Thursday, December 5, 2013

Frank Vennes in Prison


Screenshot from BOP inmate locator.

UPDATE: The Best Places to Go to Prison (CNBC)

FCI Butner is part of the latest trend — a federal correctional complex that includes several prisons with varying security levels. The campus in Butner, N.C., also includes a medical center.

While it’s the low-security facility that Ellis prefers, he said the entire campus is viewed as the “crown jewel of the Bureau of Prisons.” One criminal who scored a cell is Ponzi schemer Bernie Madoff, who calls FCI Butner Medium home. Madoff “hit the inmate lottery,” Ellis said.

The prison complex is close to the Research Triangle area of Durham, Raleigh, and Chapel Hill — that means good quality interns are available to work for free at the facilities.

Monday, November 25, 2013

Red Flags

David Phelps at the Strib reports U.S. Bankruptcy Judge Kishel has ruled to allow a consolidation of clawbacks of hedge funds in one proceeding and the judge says there were several "red flags" the investors should have noticed that indicated Tom Petters was a fraudster.

One big red flag not mentioned is Tom Petters' associate Frank Vennes. A lot of these high-rolling investors, not to mention several elected officials apparently knew Mr. Vennes served time for a conviction for money laundering and invested anyways.

I took a look at the judge's ruling and could find only one mention of Frank Vennes - a footnote in one of the 107 pages. This is it:
James Fry of Arrowhead was indicted on various criminal charges, on the assertion that he worked with Frank Vennes of Metro Gem to fraudulently lure investors into the Petters scheme.


Friday, November 8, 2013

The Last Petters/Vennes Sentencings: Prevost, Harrold & Palm

It was a long day - three hearings.  Here's what Judge Kyle decided:

Bruce Prevost - 90 months.

David Harrold - 60 months.

Michelle Webster Palm  - 3 years probation.

One bit of drama I captured on paper - former Major League baseball player Albie Pearson testified on behalf of Bruce Prevost and gave Mr. Prevost a big hug afterwards.

Click on the sketches to make them bigger:

Albie Pearson Hugs Bruce Prevost.

David Harrold.

Bruce Prevost.

Michelle Webster Palm.






Sunday, November 3, 2013

Mariah Blake's Sloppy Reporting for Mother Jones Lets Michele Bachmann Off the Hook

Last week I wrote about Mariah Blake's lack of attribution in her Mother Jones article about Michele Bachmann's clawback of Vennes contributions - something the The Star Tribune & the AP published October 13,2013 and I reported back in June.

Like her godawful TNR article there's a bunch of sloppy statements in Blake's MoJo article:

1)"...Frank Vennes, a former North Dakota pawnshop owner who was recently sentenced to 15 years in prison for aiding and abetting fraud."

Frank Vennes pled guilty to two counts; aiding and abetting securities fraud and money laundering. Here is the plea agreement. According to the DOJ announcement of the second superseding indictment, had Vennes gone to trial he would have faced eight counts of securities fraud, two counts of mail fraud, six counts of wire fraud, three counts of money laundering, three counts of bank fraud, and two counts of making false statements on credit applications. Vennes was originally charged in an April 20, 2011 indictment with four counts of securities fraud and one count of money laundering.

2) "But she didn't return Vennes's donations—until now."

Well, not exactly. Bachmann attempted to dump some of the Vennes campaign donations early on - Karl Bremer wrote about that bizarre part of the pardon & campaign cash saga in his award-winning investigative series "Lawyers, Guns & Money: An Inside Look at the Political Pardon of Frank Vennes Jr." on the Ripple in Stillwater blog:

On Oct. 3, Ronald Rodgers in the OPA sent an email to Kenneth K. Lee, associate legal counsel for the White House who handled pardon applications.

“Ken, this is a pardon case that you asked us to take a second look at and we sent it through the wickets anew and then over to you on or about 1 July 2008 (redacted) no action by the President has been taken on the case.

“We just got a call from Congresswoman Michele Bachman’s (sic) office: they wanted to withdraw their letter of support that they submitted on behalf of the guy, though they didn’t specifically disclose the reason for it. It appears he is under investigation for a securities and/or wire fraud matter and they executed a search warrant last week in which he was implicated.”

