortgages. In reality, it was a scheme to bring in millions of dollars’ worth of fees from customers who they hoped would never figure it out.<\/span><\/p>\n The United States Consumer Financial Bureau found out about this and fined Wells Fargo $185 million due to their gross negligence. On top of that, there was a class-action lawsuit where Wells Fargo had to <\/span>pay an additional $575 million<\/span><\/a> across all 50 states. If there’s any lesson to be learned here, it is to always carefully examine your bank statement and speak up if you see something strange.<\/span><\/p>\n <\/p>\n You may have heard of Freddie Mac, which is short for the <\/span>Federal Home Loan Mortgage Corporation<\/span>. In 2003, there was a <\/span>shocking scandal<\/span><\/a> when Freddie Mac doctored their quarterly earnings report by $6 billion in order to meet the expectations of their investors on Wall Street. Considering that this was supposed to be a government-affiliated program, this fraud was even more shocking than if it had been committed by a private bank. <\/span><\/p>\n They were forced to pay a $125 million fine to the Office of Federal Housing Enterprise Oversight. But that was not the end of their troubles. In 2006, they paid $400 million in 2006 to the SEC and OFHEO. Many people blame Freddie Mac for the start of the 2008 financial crisis as a result. If you want to know more about the scandal, visit <\/span>Investopedia<\/span><\/a> for their in-depth explanation of what happened.<\/span><\/p>\n <\/p>\n Between 1821 to 1837, a Scottish soldier named <\/span>General Gregor MacGregor<\/span><\/a> managed to convince hundreds of British and French investors that he was the Prince of a fictional country called The Republic of Poyais. He told people that they had the opportunity to invest in <\/span>Poyaisian bonds. The idea that someone would lie about such a thing seems preposterous due to its absurdity. But back then, photography did not exist, so he provided people with illustrations of this so-called country. That was enough to convince them that it was real. Some people even agreed to buy land and emigrate to Poyais!<\/span><\/p>\n MacGregor was originally from Scotland, and he spent a lot of time living in Venezuela and surviving in the wilderness. He purchased a large piece of land in the middle of Nicaragua in a place called The Mosquito Coast. This was once an English settlement that was full of bugs and dangerous pirates, and he decided that he would become the Prince and fill it with new settlers. But once they arrived, people were shocked to see that this was not a country at all, but a place with absolutely no resources for them to live on. Sadly, a lot of people died because they fell for Gregor MacGregor’s trick. <\/span><\/p>\n <\/p>\n Cendant was a real estate and travel services company built by two men named Walter A. Forbes and E. Kirk Sheldon. The two executives falsely reported that the company had grown to the point where it was making <\/span>$500 million in profits<\/span><\/a>. Investors put billions of dollars into Cendant based on these false numbers. Once they were rolling in the dough, the company was able to form CUC International Inc., and they acquired some impressive companies like Century 21, Avis car rentals, the Days Inn hotel chain, and the Jackson Hewitt tax preparation company as a result. <\/span><\/p>\n Even with all of this success, they still continued to lie about how much money they were making. Eventually, the value of the shares plummeted and investors lost $19 billion. Forbes and Sheldon had to go to court to face fraud charges due to their underhanded dealings. The trial lasted for eight years, but they were finally convicted of fraud in 2006. Walter Forbes was sentenced to <\/span>12 years in prison<\/span><\/a> and forced to pay $3.275 billion in restitution. <\/span><\/p>\n <\/p>\n By now you know what a Ponzi scheme is. Shockingly, Bernie Madoff was a scam artist who made it all the way to becoming the chairman of the NASDAQ and founded a wealth management firm in New York City. Madoff started out as a stockbroker in the 1960s who was able to help investors make huge profits. Even though he was successful in his career, he decided to start a Ponzi scheme in 1991. He claimed that he could help people made a profit of 12% because of his financial exertise. <\/span><\/p>\n When people became suspicious as to how Madoff managed to bring back such consistent returns, complaints were filed with the SEC. Eventually, after the stock market crash in 2008, the firm completely lost its money and Madoff could no longer keep up the ruse. In 2008, his own sons turned him into authorities. In 2009, he plead guilty to several federal crimes and was put in prison because of it. <\/span><\/p>\n <\/p>\n Unless you’ve been living under a rock, you’ve probably already heard of the Broadway hit “Hamilton” and how notoriously difficult and expensive it is to buy tickets for. Between 2015 and 2017, a man named <\/span>Joseph Meli<\/span><\/a> wanted to start a firm where he purchased Hamilton tickets and sold them for a profit. Essentially, he wanted to start a ticket scalping business. He convinced investors that he had struck a deal with the producers of the show and was able to buy 35,000 tickets.