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To: Dan B. who wrote (1511)6/10/2003 10:16:26 PM
From: StockDung  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 1658
 
National Bank's P.I. fugitive client Weiss now in jail
National Bank of Canada (The)
NA
Shares issued 190,566,755 Jun 10 2002 close $
32.90
Monday June 10 2002 Street
Wire
Also B.C. Securities Commission (*BCSC) Street Wire
Also Securities and Exchange Commission (*SEC) Street Wire
Also TSX Venture Exchange (*TSX) Street Wire
America's most-wanted major financial fugitive, a Mafia-linked star offshore client of controversial Vancouver brokerage Pacific International Securities, is finally behind bars in Florida. Shalom Weiss, also known as Sholam Weiss, who fled three years ago, before being sentenced to a record 845 years in jail and fined a total of $248.4-million in the biggest-ever criminal insurance fraud, was whisked back to Orlando by federal agents on a government jet Sunday from Austria. (All figures are in U.S. dollars.)
Mr. Weiss, 47, the subject of an international manhunt for the massive National Heritage Life Insurance Inc. mortgage fraud, was tracked down and arrested on Oct. 24, 2000, in Vienna, where he waged a vigorous extradition defence since. After Mr. Weiss vanished on Oct. 18, 1999, the day before jury deliberations after a nine-month federal trial, the FBI and the Delaware Insurance Commissioner posted bounty rewards of more than $100,000. U.S. authorities credit the assistance and co-operation of law enforcement
agencies in Israel, Brazil, Belgium, Germany, Hungary and Austria in tracking him down.
Pacific International's most-wanted client had many sides. Once a respected member of New York's Hasidic Jewish community, Mr. Weiss was also a part-owner and regular at Scores, an upscale strip club in Manhattan which allegedly featured members of the late Don Gotti's Gambino family as secret partners. Although it is unclear what, if any, due diligence P.I. did on Mr. Weiss, his latest string of fraudulent deals stretches back to at least 1990.
"This man was essentially a financial predator, and National Heritage was only the last in a long string of victims," Assistant U.S. Attorney Judy Hunt told the press. "The evidence presented at trial showed that Weiss had been engaged in a series of bank frauds, bankruptcy frauds and securities frauds dating back to the 1980s."
Mr. Weiss was on the top tier of 12 National Heritage figures who pled guilty between 1994 and 1999 in a large criminal conspiracy involving a wide circle of alleged co-conspirators in Arizona, Texas, Illinois, New York and Florida.
"According to insurance regulators, the failure of NHLIC is the largest failure due to criminal activity in insurance industry history, involving a loss which exceeded $250-million," states the office of Paul Perez, United States Attorney for the Middle District of Florida in Orlando.
"We are gratified that Shalom Weiss has not evaded the penalties imposed for these very serious criminal offenses. Those who pillage our financial institutions for their own gain, thereby jeopardizing the financial security of our citizenry, must be prosecuted, and face terms of imprisonment which reflect the grave harm done by their criminal acts," stated Mr. Perez on Monday. Mr. Weiss's 845-year sentence is believed to the longest sentence
imposed in U.S. history, at least for non-serial killers.
While the initial FBI probe, launched in 1994 with the Internal Revenue Service and the U.S. Postal Inspection Service, began with a believed fraud of $12-million, the case snowballed over the years into a complex $450-million mortgage and real estate fraud operation. The Orlando office of the FBI earlier called the case "one of the largest white-collar crimes ever."
Mr. Weiss was the star bad-boy client of Pacific International, a scandal-plagued Howe Street brokerage, controlled by National Bank of Canada, which was charged last July by the British Columbia Securities Commission for servicing far more than its share of dubious clients. The securities regulator portrays P.I. as a haven for stock crooks, rolling out the welcome mat for numerous securities violators and felons, especially in the barely
regulated OTC Bulletin Board market.
In addition to vigorously defending the serious, but as-yet-proven BCSC charges, Pacific International has denied Stockwatch's documented evidence, largely obtained through BCSC searches, that it ever serviced big-league racketeer and money launderer Mr. Weiss. "Mr Weiss is not and never has been a client of Pacific International," stated Vancouver lawyer Bryan Baynham of Harper Grey Easton in a strongly worded legal warning letter in January.
"This story and earlier stories of a similar vein have the potential of doing irreparable harm to my client's good name and reputation," he stated.
Despite lawyer Mr. Baynham's legal warning to Stockwatch about reporting on Mr. Weiss as a client of Pacific International, the BCSC has never withdrawn or otherwise revised the Weiss allegations in its notice of hearing. "We certainly haven't retracted that," BCSC acting enforcement director Wayne Armistead told Stockwatch on Monday.
Until recently, Mr. Weiss was the standout disreputable P.I. client, topping BCSC citation list including Mafia-linked player Joe Garofalo, Regulation S abuser Salvatore Mazzeo, convicted stock felons Paul Harary, David Hesterman and ZZZZ Best's Maurice Rind, fellow U.S. securities violators Randy Biemel, Jimmy Ray Carter, Richard Gladstone, Steve Keyser and Amr Ibrahim (Anthony) Elgindy.
