Subscribe

SEC charges five unlicensed salespeople in Woodbridge Ponzi

Unregistered agents pose "massive" problem in South Florida: attorney.

The Securities and Exchange Commission’s charges Monday that five unregistered salespeople in South Florida unlawfully sold securities in a massive $1.2 billion Ponzi scheme underscores a significant threat facing investors, particularly the elderly. Salespeople posing as financial advisers are pushing products that promise guaranteed or stable returns to clients.

In two complaints, the SEC alleged five salespeople reaped millions of dollars in commissions for their sales of Woodbridge Group of Companies securities, even though they were not registered as broker-dealers and were not permitted to sell securities. One person, Barry Kornfeld, also violated a prior SEC order that barred him from acting as a broker.

A purported real estate company, Woodbridge collapsed into bankruptcy in December 2017. The SEC previously charged the company, its owner and others with operating a $1.2 billion Ponzi scheme.

“I think these types of investments are a massive problem, and it’s bigger than people give credence to,” said Scott Silver, a plaintiff’s attorney in South Florida with clients who bought the Woodbridge securities. “Look at the ads in the back of the newspaper, or go to retirement conferences in South Florida. Companies there are pitching investments untethered to the stock market that are not securities.

“We are finding these companies are telling unregistered people that they will pay them to bring in more clients as well as other salespeople,” Mr. Silver said.

As InvestmentNewsreported at the start of the year, a network of unlicensed securities salesman, some of whom had been brokers but had been barred or left the business, were instrumental in selling the Woodbridge real estate notes to investors.

The Florida-based defendants named in the SEC’s complaints, Mr. Kornfeld; his wife, Ferne Kornfeld; Lynette M. Robbins; Andrew G. Costa; Albert D. Klager and their companies, were among Woodbridge’s top revenue producers, selling more than $243 million of its unregistered securities to more than 1,600 retail investors, according to the SEC.

Mr. Klager declined to comment. The Kornfelds and Ms. Robbins did not return calls to comment, and Mr. Costa could not be reached to comment.

Mr. Silver pointed to the recent collapse into bankruptcy of 1 Global Capital and 1 West Capital, two lenders to small businesses, as an indication of the scope of the problem.

“The theme of the two, Woodbridge and 1 Global Capital, is unregistered advisers looking for loopholes in the law to sell these things without calling them securities,” Mr. Silver said, adding that he had spoken with clients of Mr. Kornfeld who were sold both investments.

“They span from real estate investments to financing-type companies to diamonds,” Mr. Silver said. “There has also been an uptick in the sale of precious metals. The creativity of these con artists is constant.”

The Kornfelds, Mr. Costa and Mr. Klager earned more than $5.8 million in sales commissions, according to the SEC, selling close to $100 million of the Woodbridge securities from April 2013 through December 2017. They routinely touted the Woodbridge securities as “safe and secure,” according to the SEC.

Ms. Robbins and her company, Knowles Systems Inc., agreed to settle the SEC’s charges without admitting or denying the allegations and return more than $1 million of allegedly ill-gotten gains plus interest. Ms. Robbins also agreed to pay a $100,000 civil penalty and agreed to an industry bar and penny-stock bar.

The 1 Global Capital loan business is a separate, unrelated company from 1st Global Capital Corp., an independent broker-dealer based in Dallas.

Related Topics:

Learn more about reprints and licensing for this article.

Recent Articles by Author

Blackstone REIT keeps up with demand to buy back shares

May was a particularly tough month for nontraded REITs.

Broker who took client funds for 17 years is barred

"A broker admitting that he has been ripping off clients for 17 years is beyond troubling," said one attorney.

SEC boots California RIA linked to crypto, private funds

"Nobody knows what’s happening internally in these pooled funds at the retail level," said one plaintiff's attorney.

Former head of Osaic B-D lands at AssetMark

"Having relationships with financial advisors is one of the greatest assets these senior executives possess," said one industry official.

Colorado bars advisor over high-risk options trades

"Buying options is fraught with risk for financial advisors," one attorney noted.

X

Subscribe and Save 60%

Premium Access
Print + Digital

Learn more
Subscribe to Print