Rodgers sent Lee a link to a September 26 Star-Tribune report on the Petters raid that named Vennes.

On Oct. 3, 2008, the OPA also sent a two-page fax, the contents of which are unknown, to Bachmann with the subject line “per your request.” However, the fax wasn’t sent to the congresswoman’s office, from which her pardon letters had been sent. It was sent to Bachmann’s campaign office in Minnesota.

That same day, displaying further signs of panic just weeks before the election, Bachmann tried to symbolically wash her hands of the Vennes’ most recent campaign contributions by donating the sum of $9,200—an amount equal to Frank and Kimberly Vennes’ June 30 donations to Bachmann, but only a small portion of Bachmann’s total take from the Vennes and Howse families—to Minnesota Teen Challenge, an organization closely linked with Vennes. That didn’t work out so well for the congresswoman either. Minnesota Teen Challenge returned the donation to Bachmann two weeks later.

“We didn’t want to be involved if it was dirty money,” said Rich Scherber, executive director of Minnesota Teen Challenge, which lost millions in the Petters Ponzi scheme after investing with Vennes. Scherber personally suffered a loss of $423,759 in the Petters Ponzi through investments with Vennes, according to court documents, some of which he may recover from Vennes’ seized assets.
(Bachmann ultimately donated the $9,200 to R3, a collaborative of Christian recovery groups that includes Minnesota Teen Challenge, but has kept the remaining $41,000 she got from the Vennes-Howse connection.)

3)  "According to subsequent FBI wiretap recordings, Vennes knew he might face criminal charges..."

Tom Petters was recorded by a wire worn by his associate turned government witness Deanna Coleman (not a phone wiretap) talking about Vennes - not Vennes himself saying he knew he would face criminal charges. I am not aware of a phone wiretap of Frank Vennes talking about facing criminal charges. There's no way I can check Blake's source since her link is to the DOJ's collection of wire recordings and transcripts and not a specific recording or transcript.

4) "After being elected to Congress, Bachmann began lobbying for Vennes's pardon, an unusual step given that he lived outside her district:"

Blake does not explain why it is "unusual"for a congress member to help a non-constituent - there's a general ethics rule in Congress about devoting official resources to helping a non-constituent. This is from the House Ethics Committee manual from that time:
Assisting Non-Constituents

On occasion a Member’s publicized involvement in legislation or an issue of national concern will generate correspondence from individuals outside the district. A private citizen may communicate with any Member he or she desires. However, the Member’s ability to provide assistance to such individuals is limited.

The statute that establishes the Members’ Representational Allowance provides that the purpose of the allowance is “to support the conduct of the official and representational duties of a Member of the House of Representatives with respect to the district from which the Member is elected.”29 This statute does not prohibit a Member from ever responding to a non-constituent. In some instances, working for non-constituents on matters that are similar to those facing constituents may enable the Member better to serve his or her district. Other times, the Member may serve on a House committee that has the expertise and ability to provide the requested help. Of course, if a Member has personal knowledge regarding a matter or an individual, he or she may always communicate that knowledge to agency officials. As a general matter, however, a Member should not devote official resources to casework for individuals who live outside the district. When a Member is unable to assist such a person, the Member may refer the person to his or her own Representative or Senator.
Bachmann should have been investigated for writing a highly improper letter to the Pardon Attorney on official stationery lobbying for a presidential pardon for non-constituent, big-time donor Frank Vennes. Specifically, she should have been asked whether there was there a quid pro quo.

5) "At the time, the Petters fraud, which brought in more than $36 billion over the course of a decade, was the largest known Ponzi scheme in US history."

Blake also used this figure in her TNR  article describing the Petters Ponzi scheme as a "$36 Billion Ponzi swindle". $36 billion is the amount that may have passed through the Petters scheme, but the total amount is usually described as $3.7 billion by the DOJ.
 
