United States Attorney
Southern District of New York
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
SEPTEMBER 20, 2007 |
CONTACT: |
U.S. ATTORNEY’S OFFICE
YUSILL SCRIBNER,
REBEKAH CARMICHAEL
PUBLIC INFORMATION OFFICE
(212) 637-2600
USPIS
AL WEISSMAN
PUBLIC INFORMATION OFFICE
(212) 330-2270
FBI
NEIL DONOVAN, JIM MARGOLIN,
PUBLIC INFORMATION OFFICE
(212) 384-2715, 2720 |
MANHATTAN U.S. ATTORNEY
CHARGES NORMAN HSU WITH $60 MILLION FRAUD SCHEME
Hsu Also Accused of Using Straw Donors to Make Illegal Federal Campaign
Contributions
NEW YORK - Federal charges
have been unsealed against Norman Hsu, 56, for perpetrating a massive
Ponzi scheme that defrauded victims across the United States of over $60
million, U.S. Attorney Michael J. Garcia for the Southern District of
New York and Assistant Director-in-Charge Mark J. Mershon of the New York
Office of the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) announced today. Hsu
also was charged with violating federal campaign finance laws by making
contributions to various political candidates in the names of others.
According to the Complaint
unsealed earlier today in Manhattan federal court:
At all times relevant to the
charges, Hsu operated and was the Managing Director of two companies,
Components Ltd. And Next Components Ltd. (the "Companies"),
which purported to provide investment programs that extended short-term
financing to businesses. Hsu recruited victims by guaranteeing high rates
of return on short-term investments. After receiving money from investors,
Hsu, for a time, repaid both the victims' interest and principal as promised.
Believing Hsu to be trustworthy and the Companies to be legitimate and
potentially profitable, victims often agreed to roll-over their invested
funds into new investments with Hsu, contribute additional, larger sums
of money to the scheme, or recruit friends to invest with Hsu. In reality,
however, the Companies were merely vehicles for Hsu's Ponzi scheme, in
which money owed as returns to older investors was paid with money received
from newer investors, and Hsu never invested the money in the manner he
represented to his victims. In the end, Hsu defrauded his victims out
of more than $60 million.
In an effort to raise his public
profile and thereby convince more victims to invest in his fraudulent
scheme, Hsu pressured investors to contribute tens of thousands of dollars
to various candidates for President of the United States, the United States
Senate, and the United States House of Representatives.
Hsu made victims believe that
failure to make political contributions to candidates he supported would
jeopardize their investment relationship with him, and put their money
at risk.
Hsu also violated the Federal
Election Campaign Act by making contributions to various political campaigns
in the names of others. Specifically, in 2006, Hsu asked two other individuals
to make contributions, totaling more than $20,000 each, to designated
federal candidates. Hsu then reimbursed these two individuals for the
political contributions they had made on his behalf.
During a court-authorized search
of the items seized from Hsu at the time of his arrest, FBI agents recovered
extensive evidence confirming Hsu's role in the charged crimes, including,
among other things: (1) thousands of dollars in cash; (2) checkbooks for
bank accounts used to carry out the fraudulent scheme; (3) hundreds of
thousands of dollars worth of checks from Hsu's victims; (4) bank receipts
reflecting millions of dollars worth of financial transactions conducted
by Hsu; (5) handwritten ledgers reflecting specific amounts of campaign
contributions to be made by specific victims on behalf of various candidates
for elected federal office; (6) a Cartier watch and Tiffany jewelry; and
(7) receipts reflecting Hsu's travel throughout the United States via
a corporate jet service.
Hsu is charged in the Complaint
with one count each of mail fraud and wire fraud, and one count of violating
the Federal Election Campaign Act. If convicted, HSU faces maximum penalties
of 20 years' imprisonment on the mail fraud charge, 20 years' imprisonment
on the wire fraud charge, and 5 years' imprisonment on the federal campaign
finance charge. Hsu also faces a maximum fine of twice the gross gain
or loss resulting from his financial fraud crimes, and an additional maximum
fine of $250,000 on the campaign finance crime.
Mr. Garcia praised the work
of the FBI in the investigation of this case. He added that the investigation
is continuing.
This prosecution is being handled
by the Office's Public Corruption Unit. Assistant United States Attorneys
Boyd M. Johnson III, Katherine A. Lemire, Alexander J. Willscher, and
Rua M. Kelly are in charge of the prosecution.
If you believe you were a victim
of these crimes, including a victim entitled to restitution, and you wish
to provide information to law enforcement and/or receive notice of future
developments in the case or additional information, please contact Wendy
Olsen-Clancy, the Victim Witness Coordinator at the United States Attorney's
Office for the Southern District of New York, at (866)874-8900, or Wendy.Olsen@usdoj.gov.
For additional information, go to: http://www.usdoj.gov/usao/nys/victimwitness.html
on the Internet.
The charges contained in the
Complaint are merely accusations, and the defendant is presumed innocent
unless and until proven guilty.
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