California shortseller Mr. Elgindy took the crown three weeks ago, on May 21, when he was arrested and denied bail as the head of a ring which allegedly bought confidential FBI and grand jury records from several corrupt FBI agents, used the information in short attacks, and extorted cease-and-desist payments from targeted stock promotions. While Mr. Elgindy traded heavily through another Vancouver brokerage in the current case, Global Securities, which wired funds offshore to Lebanon, he earlier traded through
Pacific International.
In an intriguing coincidence, Pacific International serviced both mortgage fraudster Mr. Weiss, a key player in the fraudulent 1997 bulletin board promotion of Saf T Lok Inc., and controversial fraudbuster Mr. Elgindy, who exposed and shorted the promotion. (There is no suggestion Mr. Elgindy and Mr. Weiss were acting in concert or even knew each other personally.)
The BCSC names Mr. Weiss as the owner, operator or associate of several offshore accounts, including Amex Corp., based in Geneva, and Dagon Developments, based in Israel. The regulator included these Weiss-linked accounts on several red-flag lists of suspicious activity, including receiving in or transferring out of large blocks of OTC-BB shares, in-and-out cash transfers with little or no trading, akin to money laundering, and
stock-sales proceeds distributed to third parties.
The National Heritage case dates back to 1990, when Mr. Weiss's New York attorney, Michael Blutrich, Arizona businessman Patrick Smythe and Orlando accountant David Davies bought an equity stake in the insurance company with a rubber $4-million cheque. Although their corporate account had a balance of only a few thousand dollars, the trio stalled the closing until a Friday evening, and by the Monday morning, they were able to siphon funds from National's treasury, a particularly audacious leveraged buyout with no
money down. Mr. Davies helped paper over the sham by scooping $540,000 from a trust
fund he controlled, buying $4.5-million of U.S. T-bills on margin, then having a brokerage firm state the bonds were owned without debt.
National Heritage was no prize at first. The insurer, mainly operating in Florida, was suffering in the late 1980s and the Delaware insurance industry regulator threatened to step in by May of 1990, unwittingly paving the way for the Smythe group to come in.
To help finance the sham buyout and subsequent dubious transactions, businessman Mr. Smythe and lawyer Mr. Blutrich opened a series of corporate accounts at the New York branch of Swiss-based Bank Leumi. Although Mr. Weiss did not appear on the scene immediately, he was already quite experienced in dealing with, and defrauding, Bank Leumi's New York operation.
In a Sept. 5, 1996, civil judgment after a three-week trial in the Eastern District of New York, Mr. Weiss and his plumbing company, Windsor Plumbing Supply Co. Inc., were found guilty of civil fraud and conspiracy and ordered to pay Cofacredit S.A., a French export finance company, $5.12-million, stemming from a plumbing fixtures importing deal dating back to 1987.
After conning Bank Leumi through false representations, Mr. Weiss gained a $1.3-million letter of credit in mid-1998. In late 1990, the plumbing entrepreneur called Bank Leumi to claim some of the inventory securing the loan had been stolen from a warehouse. "Bank Leumi tried to cover this loss through an insurance policy, but was unsuccessful because Sholam Weiss failed to produce evidence that he owned the inventory allegedly stolen," states an Aug. 3, 1999, appeal court decision, which upheld the $5.12-million Cofacredit judgment.
Mr. Weiss would later used Windsor Plumbing in at least one of a multitude of schemes to defraud National Heritage, by using fraudulently inflated property appraisals.
While hard at work ripping off National Heritage and other victims, Mr. Weiss often took time to enjoy life. In 1996, when he was serving time in a halfway house for mail fraud in
New York, Mr. Weiss conned a judge into letting him out to spend the sacred Jewish
Passover holiday with his wife and five children. With his strict four-day pass in hand, Mr. Weiss then climbed into Donald Trump's Air Trump helicopter with a 23-year-old tart for a gambling fling at Trump Plaza Hotel and Casino in Atlantic City, where he was "comped" in a $700-a-night suite and he dropped $100,000. (The FBI's Most Wanted poster notes he "frequents gambling casinos and plays blackjack.")
Even more titillating were the prominent and respected Hasidic Jewish businessman's frequent appearances at Scores, the upscale Manhattan peeler parlour. National Heritage, fronted by lawyer Mr. Blutrich and associate Lyle Pfeffer, bought a major ownership stake in the strip club, and after a subsequent shakedown, they allegedly fronted for secret Gambino family partners. The extortionist was John Gotti Jr., the son of John Gotti
Sr., Gambino family head who died of cancer in jail this weekend.
As part of an agreement with their National Heritage guilty pleas, Mr. Blutrich and Mr. Pfeffer were placed in the federal witness protection program as they testified about mob dealings in the stripper industry. U.S. authorities claim some of National Heritage's plundered funds were laundered through Scores.
Meanwhile, Mr. Weiss's irrepressible taste for young skin led to his ultimate downfall. After fleeing the States with his Brazilian girlfriend, now 27, Mr. Weiss's scent was narrowed down in Vienna. Brazilian police, sniffing around in Sao Paulo, retrieved Weiss-related phone records from one hotel, found an odd call to the girlfriend's mother in a poor neighbourhood, and led international investigators to a chase which ended in Vienna.
investorcheck.com