6) "There's no indication Bachmann knew about Vennes's ongoing criminal activity"

As a tax attorney, you would expect Michele Bachmann would know that selling promissory notes are securities and selling securities without a license is a crime. Also, according to the SEC promissory notes are a notorious red flag for fraud. As a felon, Vennes could not have and did not have a license. Bachmann cannot say she did not know much about Vennes' business because she says in her letter to the Pardon Attorney; "I am confident of Mr. Vennes' successful rehabilitation" and " I know from personal experience, Mr. Vennes has used his business position…" -

Those statements on her letter to the Pardon Attorney are bold assertions that implied Bachmann had thoroughly investigated Vennes' business Metro Gem, a fraudulent enterprise that acted as a feeder fund for the Petters Ponzi scheme. After the 2008 raid, Bachmann made a careful statement that in no way addressed the fact that she had personally vouched for Vennes' honesty. As a congress member, Rep. Bachmann had access to government resources to look into Mr.Vennes' business. Lying to a Federal law enforcement agent is a felony and Bachmann's letter was addressed to the Pardon Attorney who is an Assistant U.S. Attorney. Martha Stewart went to prison for that crime. Reporters need to ask Michele Bachmann whether she lied to the Pardon Attorney when she claimed she was confident that Mr. Vennes was rehabilitated.

Also, if Blake had attended recent court hearings as I have, she would know that attorneys discussed in open court how Bachmann lobbied the White House for a pardon for Frank Vennes and that the Bachmann letter was used by Vennes to assuage nervous clients.

But, perhaps the worst aspect for me of Mariah Blake's sloppy reporting is her implied assertion - "as I have reported" - that she and only she has reported the story of Frank Vennes and Michele Bachmann.

In a November 2, 2011 article in Mother Jones reporter Tim Murphy credits Karl Bremer with the initial Bachmann/Vennes investigative legwork:
Following up on reporting by Karl Bremer at Ripple in Stillwater, Blake explains how Frank Vennes and his partner, convicted Ponzi schemer Tom Petters, made millions on phony investments and then poured hundreds of thousands of dollars into political campaigns in the 2000s. Vennes' donations seemed to have a clear motive: receiving a presidential pardon for a prior felony conviction.

Many reporters and bloggers have written about this story over five years beginning with the Star Tribune's Jon Tevlin. Much of the mainstream reporting on the Vennes case has had a business focus concentrating on the fraud rather than Vennes' political pals who helped facilitate the fraud. Without a doubt, Karl Bremer who died last January did the essential investigative reporting on the political aspects on the Vennes case. Karl wrote about the politics of the Vennes case for the Minnesota Independent, the Dump Bachmann blog and a book we co-authored with Eva Young published by Wiley and Sons in 2011. I like to think that I am continuing Karl's work on this blog.

Local reporters and bloggers often provide information that national reporters amplify to a larger readership. Smart national reporters know that the origin of the scoop is often as interesting as the scoop itself as was the story of how Bluestem Prairie's Sally Jo Sorensen discovered Tom Emmer's bizarre testimonial commercial while watching a local wrestling TV show.

Another more important reason for mainstream reporters to link back to the original authors is to give readers a source to read up more about the subject. In her February 2, 2013 article "Frank Vennes and the Petters Ponzi scheme: a long, mysterious tale" Minnpost reporter Beth Hawkins let her readers know that the Vennes Info blog was a source for ongoing information on the case.

Crediting local reporters and bloggers does nothing to diminish the reputation of national reporters. Here's a quote from a June 28, 2011 broadcast of Democracy Now! from reporter Michelle Goldberg:

MICHELLE GOLDBERG: Well, yeah, I mean, obviously—you know, the local bloggers in Minnesota have been doing amazing work on this for years now. And it’s amazing to me—I mean, I’ve written about it a little bit in The Daily Beast. It’s amazing to me that this issue hasn’t yet broken into the mainstream media, in part because it’s not just about Michele Bachmann, it’s also about Tim Pawlenty. And one of the interesting things about Frank Vennes is that, you know, the reason that he was able to kind of insinuate himself into Republican Party politics both—was both financial and ideological, right? He claimed to have found Jesus when he was imprisoned for cocaine—for money laundering and cocaine trafficking. And then he came out, having found Jesus, and made himself a kind of stalwart of Minnesota’s evangelical community. He, you know, kind of cultivated all of these powerful allies. And it was because of these powerful allies that he was able to accomplish his fraud.

