By GILLIAN FLACCUS,
SANTA ANA, Calif. - Federal authorities arrested a man accused of
running an investment scheme that netted more than $25 million by
targeting Christian investors nationwide.
Jon G. Ervin, 61, of Mission Viejo, was arrested Friday on a charge of
wire fraud. He later appeared in federal court, where he was ordered
held on $1 million bail.
Ervin's public defender, Leon Peterson, didn't immediately return a
call seeking comment.
Ervin was named Thursday in a criminal complaint filed in federal
court. The same day, the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission and
the Commodity Futures Trading Commission filed lawsuits against Ervin
and his company, Safevest LLC, and obtained federal orders freezing
their assets.
According to the criminal complaint, Ervin used Safevest to persuade
victims to invest in a fake commodity futures trading program.
Investors were told Safevest would use no more than 13 percent of their
deposit in hundreds of commodity trades a day on the Chicago Mercantile
Exchange, with a guarantee of up to 1 percent in returns each day.
Investors could check their returns on a password-protected Web site
that was run exclusively by Ervin. The program attracted about 550
investors, officials said.
Authorities allege that Ervin didn't invest any of the money in
commodities trading and instead spent $1 million to invest in a Georgia
golf course. He also bought a sport utility vehicle and spent lavishly
on air travel, gourmet meals and shopping, said Thom Mrozek, spokesman
for the U.S. attorney's office.
Up to 80 percent of investors were churchgoing Christians and many
joined the program after being approached by fellow worshippers through
a referral system, according to court papers
Those who referred others in their church would receive a 10 percent
"referral fee" from the profits of the new members they solicited;
pastors were required to make an initial investment of $5,000, while
non-pastors had to put down $25,000, according to federal documents.
Investment materials included the resume of an Arlington, Va., pastor,
the Rev. John V. Slye, who was listed as one of the founders of the
National Center for Cancer Research and a prominent fundraiser for
charities.
The SEC complaint states that Slye was the chief executive and co-owner
of Safevest and was a signatory on several accounts, but Mrozek said
Slye has not been charged in the criminal case because it's unclear how
much he knew about the operation. Investigators have also not
determined if all the information on Slye's resume was accurate.
"Basically, what you have here is a scheme that is being orchestrated
by Ervin," Mrozek said. "There are people who are wittingly or
unwittingly assisting him, and we're still trying to figure out who
knew what, and when."
A John Slye, listed as pastor for the Grace Community Church in
Arlington, Va., said he was the son of the John Slye named in the
criminal complaint. He said he was unaware of his father's activities
and had no further comment.
Attempts to reach the father were unsuccessful.
Ervin eventually returned about $18 million to investors who grew
concerned and asked for their money back, but the rest was never
recovered, Mrozek said. Ervin would dodge investors' phone calls or
delay returning the money through a series of excuses, the criminal
complaint said.
Original
Source
|
|
|||||||||
|
Shabbat Times
Subscribe 4 Updates
About Us
Search
Donations
This Month
Month Archive
Recent Photos
Login
|
Calif. man accused of investment scam targeting Christians
Comments
No comments found.
Trackbacks
TrackBack URL: |
||||||||
|
|
|||||||||


![Validate my RSS feed [Valid RSS]](http://www.battalionofdeborah.org/logos/valid-rss.png)