Allen Stanford jailed for 110 years for $7bn Ponzi                                 		 		                            
  Allen Stanford had blamed a former chief financial officer     		  	                        Disgraced  tycoon Allen Stanford has been sentenced to 110 years in jail for  operating a Ponzi scheme that defrauded investors of more than $7bn  (£4.5bn).
           The scheme was described as one of the largest in US history.
           In court, Stanford denied any guilt, telling the judge at his sentencing hearing: "I did not defraud anybody."
           A Texan banker, Stanford rose to prominence outside the US  when he bankrolled international cricket competitions in the UK and  Caribbean.
           But after the collapse of his agreement to stage Twenty20  cricket in England, his financial empire began to crumble amid  investigations by US regulators.
           Forbes Magazine listed him as the 605th richest man in the world in 2006.
           However, since his arrest in 2009 he has spent three years in detention after being denied bail.
     Shifting blame 	      Stanford's Ponzi scheme centred on his banking operation based in the Caribbean island nation of Antigua.
       	Some 30,000 individual investors  were swindled, it was alleged. Prosecutors failed to find as much as 92%  of the assets Stanford International Bank claimed to have.          In his statement in court on Thursday, which ran for some 40  minutes, he told the judge: "I'm not here to ask for sympathy or  forgiveness or to throw myself at your mercy.
           "I did not run a Ponzi scheme. I didn't defraud anybody."
           US District Judge David Hittner, who presided over Stanford's  trial, called Stanford's actions  "egregious criminal frauds" during  the hearing.
           Two victims of the scheme spoke during the hearing, including  Angela Shaw, who told the court Stanford was worse than convicted Ponzi  schemer Bernard Madoff because he preyed on middle-class investors.
           "He stole more than millions," Ms Shaw said. "He stole our lives as we knew them."
           His sentence is 40 years shorter than the jail term handed  down to Madoff, who pleaded guilty in 2009 to a Ponzi scheme targeting  wealthy investors.
           Stanford was convicted in March on 13 of 14 charges against  him, despite his lawyers attempting to shift most of the blame on his  chief financial officer.
           Prosecutors had asked for a 230-year sentence, with defence lawyers arguing for a lenient term of 44 months.
           Three other former executives at Stanford's company are  awaiting trial, while a former Antiguan financial regulator is expected  to be extradited to the US for related charges.
           While a jury has cleared the way for access to about $330m in  stolen funds sitting in Stanford's frozen bank accounts across Canada,  England and Switzerland, legal wrangling could make it years before  investors recover any of that money. |