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A businessman who orchestrated a $50 million
iPod investment scam on the University of Miami campus must spend 17
years in prison, a judge ruled.
According to the Miami Herald
Andres Leonel Pimstein pleaded guilty to a dozen wire-fraud counts in
December and now must turn over 5,540 of the Apple devices and a
Fidelity investment account totaling $138,522.
According to the U.S. attorney's office in Miami at least 146 investors suffered losses totaling about $40 million.
Pimstein
promised a return of up to 36% for investing in his business idea. He
told investors that he was purchasing iPods at wholesale prices and
reselling them to department store chain in Chile and that they were
going to pay above market prices.
Unfortunately he was running a
Ponzi scheme. Pimstein took the initial investors money and paid them
back with money from new investors. He even recruited other investors
to earn even more by acting as agents who recruited more people to back
his venture.
Since no real revenue was being generated the money
eventually ran out. Prosecutors said Pimstein used the funds to pay off
a home mortgage, auto loans, and to pay child support.
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Categories: Apple, Ipod, Other