Here's the video of that broadcast featuring Michelle Goldberg and Karl Bremer:







H/T and thanks to Phoenix Woman.

Tuesday, October 29, 2013

Clawbacked Fidelis Foundation Has Apparently Moved From Plymouth to Shoreview

According to Charitystat.com the Fidelis Foundation has apparently moved from Plymouth in Hennepin County to Shorview in Ramsey County.  Charitystat.com also has an awesome chart showing the precipitous decline in revenue at Fidelis following the raid on Tom Petters & Frank Vennes' businesses and homes in 2008.

I looked  up Fidelis on the Minnesota Secretary of State website (the MN Attorney General's website still has the Plymouth address). Here's a screenshot from the SoS site:



People sometimes ask me "whatever happened to Vennes attorney & lobbyist Craig Howse? Howse who used to describe his publicity-shy client this way: “The folks that are behind this don’t like drawing a lot of attention to themselves". Of course, we now know why Frank Vennes wanted to hide in the shadows.

Much of Frank's phony generosity (which his defence attorney Jim Volling touted at the Vennes sentence hearing) flowed through the Fidelis Foundation which has the double-dubious distinction of being mentioned in the superseding indictment of Tom Petters and the letter supporting a pardon for Frank Vennes penned by failed presidential candidate Michele Bachmann who was the recipient of boatloads of campaign contributions from Vennes, his family and associates including Craig Howse. Howse's law firm also received a mention in his client's indictment. The office for Fidelis used to be right next door to Howse's firm in Plymouth.

Michele Bachmann lauded the Fidelis Foundation in her pardon request for Frank Vennes Jr.:
Bachmann wrote:

“As a U.S. Representative, I am confident of Mr. Vennes’ successful rehabilitation and that a pardon will be good for the neediest of society. Mr. Vennes is seeking a pardon so that he may be further used to help others. As I know from personal experience, Mr. Vennes has used his business position and success to fund hundreds of nonprofit organizations dedicated to helping the neediest in our society. The Fidelis Foundation, backed by Mr. Vennes, has directed over $10.7 million in total gifts in the last three years, and the Fidelis Foundation has ranked #6, #9 and #7 as the largest grant-making foundation in Minnesota over the past three years.”

The Fidelis Foundation is a Plymouth, Minn.-based nonprofit organization “organized to assist Christians in discerning, clarifying and implementing God’s call and direction in their life,” according to the group’s tax filings. Its chairman is G. Craig Howse, Vennes’ lawyer, and the organization leases office space from Howse for $1,300 a month.

Howse has donated $5,000 to Bachmann’s campaign committee since 2007.

A list of wire communications are presented as evidence in the Petters Ponzi case (see superseding indictment of Tom Petters (PDF)). Among them this mention of a wire transfer of $4,060,000 from the Fidelis Foundation to "PCI's account". PCI is Petters Company Incorporated.



The latest #990 for 2012  still lists Vennes lawyer & lobbyist Craig Howse as chairman.

Here's some old Vennes Info posts about Mr. Howse:

Palm Beach Finance Trustee Settlement With Vennes Attorney Craig Howse

Vennes Lawyer/Lobbyist Craig Howse Continues to Trouble the Waters of Deer Lake

Vennes Lobbyist in 2007: “The folks that are behind this don’t like drawing a lot of attention to themselves"

The late Karl Bremer's Ripple in Stillwater blog has a great deal about the Fidelis Foundation.

Monday, October 28, 2013

National Media Continues to "Report" Local News Stories Without Attribution

Mariah Blake  now working for Mother Jones "reports" on the Bachmann clawback today, something the Strib reported a little over a week ago and I reported back in June.