To: Dan B. who wrote (1511)6/10/2003 10:19:41 PM
From: StockDung  Respond to of 1658
 
Fugitive Asks for Bond Hearing, Requests Kosher Meals in Jail
By Mike Schneider Associated Press Writer
Published: Jun 10, 2002

ORLANDO, Fla. (AP) - Even though Shalom Weiss had been sentenced in absentia to 845 years in prison, eluded international authorities for a year and faked a heart attack to delay being extradited from Austria, he wasn't about to give up without a fight.
The Yeshiva-educated businessman, who fled the United States three years ago before a jury convicted him of bilking tens of millions of dollars from an Orlando insurance company, asked a judge Monday for a bond hearing and that he be given kosher meals in jail.

U.S. Magistrate Karla Spaulding ordered Weiss held in custody. She agreed that he should receive kosher meals.

During a 20-minute initial appearance, Weiss' attorney called into question the legality of the extradition from Vienna to Orlando, which occurred Sunday.

"We object to the unlawful manner in which Mr. Weiss was essentially kidnapped," attorney Sam Burstyn said by speakerphone during the hearing. Burstyn was in the New York area for another trial.

But federal prosecutors said the extradition was legal, and they filed a motion to have Burstyn removed from the case because he had represented a co-defendant of Weiss, which prosecutors argued presented a conflict of interest.

The extradition petition was "drawn in accordance with the law," prosecutor Judy Hunt said after the hearing. "This was a horrendous crime that caused a number of people tremendous suffering."

Hunt said prosecutors would refile a sentencing motion dropping an obstruction of justice charge that could knock five years off of Weiss' sentence. Austrian officials allowed the extradition on the condition that the obstruction charge be dropped because the nation doesn't have a such a crime.

Dressed in a red prison suit and shackled at the hands and feet, a glum-looking Weiss presented a stark contrast to the type of high-living that investigators said Weiss grew accustomed to while living on the lam.

As a fugitive in Israel, Brazil, Belgium, the United Kingdom and Austria, Weiss acquired a call-girl girlfriend, gambled at casinos and lived at expensive hotels, officials said. He eluded authorities by using aliases such as "Charles Dick" and "Saul Levine," said retired FBI special agent Joseph Judge.

His wife and family remained in Monsey, N.Y., and at times in Brazil, while he moved in and out of the community of religious, Chasidic Jews.

"When it suits him, he's a religious Jew," Judge said. "When he's by himself, he shaves his beard and he gambles."

