A northwest suburban man was sentenced for engaging in a lengthy investment fraud scheme in which he and a co-defendant swindled approximately $105 million from 455 investors who invested in funds they purported to operate. The defendant, DANIEL SPITZER, pleaded guilty to 10 counts of mail fraud last July on the day his trial was scheduled to begin in Federal Court. Spitzer misused the money he raised from investors for his own benefit and to make Ponzi-type payments to investors, resulting in a loss of $33.98 million to at least 279 victims, many of them elderly.
Spitzer, 55, of North Barrington and formerly of the U.S. Virgin Islands, caused “very substantial damage,” U.S. District Judge James Zagel said in imposing the sentence today, a day after he ordered Spitzer into federal custody. The judge also ordered restitution of $33.98 million.
Spitzer engaged in an “extended act of greed,” between late 2004 and early 2010, Assistant U.S. Attorney Madeleine Murphy argued at today’s hearing.
According to court records, Spitzer was the principal officer and sole shareholder of Kenzie Financial Management; the sole manager and member of Kenzie Services, LLC; the president of Draseena Funds Group, Corp.; the manager of DN Management Company, LLC; and the manager of Nerium Management Company.
Co-defendant ALFRED GEREBIZZA, 59, formerly of Crystal Lake and Palm Beach Gardens, Fla., was the secretary and a director of Draseena and a sales agent for the Kenzie Funds, who also held himself out as a trader. Gerebizza was convicted at trial last July of 10 counts of mail fraud and six counts of federal income tax fraud. He is in federal custody awaiting sentencing.
Through these entities, Spitzer controlled 12 investment funds collectively known as the “Kenzie Funds.” Spitzer and Gerebizza offered and sold to the public investments in the various Kenzie Funds in the form of membership interests and limited partnerships. Through sales agents and various marketing materials, they informed investors and potential investors that their investments would be used primarily in foreign currency trading, that the Kenzie Funds had never lost money, and that they had achieved profitable historical returns. The defendants had to continually raise funds through the solicitation of new investors in the Kenzie Funds to make payments on investments made by earlier investors, all of which they concealed and intentionally failed to disclose to both new and earlier investors. Although Spitzer and Gerebizza falsely represented to prospective investors and current investors that different Kenzie Funds had different levels of risk and different investment strategies, they commingled the money invested in all 12 Kenzie Funds, then misappropriated a significant portion, and only invested less than one-third of the approximately $105 million raised from investors.
The defendants represented to investors that the Kenzie Funds had rates of returns ranging from 4.52 percent to 13.54 percent over the prior five years, although the bank accounts for the Kenzie Funds reflected that the total net return during that period was less than one percent. As of June 30, 2009, they represented that the Kenzie Funds were worth approximately $250 million when, in fact, the Funds collectively had only approximately $4 million in their bank accounts.
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