简体中文
繁體中文
English
Pусский
日本語
ภาษาไทย
Tiếng Việt
Bahasa Indonesia
Español
हिन्दी
Filippiiniläinen
Français
Deutsch
Português
Türkçe
한국어
العربية
Abstract:According to a news statement issued by the US Justice Department, each of them pled guilty to one count of conspiracy to commit securities fraud. Both are now facing a maximum jail sentence of five years, which will be decided by a US federal court judge at a later date.
They manufactured enormous trading losses to steal money from investors.
To avoid detection, they funneled the money through shell businesses.
Two US men pleaded guilty on Friday to their roles in a huge forex trading fraud and the loss of $30 million in investor deposits.
According to a news statement issued by the US Justice Department, each of them pled guilty to one count of conspiracy to commit securities fraud. Both are now facing a maximum jail sentence of five years, which will be decided by a US federal court judge at a later date.
Patrick Gallagher and Michael Dion, who live in Massachusetts and Florida, respectively, founded the firm Global Forex Management and conducted the fraudulent scam. They offered “huge profits” to investors and falsified past trading outcomes to get them to engage in the scam.
Both criminals convinced the victims that the cash would be utilized to trade foreign currency on an Internet trading platform offered by IB Capital, a business that turned out to be a co-conspirator in the scam.
“Instead, Gallagher and Dion were conspiring with other co-conspirators in the Netherlands to steal the victim investors' money,” according to the press release.
To successfully steal the cash of the investors, the offenders declared loss transactions in May 2012, which were created as part of the fraudulent plan. Gallagher and Dion then funneled the money through shell businesses they had established across the globe to successfully conceal the source of the funds.
Forex trading scams are common all over the globe, as investors often fall for the lofty claims of scammers. WikiFX revealed in August the $55 million FX trading fraud perpetrated by famous Thai Natthamon Khongchak, well known to her fans as 'Nutty.' She allegedly duped over 6,000 investors before fleeing the country.
Earlier this year, a US court imposed more than $29 million in restitution and penalties on forex and binary options pool fraud and the operators, Financial Tree, Financial Solution Group, New Money Advisors, and other scheme accomplices.
Meanwhile, Belgium's financial market authority has identified hundreds of illicit Forex and other trading platforms operating in the nation.
About WikiFX
WikiFX is a worldwide corporate financial information search engine. Its primary duty is to give basic information searching, regulatory license seeking, the credit assessment, platform identification, and other services to the included foreign exchange trading firms.
The platform lists approximately 39,000 brokers, both regulated and unregulated. WikiFX's staff has been working hard with 30 financial regulators from across the world to guarantee that the information supplied is factual and correct.
Stay tuned for more Forex World News.
Download the WikiFX App from the App Store or Google Play Store.
Disclaimer:
The views in this article only represent the author's personal views, and do not constitute investment advice on this platform. This platform does not guarantee the accuracy, completeness and timeliness of the information in the article, and will not be liable for any loss caused by the use of or reliance on the information in the article.
A recent allegation against STP Trading has cast doubt on the firm's business practices, highlighting the potential risks faced by retail traders in an increasingly crowded and competitive market.
Cross-border payments are now faster, cheaper, and simpler! Explore fintech, blockchain, and smart solutions to overcome costs, delays, and global payment hurdles.
The UK Financial Conduct Authority (FCA) has issued a public warning regarding a fraudulent entity impersonating Admiral Markets, a legitimate and authorised trading firm. The clone firm, operating under the name Admiral EU Brokers and the domain Admiraleubrokerz.com, has been falsely presenting itself as an FCA-authorised business.
A 57-year-old Malaysian man recently fell victim to a fraudulent foreign currency investment scheme, losing RM113,000 in the process. The case was reported to the Commercial Crime Investigation Division in Batu Pahat, which is now investigating the incident.