Here's a repeat of a Dump Bachmann post from Halloween, 2011:

-------

Steve Buttry a 40-year veteran in the news biz has this to say on his blog about plagiarism:
Attribution is the difference between research and plagiarism. Given the scandals in journalism over the past decade, the typical excuse blaming plagiarism on sloppiness simply doesn’t wash. Plagiarism can ruin a career.
You'd think jet-setting, East Coast reporters would have learned a lesson about plundering homegrown media in flyover country for content after Matt Taibbi got caught ripping off G.R. Anderson's City Pages profiles of Michele Bachmann.

Now, The New Republic's Mariah Blake thinks she can Google-up a whole bunch of articles by local reporters and cobble together a flawed, confusing, unfocused article. No wonder Scott Lemieux conflates Petters and Vennes at the Lawyers Guns & Money blog:

Mariah Blake’s article about Tom Petters is fascinating stuff. Petters used a Ponzi scheme funded largely by hedge funds, investors known to Petters and his associates through Christian groups, and the purchase of failing legitimate businesses to finance the classic lifestyle of the conservative wealthy-and-tasteless (high stakes slot machines! Yacht cruises with prostitutes, interns selected as potential sex partners, and cocktails involving Red Bull and citrus vodka!) All throughout this, he sought to get a pardon for his past crimes with the help of political backers ranging from Fritz Mondale to Michele Bachmann.

Longtime readers of this blog know that Bachmann wrote a letter supporting a pardon for Vennes, not Petters.

The TNR cover claims the article tells the "untold story" of the Tom Petters Ponzi scheme - what horse crap!. That story was told by every major news outlet in the state, the news wires and national business news outlets. I covered the trial of Tom Petters for the City Pages and kept a blog titled Petters Info. I even won an SPJ award for my nightly video reports of the trial (sadly, swept away by Bradlee Dean's You Tube take-down with only one remaining). Beth Hawkins wrote a long article for Minnesota Monthly in 2009 titled "Trust Me" and covered the trial for Bloomberg. There were many articles about Petters in the Strib, PiPress and on radio and TV. The trial and conviction of Tom Petters was one of the top Minnesota news stories of 2009 and the last decade. Untold? Really?

Less covered, but covered nonetheless is the saga of Michele Bachmann's top donor of 2006 and convicted felon Frank Vennes. The first article mentioning Frank Vennes appeared in the Star Tribune written by Jon Tevlin. Compare these two passages, one from Tevlin's article and the other from TNR:

The ending of Jon Tevlin's October 4, 2008 Strib story on Vennes:

"From a basement vault, agents took boxes and buckets of silver and gold coins, trays of jewelry, five stacks of $100 bills, boxes of gem stones, silver plates and Rolex watches. Agents also seized diamond rings and numerous paintings, including dozens with religious themes, such as the raising of Lazarus from the dead."


The ending of the TNR article:

"When FBI agents raided his home back in 2008, they cracked open a basement vault. Amid the buckets of gold coins and stacks of hundred dollar bills, they found a trove of religious paintings, including one of Lazarus rising from the dead."


Geez, ending an article with the image of Lazarus rising from the dead - that deserves an encore. Shameless!

Shortly after the 2008 FBI raid that discovered Frank's treasure trove, investigative reporter Karl Bremer wrote one article after another on Frank Vennes. Karl's excellent muckraking articles appeared on Minnesota Independent, Dump Bachmann and the Ripple in Stillwater blog. I've added additional information about Frank Vennes here and at my Vennes Info blog. I have the only courtroom sketches of Frank Vennes and his cohorts.

Appropriating the research of Minnesota reporters, Mariah Blake makes mistakes as well. Blake and TNR describe the Petters Ponzi scheme as a "$36 Billion Ponzi swindle". $36 billion is the amount that passed through Petters, but the total amount actually lost is now described as $3.8 billion.

For comparison, there's a Think Progress article today using the much smaller $17 billion figure for Madoff's Ponzi scheme.

There is a big chapter in our book The Madness of Michele Bachmann about Frank Vennes, so don't bother reading The New Republic's boring, error-riddled article. Our book's official publication date is December 12th.

