Mineral
Wells, Texas, Man Sentenced to More Than Five Years
in Federal Prison for Defrauding Hundreds
of Victims in Investment Scheme
Ronald Keith Owens Also Ordered to Pay Approximately
$2.6 Million Restitution
DALLAS - Ronald Keith Owens, 72, of Mineral Wells,
Texas, who pled guilty in August to an Information
charging offenses related to an investment scheme
he ran, was sentenced today by U.S. District Judge
Barbara M.G. Lynn to 63 months in federal prison,
announced U.S. Attorney Richard B. Roper of the
Northern District of Texas. In addition, Judge Lynn
ordered that Owens pay a total of $2,582,376.79
in restitution to the hundreds of victims of his
crime. In addition, Judge Lynn ordered that once
(if) that is paid off, Owens must pay $550,304 to
the Internal Revenue Service. He must report to
the Bureau of Prisons by January 29, 2009, to begin
serving his sentence.
"Mr. Owens' scheme was particularly insidious
as it financially devastated many elderly victims,"
said Fort Worth Division Postal Inspector in Charge
Randall C. Till. "Postal Inspectors will continue
the fight against crooks that use the U.S. Mail
to fleece the honest, hard-working citizens of America."
Owens operated an investment business in Mineral
Wells, Texas, known as Executive Investors, Inc.
(EII), which was also known as Newlife Trade Group
(NTG). Through EII, NTG, and individually, Owens
solicited money from individuals throughout the
U.S. to invest in offshore "Bank Credit Instrument
Trading," supposedly located in Nassau, Bahamas,
Germany and Switzerland. These investments, however,
did not exist.
Owens
pled guilty to one count of wire fraud and one count
of filing a false tax return. Owens ran his scheme
from approximately March 2000 through September
2007. As part of the scheme, he created promotional
literature for buying and selling bank credit instruments
that fraudulently reflected high investment returns,
such as a 30% monthly return, with 10% of the return
paid each month with the remaining 20% added to
the principal investment and compounded. He also
promoted investments in the offshore programs through
group leaders who recruited investors and formed
joint ventures to make investments.
Owens
caused his investors to send funds by wire transfer,
and checks mailed to Mineral Wells, Texas, knowing
the funds would not be invested as represented to
investors. He used the investor funds as "Ponzi"
payments to early investors and for personal use.
To
further his scheme he provided investor account
information to a company in Florida, knowing the
information was false and would be used to create
and mail false account statements to investors.
He required investors to sign settlement and release
agreements regarding their fund balances, knowing
the information in the agreements was false.
To
keep his scheme going, he created and sent more
than 200 lulling emails to investors about his supposed
efforts to liquidate investments in foreign bank
credit instruments and return principle and interest
amounts to investors, well knowing the emails contained
false information.
In
2004 and 2005, he requested additional funds from
investors to offset expenses incurred during his
supposed retrieval of investment money from these
foreign banks, knowing the requests contained false
information. He continued representing to investors,
through September 2007, that their funds were being
deposited with the foreign banks, well knowing that
the funds had been depleted in 2003, for purposes
other than what he had represented to investors.
As
a result of Owens' scheme, investors lost a total
$2,471,267.31.
Owens
also admitted that he filed a false income tax return
in 2003, reporting that he had $107,877 of gross
income in 2002 when in fact he had approximately
$1,142,322.
"Investors
must be vigilant with their hard earned money and
remember that scam artists exist in every walk of
life. Ponzi schemes are just another form of theft
and we should protect ourselves by being cautious
and recognizing that if something sounds too good
to be true, it probably is," said Michael P.
Lahey, Special Agent in Charge, IRS-Criminal Investigation,
Dallas Field Office".
U.S.
Attorney Roper praised the investigative efforts
of the FBI, the Internal Revenue Service - Criminal
Investigation and the U.S. Postal Inspection Service.
The case was prosecuted by Assistant U.S. Attorney
Jay Weimer.
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