Weiss and 16 others were either convicted or pleaded guilty to stealing more than $250 million from National Heritage Life Insurance Co. through fraudulent business dealings. Federal authorities called it the largest failure due to criminal activity in the insurance industry's history.

Weiss fled the United States as a federal jury was deliberating his case in 1999 after a nine-month trial. In addition to the prison sentence, Weiss was ordered to pay restitution of $125 million.

Weiss was arrested in 2000 after his call-girl girlfriend, who was secretly being followed by Brazilian, Austrian and German investigators, inadvertently led authorities to Weiss in Vienna.

Marcia Praysner, who was a member of the jury that convicted Weiss and attended Monday's hearing, said she was glad to see him returned to face his sentence.

"I feel good that they finally got him," Praysner said. "I think he's come to the end - finally."

AP-ES-06-10-02 1619EDT



To: Dan B. who wrote (1511)6/10/2003 10:24:19 PM
From: StockDung  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 1658
 
Banking On Andy Cuomo
The American Spectator
Jan, 1999 SAM DEALEY & JAMES RING ADAMS

Not for commercial use. Solely to be fairly used for the educational purposes
of research and open discussion.
------------------------------

Part 2

THE WITNESS FORMERLY
KNOWN AS BLUTRICH

Another New York investor in Oceanmark was Michael Blutrich, a name partner in
Cuomo's firm. In 1996 Blutrich was exposed as a target in one of the
largest-ever FBI fraud probes, and in November 1998 was convicted on 22 counts
of racketeering, fraud, and money-laundering. In that scam, Blutrich and others
plotted with the then-chairman of the Orlando, Florida-based National Heritage
Life Insurance Company to loot some $237 million from the company through
inside loans and sham real-estate deals.

In 1990 the Blutrich group approached Heritage and offered to invest $4
million. There was just one problem: They only had a million. So the investors
illegally "borrowed" the rest from an escrow account at Blutrich's firm. Soon
after, a $3-million advance for "future commissions" was drawn from the
insurance company by the Blutrich group and deposited into the firm's escrow
account. The investors bought land near the Catskills in New York, then billed
Heritage for millions more than they had paid.

Another sham loan involved a Bronx land parcel owned by 4305 Associates, a
two-person corporation formed in 1988 and named for the parcel's street
address. Blutrich was vice-president and 50-percent shareholder; Lucille
Falcone, president and equal shareholder. Blutrich persuaded a cohort to pose
as a real-estate appraiser, who valued the property at $2,346,000. It was
actually worth only $700,000. Heritage made a $1.5 million loan, a large chunk
of which found its way into Blutrich's pockets.

Predictably, Heritage soon found itself in financial straits, and its directors
became uneasy for their shareholders, 26,000 (75 percent) of whom were elderly.
Two years later, the insurance company collapsed, a $440-million debacle. The
Blutrich group, meanwhile, had walked away with $93 million in laundered money,
and sunk over two and a half times that much in bad deals. By July 1996,
Heritage's chairman pled guilty to the scam and received eight years in prison
in exchange for his cooperation. Blutrich, along with several associates, was
indicted the following month and has since begun to cooperate with the FBI. One
of the loans that federal agents are investigating was a piddling $300,000 to
underwrite Scores, a New York strip club which the Feds charge became a racket
for the Gambino crime family.

In exchange for testifying and helping the FBI, Blutrich recently entered the
federal Witness Protection Program--and a substantially discounted lifestyle.
In court documents, one of Blutrich's former associates, Shalom Weiss, charges
that during the heyday of the scam Blutrich dropped $50,000 per week
"supporting a lavish lifestyle and expensive habits." The lavishness included a
Porsche, a yacht, and a $12,000 wristwatch, all of which he gave up as part of
his plea agreement.

Blutrich's expensive tastes included a passion for boys' basketball. According
to Weiss, "much of Blutrich's ill-gotten gains were spent supporting or
covering up" pedophilia. "He exploited the young boys he raped and molested. He
beguiled the parents of the boys whose basketball teams he coached so he could
meet his prurient need." In 1994, after a two-year sting, Blutrich was charged
with multiple counts of sexual assault on a minor (to which he secured a
sweetheart plea-bargain), and a story in the December 1998 Penthouse quotes an
anonymous partner in Blutrich's law firm saying, "Everyone knew what Michael
was doing with these young boys. On more than one occasion a mother of one of
these boys would come up to the office screaming and complaining about what
Blutrich was doing." According to the story, several sources "close to the
situation" said Cuomo left the firm in 1988 in part because of Blutrich's
behavior. A former partner of Cuomo's disputes this, however. "That's a total
lie. No one had knowledge that [Blutrich] was involved in any of this s--t,"
says the source, who wishes to remain anonymous.