<\/span><\/p>\n Meli told investors that if they helped him start this company, they could make a huge profit by overcharging people for these tickets. Of course, this was a front for a classic Ponzi scheme. None of that money went to Broadway tickets, and he enjoyed a $3 million mansion in The Hamptons while he juggled the remaining funds around to his investors. In just two years, Meli was able to collect over $100 million from 130 investors as a result of his scam. Eventually, he was caught, and charged with fraud, and forced to give back the $100 million.<\/span><\/p>\n <\/p>\n A financial planner named Gregory Smith and a pastor named Kirbyjon Caldwell were well-respected businessmen. Caldwell was famous for taking a congregation of just 25 people and creating a mega-church with 16,000 members. Even George W. Bush looked up to him as his pastor due to his success in religion. The two were selling Chinese bonds, claiming that these investments could turn a profit in a few years. In reality, these bonds were from The Republic of China, which was overthrown in 1949. (Clearly, their investors didn’t know much about Chinese history.) The bonds were real at one point in time but are now completely worthless.<\/span><\/p>\n Caldwell and Smith targeted elderly people to invest in these bonds, convincing them that they could make an even bigger profit compared to bonds found in the United States. They pocketed the money for themselves, spending at least $1.8 million on luxury cars, homes, and the good life. Finally, the SEC caught up with this Ponzi scheme and filed a <\/span>criminal complaint in 2018<\/span><\/a>. The two have not yet been convicted of fraud because it’s still an ongoing case.<\/span><\/p>\n <\/p>\n The <\/span>Enron scandal<\/span><\/a> is one of the most famous stories on this list. Enron was founded as a gas and power company and continued to acquire other gas companies to their corporation. They even tried to break into online stock trading, internet, and video-on-demand services. Believe it or not, they had some part in the failure of Blockbuster as a result. For years, the corporation was one of the powerhouses of Wall Street. They released false profit statements that made it seem as though they were making billions more than they were.<\/span><\/p>\n At the company’s peak, shares were trading at $90.75. But when they suddenly revealed they owed far more money than they were actually earning, they were forced to declare bankruptcy. The stock value went down to just $0.26 per share. Employees and investors both lost their retirement funds due to the scandal, and thousands of people lost their jobs. Between 2004 and 2011, the company was forced to pay back $21.7 billion in restitution. <\/span><\/p>\n <\/p>\n You may have already heard of Frank Abagnale Jr. because his life story was turned into the film <\/span>Catch Me if You Can<\/span><\/i>. From age 15 to 21, Frank pretended to be a pilot, a doctor, a lawyer, and more. In each of his new identities, he was able to forge paychecks and made over a million dollars. He escaped police custody twice and was always on the run. <\/span><\/p>\n When he was finally caught at 22, Abagnale spent less than five years in prison. Once he regained his freedom, he began working for the FBI as a consultant to help them find other criminals who are just like him. He also runs a corporation called <\/span>Abagnale & Associates, which is a financial fraud consultancy company. So he very literally turned his life of crime into a career, even though everything he is doing now is completely legal.<\/span><\/p>\n <\/p>\n Leonardo DeCaprio played yet another con artist years after Catch Me If You Can<\/em>. This time, he was Jordan Belfort in <\/span>The Wolf of Wall Street. <\/span><\/i>You may already know from watching the movie that Jordan Belfort began his career as a run-of-the-mill stockbroker. His life changed when he realized that he could make a fortune on penny stock scams. Soon enough, he was living the lifestyle of a high roller with fancy cars, houses, and a yacht. The only trouble was that he was stealing money from hopeful investors.<\/span><\/p>\n In the end, Belfort spent just 22 months in prison because of his crimes. He was willing to give authorities as much information as possible, and of course, his life story was made into a movie. By 2013, he had paid back $10 million from the $11.6 million he owed to his victims, and he also put some of his proceeds from the movies and books towards restitution as well. He was determined to turn his life around to show his kids that he could make an honest dollar. He now works as a motivational speaker because of that focus.<\/span><\/p>\n <\/p>\n Since the 1960s, Waste Management has been a national corporation that collects garbage throughout the United States. You have probably seen their green trucks and famous logo. In 2002, the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) <\/span>filed a lawsuit<\/span><\/a> against Waste Management for fraud. Between 1992 to 1997, Waste Management published false financial statements for their investors to make it seem as though they were making $1.7 billion more than reality. Every single one of the executives of the corporation was pocketing millions of dollars from their financial fraud.