Close X
Sunday, November 17, 2024
ADVT 
National

$37 Million Fine For Ponzi Schemer Doris Elizabeth Nelson Who Defrauded Hundreds Of Investors

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 20 Feb, 2016 01:02 PM
    VANCOUVER — The British Columbia Securities Commission fined a woman $37 million and banned her from the provincial capital market over a Ponzi scheme that involved hundreds of investors across North America. 
     
    The commission says Doris Elizabeth Nelson promoted the Little Loan Shoppe to 121 investors in British Columbia who invested $19 million in what was actually a Ponzi scheme.
     
    It has fined her $18.5 million for the money lost by investors and another $18.5 million in penalties.
     
    Nelson, who's from Colbert, Wash., pleaded guilty in 2014 to 110 counts in a Washington court to fraud and international money laundering in the scheme that the Federal Bureau of Investigation says covered investors in Canada, the United States and Mexico.
     
    The FBI said that Nelson claimed her business was making so much profit that she could supply investors with a 40 to 60 per cent annual return.
     
    In 2014, U.S. District Court Judge Robert Whaley sentenced Nelson to nine years in prison for what he said was a scheme that funded a lavish lifestyle of shopping sprees, cruises, art purchases and gambling losses.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Trial Date Expected To Be Set For Man Charged With Shooting B.C. Mountie

    Trial Date Expected To Be Set For Man Charged With Shooting B.C. Mountie
    Courtroom scheduling matters have delayed the case of 37-year-old Kenneth Knutson, who is set to return to court on Jan. 18.

    Trial Date Expected To Be Set For Man Charged With Shooting B.C. Mountie

    Air Canada Asks Top Court To Reject Maintenance Ruling In Quebec Lawsuit Fight

    MONTREAL — Air Canada has asked the Supreme Court to intervene to overturn a court ruling that requires the carrier to keep maintenance operations in the country.

    Air Canada Asks Top Court To Reject Maintenance Ruling In Quebec Lawsuit Fight

    Nova Scotia Writer George Elliott Clarke Named New Parliamentary Poet Laureate

    Nova Scotia Writer George Elliott Clarke Named New Parliamentary Poet Laureate
    George Elliott Clarke, a much-honoured Nova Scotia writer, has been named the country's seventh parliamentary poet laureate.

    Nova Scotia Writer George Elliott Clarke Named New Parliamentary Poet Laureate

    Rosemary Barton Named As Permanent Host For CBC's 'power And Politics'

    Rosemary Barton Named As Permanent Host For CBC's 'power And Politics'
    Solomon's departure followed a report that he had been brokering lucrative art deals with people he dealt with through his job.

    Rosemary Barton Named As Permanent Host For CBC's 'power And Politics'

    Chief Economists At Canada's Big Banks Predict Rocky Year For Economy

    Chief Economists At Canada's Big Banks Predict Rocky Year For Economy
    TORONTO — Canada is headed for a rocky year as low oil prices continue to drag on economic performance, the chief economists of some of Canada's biggest banks said Tuesday.

    Chief Economists At Canada's Big Banks Predict Rocky Year For Economy

    Jury Urged To Find Melonie Biddersingh Drowned In Unclear Circumstances

    Jury Urged To Find Melonie Biddersingh Drowned In Unclear Circumstances
    TORONTO — The defence at a trial involving the death of a teenage girl whose body was found stuffed in a burning suitcase is urging jurors to accept forensic evidence that she drowned

    Jury Urged To Find Melonie Biddersingh Drowned In Unclear Circumstances