Cuomo downplays his relationship with Blutrich. In a letter to TAS, the
secretary's Fort Lauderdale attorneys wrote, "Many years ago, Secretary Cuomo
practiced in a law firm with Mr. Blutrich and participated with many investors,
including Mr. Blutrich, in a tax-credit syndication." In fact, along with
Blutrich and Lucille Falcone, Cuomo was one of three general partners in L&M
Associates, a tax-sheltered oil and gas investment. And although the
partnership began many years ago (September 17, 1986), it was not until January
21, 1997--the day before his Senate confirmation hearing to become housing
secretary--that Cuomo quit doing business with Blutrich and sold his interest
in L&M at a loss. A monthly disbursement check to Cuomo from the venture, a
copy of which TAS has obtained, bears Blutrich's signature, and an accompanying
letter shows that it was mailed in 1995 to Cuomo's HUD address, with "best
personal regards."

Cuomo did not have to sell his stake in L&M to become secretary; he need only
have recused himself from decisions involving the partnership (which he had
done two weeks earlier). That he ultimately did sell seems to suggest he was
troubled by doing business with an accused criminal. Yet Blutrich's fraud case
had been widely reported months earlier, and Cuomo's former business associates
had known about it almost immediately. "After...the firm was raided by the
FBI...a former employee called me," says Cuomo's former partner. "I think that
call, I'm sure, went out all over the city. And that's when I became aware that
the FBI was investigating Michael in connection with Scores and the Mob."
Presumably, it was only the prospect of public scrutiny that prompted Cuomo to
finally withdraw his investment.

BETTER LEFT UNSAID
Less than a month after the ink dried on the second Oceanmark settlement in
November 1996, Andrew Cuomo was nominated for HUD secretary. A month later,
accompanied by his wife Kerry Kennedy (whom he had married in 1990), one of
their two daughters, his mother Matilda, sister Maria, and mother-in-law Ethel
Kennedy, Cuomo sailed through an adulatory confirmation hearing notable only
for what was not brought up: Oceanmark Federal Savings and Loan.

The chairman of the Senate committee charged with confirming Andrew was Alfonse
D'Amato, whose hearty dislike for the Cuomos was well known--and generously
reciprocated--after many years' rivalry in New York politics. D'Amato might
have been expected to turn the hearing into a blood bath, given the ample press
coverage Oceanmark had received in the preceding decade. What's more, Florida's
Connie Mack also sat on the committee. AHUD lawyer confirms that a Florida GOP
official sent committee members a package alerting them to the Oceanmark
imbroglio. Amazingly, however, the thrift never came up.

Senate Banking sources say the oversight had more to do with D'Amato protecting
his own chairmanship than Andrew Cuomo's well-being. There was speculation at
the time that Cuomo might challenge the New York senator in his 1998 campaign,
and that he posed a significant threat. (A Mason-Dixon poll conducted at the
time showed Cuomo edging out D'Amato 41-38 percent.) According to these
sources, it was understood that if D'Amato could protect his seat by
sequestering Cuomo on HUD's top floor, so much the better. "Generally a lot of
people felt there were understandings that obviously they were going to try to
stay out of each other's way," says a senior committee aide.

Another reason that Cuomo's involvement with Oceanmark wasn't mentioned at the
hearing may be that D'Amato had his own not-so-kosher connections to the New
York Group. During the 1980's D'Amato was embroiled in a nasty HUD scandal of
alleged favoritism, back-scratching, and campaign donor quid pro quos.
Goldstein, a heavy D'Amato donor, and seven members of the New York Group
realized a $17-million windfall from a juicy HUD packagepatched together by a
senior HUDofficial, Joseph Monticciolo, and pushed through by D'Amato. Upon
leaving HUD, Monticciolo became the titular head of a Goldstein investment
group that included these New York Group members. Congressional and Justice
probes were launched. Ultimately Monticciolo rolled and said D'Amato asked him
to cover for the senator, but the case could not be made. These eight investors
at one time owned nearly half of the New York Group's shares in Oceanmark,
according to documents from Cuomo's files.