<\/span><\/p>\n The Associate Director of the SEC’s Division of Enforcement, Thomas C. Newkirk, had this to say about Waste Management: “Our complaint describes one of the most egregious accounting frauds we have seen. For years, these defendants cooked the books, enriched themselves, preserved their jobs, and duped unsuspecting shareholders.” The executives from Waste Management were able to settle with the SEC in 2001, which is why you may have never known they committed fraud in the first place.<\/span><\/p>\n <\/p>\n WorldCom was a telephone company that specializes in long-distance calling. (Remember when you had to pay for long-distance?) They were huge during the dot com bubble of the 1990s. When the bubble finally burst, however, fewer companies were buying their services, so they lied to make it seem as though they were still thriving. Between 1999 to the first quarter of 2002, WorldCom was doctoring their books to make it seem as though they made $3.3 billion more than they actually were. <\/span><\/p>\n WorldCom went down in history as being the biggest accounting fraud, as well as the <\/span>largest bankruptcy<\/span><\/a> filing in US History. After going to court, CEO Bernard Ebbers was sentenced to 25 years in prison because of his role in the scam. CFO Scott Sullivan was sentenced to five years due to his role. The company is still around today, but after the embarrassment of the fraud trial, they changed their name to MCI Inc. in 2003.<\/span><\/p>\n <\/p>\n In the 1980s, a 15-year-old boy named Barry Minkow started a carpet cleaning company called <\/span>ZZZZ Best<\/span><\/a> in his parents’ garage. At first, he was trying to run a legitimate business until he began to struggle financially. He began using an illegal technique called “check-kiting,” and took advantage of an insurance company scheme with restoration costs. ZZZZ Best quickly became a front for a Ponzi scheme. <\/span><\/p>\n In 1986, he wanted to take the company public with a valuation of $300 million. Just seven months later, the company went bankrupt. When its assets were auctioned off, everything was worth a mere $64,000. Minkow was found guilty of fraud and was sentenced to 25 years in prison as a result. Once he was released, he became a pastor and founded the Community Bible Church. Of course, this was yet another front for his schemes, and he committed fraud again. This time, he had to go back for another five years due to his latest scam. In 2018, the movie Con Man was released based about Barry Minkow’s life. He still owes $612 million in restitution.<\/span><\/p>\n <\/p>\n Tyco International was a security solution and fire protection company that was originally from Ireland. They opened up a second location in Princeton, New Jersey. The company also oddly began to delve into the totally unrelated field of manufacturing electronic components as well as providing health care services. But this mismatched line of work was not the only problem with the corporation. The founders were also committing financial fraud.<\/span><\/p>\n CEO L. Dennis Kozlowski and CFO Mark Swartz were discovered to have stolen hundreds of millions of dollars from the company. The two founders took out $170 million in loans without notifying the shareholders. Then they sold 7.5 million shares of fake and unauthorized Tyco stock for $450 million. They both began to buy multiple houses, and Kozlowski even threw his wife a $2 million birthday party. In 2002, Tyco’s stock price dropped 80% in just six weeks. They were found guilty of fraud and sentenced to 25 years in jail along with being forced to pay back $175 million in restitutions. <\/span><\/p>\n <\/p>\n Charles Keating was in the heart of the 1989 scandal run by a group of state senators called <\/span>The Keating Five<\/span><\/a>. In the 1980s, Keating ran a home construction business called American Continental Corporation as well as a bank called the Lincoln Savings and Loan Association. At the time, Keating was taking advantage of very loose banking regulations. <\/span><\/p>\n The bank declared bankruptcy in 1989, and 21,000 people lost their life savings. Keating sold over 23,000 worthless bonds. When the bank collapsed, it cost the federal government $3.4 billion courtesy of the American taxpayer. Thankfully, Keating was sent to prison for fraud. <\/span><\/p>\n <\/p>\n30. Charles Ponzi<\/span><\/h2>\n
29. Theranos<\/span><\/h2>\n
28. Wells Fargo<\/span><\/h2>\n
27. Freddie Mac <\/span><\/h2>\n
26. Republic of Poyais<\/span><\/h2>\n
25. Cendant<\/span><\/h2>\n
24. Bernie Madoff <\/span><\/h2>\n
23. Joseph Meli and the Hamilton Scam<\/span><\/h2>\n
22. Kirbyjon Caldwell & Gregory Smith<\/span><\/h2>\n
21. Enron<\/span><\/h2>\n
20. Frank Abagnale Jr.<\/span><\/h2>\n
19. Jordan Belfort<\/span><\/h2>\n
18. Waste Management <\/span><\/h2>\n
17. WorldCom <\/span><\/h2>\n
16. ZZZZ Best<\/span><\/h2>\n
15. Tyco International<\/span><\/h2>\n
14. Charles Keating<\/span><\/h2>\n