If D'Amato wasn't going to bring up Oceanmark, neither was Cuomo--even if it
meant a material omission on his nomination form. Cuomo will not explain why he
did not list the Oceanmark suit among the court cases in which he had been a
defendant. His HUD lawyers wrote TAS that "The FBI, Department of Justice, and
U.S. Senate (Republican controlled) have all stated that all nomination forms
and procedures were correctly complied with by Mr. Cuomo." But there is no
public record of any such statements. What's more, according to the Office of
Government Ethics, only the Senate Banking committee would have evaluated
Cuomo's questionnaire. Asked why Cuomo did not divulge that he was investigated
by federal banking regulators, HUD lawyers reply with word games. "Mr. Cuomo
was merely a witness in connection with an FHLBB examination of Oceanmark,"
they claim, and consequently not directly the subject of the inquiry.

Young Cuomo is considered one of the Democratic Party's fastest-rising stars.
He has indicated he'd like to play a major role in Al Gore's New York campaign
machine in 2000, and Washington rumor holds that he's a strong contender for
the second spot on a Gore ticket. More recent speculation predicts a possible
run for retiring Senator Daniel Patrick Moynihan's seat in 2000. The GOP
opponent in that race could turn out to be none other than Alfonse D'Amato. If
that's the case, you can bet the bank on one mud ball that neither candidate
will be throwing.

============================

BLUTRICH, MICHAEL D
9/5/95 $1,000.00
NEW YORK, NY 10016
BLUTRICH HERMAN & MILLER -[Contribution]
CLINTON/GORE '96 PRIMARY COMMITTEE INC
1997-07-24 -- Insurance fraud, money laundering.

Insurance fraud and money laundering.

CHARLES R. WILSON, United States Attorney for the Middle
District of Florida, announced today that a federal grand jury
sitting in Orlando returned a 91-count indictment charging
PATRICK C. SMYTHE, age 52, of Alphanetta, Georgia; MICHAEL D.
BLUTRICH, age 47, of New York, New York; individually and
d/b/a Blutrich, Falcone & Miller, d/b/a Blutrich & Miller,
d/b/a Blutrich, Herman & Miller; LYLE K. PFEFFER, age 37, of
New York, New York, SHALOM WEISS, age 43, of Munsey, New York;
RICHARD B. HERMAN, age 40, of White Plains, New York,
individually and d/b/a Law Offices of Richard B. Herman, d/b/a
Blutrich, Herman, and Miller; LPDA ACQUISITIONS, INC.;
NULENDA, INC.; FUTURE DIVERSIFIED PROJECTS, INC.; ACTUAL
FUNDING, INC.; IWUB CORP.; ADOS EQUITIES CORP.; SHEFA, INC.;
SPRITE EQUITIES CORP.; and ISPEP EQUITIES, CORP. with multiple
counts of wire fraud, interstate transportation of property
obtained by fraud, and money laundering. The defendants are
alleged to have engaged in various schemes from April 1992
until July 1997 to defraud National Heritage Life Insurance
Corporation (NHLIC), a wholly-owned subsidiary of LifeCo
Investment Group, Inc. (LifeCo), of money and property, and to
defraud LifeCo and NHLIC, the shareholders of LifeCo and
NHLIC, and the policy holders of NHLIC of their intangible
right of honest services from LifeCo and NHLIC officers,
directors, attorneys, and committee members.
SMYTHE was a former Director, President, Chief Operating
Officer of LifeCo and former Director, Executive Vice
President and Chief Operating Officer of NHLIC. BLUTRICH is
a New York attorney and was former outside counsel for LifeCo
and NHLIC. PFEFFER, a New York businessman, was former
consultant for LifeCo and NHLIC. The indictment alleges that
SMYTHE, BLUTRICH and PFEFFER, under the guise of obtaining or
making purported capital investments totalling approximately
$23,000,000 into LifeCo from LPDA Acquisitions Corp. and
Future Diversified Projects, Inc., companies owned and
controlled by PFEFFER, secretly diverted assets of NHLIC
totalling approximately $47,000,000 to bank accounts of LPDA
and NULENDA at Standard Chartered Bank, New York, New York for
the purpose of establishing lines of credit for LPDA
($15,000,000) and NULENDA ($20,000,000).

The indictment charges that SMYTHE, BLUTRICH, and PFEFFE
thereafter pledged the $47,000,000 of NHLIC funds to secure
the lines of credit, and then used said lines of credit to
make the $23,000,000 in capital investments into LifeCo, and
diverted the balance to their own use and benefit, or to the
use and benefit of friends and associates, and to corporations
controlled by themselves or their friends and associates.
HERMAN, a New York attorney, is alleged to have assisted
the fraud by transferring $11,000,000 of the proceeds of the
fraudulently-obtained NULENDA line of credit, disguised as a
capital contribution into LifeCo from FUTURE DIVERSIFIED in
exchange for preferred stock of LifeCo. HERMAN is also
charged with money laundering. WEISS, a businessman from
Brooklyn, New York, is alleged to have used corporations he
owned and controlled to assist in the laundering of
approximately $6,300,000 of the NULENDA/FUTURE DIVERSIFIED
funds, and to have directed New York attorney Bernard Shafran
of the law firm of Frenkel & Herskowitz to issue a substantial
portion of said funds to his own use and benefit or to the use
and benefit of business associates of WEISS.
In the Spring of 1994, the Insurance Commissioner for th
State of Delaware was appointed receiver for NHLIC, based upon
a finding that the company's capital was severely impaired.
United States Attorney Charles R. Wilson stated "The
Office of the United States Attorney, Internal Revenue
Service, Federal Bureau of Investigation and United States
Postal Inspection Service have formed a task force to deal
with issues arising from the collapse of National Heritage
Life Insurance Company. The actions of the defendants in this
case put the financial security of over 35,000 policy holders
and annuitants in jeopardy. Our investigation is continuing
and we expect to present many additional matters to the grand
jury for its consideration. The Office of the United States
Attorney will vigorously prosecute all persons who threaten
the safety of financial institutions, including insurance
companies, through theft and fraud."
The charges filed are the result of a continuing joint
investigation conducted by the Internal Revenue
Service/Criminal Investigations Division, the Federal Bureau
of Investigation, and the United States Postal Inspection
Service, into matters related to the collapses of NHLIC. The
case will be prosecuted by Senior Litigation Counsel Judy K.
Hunt and Assistant United States Attorney Thomas W. Turner of
the Orlando Division of the United States Attorney's Office.
To date, three persons have been convicted in this
investigation. In March, 1995, Jay I. Bartz, a former
attorney who practiced at Scottsdale and Parazone, and a
former director of LifeCo, pled guilty to money laundering by
transferring approximately $2,200,000 of funds fraudulently
for NHLIC to an offshore account in the Channel Islands for
the benefit of SMYTHE. On December 14, 1995, Bartz was
sentenced in Federal District Court in Phoenix, Arizona to
five years probation and a $3,000 fine.
On December 2, 1996, DAVID L. DAVIES, was sentenced by
Judge Patricia C. Fawsett, United States District Court Judge,
Orlando, Florida, to 84 months imprisonment, two years
supervised release and ordered to pay back taxes, penalties
and interest totalling $2,163,427, to pay restitution
totalling $10,503,728, and to perform 100 hours community
service, following his guilty plea to three counts of wire
fraud and one count of federal income tax evasion. The
indictment against DAVIES alleged that in September 1990, TRI-
ATLANTIC HOLDINGS, LTD., a Delaware corporation owned and
controlled by DAVIES and others, acquired beneficial ownership
of 52.3% of the common stock of Lifeco and control of NHLIC.
That indictment charged that DAVIES and TRI-ATLANTIC HOLDINGS,
LTD. devised and executed a scheme and artifice to make it
appear that the Lifeco stock was purchased with new capital,
whereas in fact most of the acquisition funds were diverted
from NHLIC under false pretenses. That indictment further
alleged that some of the acquisition funds were embezzled from
another individual. DAVIES was also charged with causing
fraudulent loans in the total amount of $10,400,000 to be
issued to assorted corporations which he secretly controlled,
and to other corporations which then secretly, immediately
forwarded the proceeds to Davies' corporations.