As Steve Buttry says on his blog:

Perhaps you got away with plagiarism or fabrication in college. Perhaps you got caught plagiarizing for a term paper and the university’s punishment wasn’t too bad. If that’s the case, you need to change your thinking if you want to succeed in the news business. Newspapers can use plagiarism-detection software to screen reporters’ stories before they run. The Internet gives readers and interest groups powerful tools that will help them detect or even accidentally stumble across your cheating. A reader who has set up a Google news alert in an area that interests her could receive e-mail messages calling attention to your story and the story you stole from. If that reader e-mails those stories to your editor, your career will be over before the day ends and you’ll be an item in Romenesko or Regret the Error..

For reporters like Mariah Blake and Matt Taibbi, Steve Buttry has another blog post with a lesson on how to use other writers' work while giving them the attribution they deserve.

POSTSCRIPT: TNR left their fingerprints at the scene of the crime... They stole a photo without credit that appears on Karl Bremer's Ripple in Stillwater blog and nowhere else. I was at the courthouse when Karl took that photo. It captures Vennes in full flight from reporters with Karl in pursuit. Karl ran after Vennes for several blocks snapping pictures of the fleeing felon. That's the sort of effort real reporters put into getting a story.

Karl sued and settled with the New Republic for an undisclosed sum.

Saturday, October 26, 2013

Harrold & Prevost Sentencing Hearing Postponed

UPDATE:  Sentencing hearings:
Bruce Prevost - November 8, 2013, at 11:00 AM
David Harrold November 8, 2013, at 1:30 PM,

Some of you may be wondering what happened  to the Prevost & Harrold sentencing that was supposed to happen Friday. I don't know. I've heard the hearing has been postponed to November sometime.

For those of you who missed the hearing for Tom Petters, former business associate of Frank Vennes watch the video at Fox 9 with the awesome Tom Lyden reporting.

Here's the sketches from the hearing used in that report (click to make them bigger):








Friday, October 18, 2013

Vennes Sentenced to 180 Months in Prison

Frank Vennes was sentenced to 180 months in prison today. From the USDJ press release:
MINNEAPOLIS—Earlier today in federal court in St. Paul, Frank Elroy Vennes, Jr. was sentenced to 180 months in prison in connection with fraudulently raising money from individuals and through hedge funds for investment in Petters Company, Inc. (“PCI”). Vennes was a long-time associate of Thomas J. Petters, the Minnseota businessman who was convicted in 2009 of orchestrating a $3.65 billion Ponzi scheme. United States District Court Judge Richard H. Kyle sentenced Vennes, age 56, of Stuart, Florida, on one count of securities fraud and one count of money laundering. On July 11, 2011, Vennes was charged in a second superseding indictment, and on February 1, 2013, he pleaded guilty to those charges.

From 1995 through September of 2008, Vennes, individually and through his company, Metro Gem, obtained money from others for investment in PCI notes. He also assisted in the formation of hedge funds, known as the Arrowhead Funds, to help raise additional funds for that same purpose. Beginning in 2001 and proceeding through September 24, 2008, he aided and abetted individuals associated with the Arrowhead Funds in making fraudulent misrepresentations to investors regarding investments in PCI.

PCI was owned and operated by Tom Petters, who operated the Ponzi scheme by representing that money invested in PCI promissory notes would finance the purchase of electronics and other consumer merchandise. Purportedly, PCI would resell that merchandise for a profit to certain “big box” retailers, including Sam’s Club and Costco. In truth, however, no merchandise was bought or resold. Instead, Petters diverted hundreds of millions of dollars for his own benefit and the benefit of his co-conspirators. Petters’ Ponzi scheme unraveled in 2008, when federal agents executed search warrants at his business office and other locations. Beginning in 2000, Vennes worked to form hedge funds to solicit investors in PCI, including Arrowhead Capital Partners II, L.P. and Arrowhead Capital Finance, Ltd., collectively known as the Arrowhead Funds, and Palm Beach Finance Partners, L.P. and Palm Beach Finance II, Ltd., collectively known as the Palm Beach Funds. Because he had a federal criminal record, having been previously convicted on federal narcotics, firearms, and money laundering charges, he had difficulty obtaining funding on his own. As a result, he worked through the Arrowhead Funds and the Palm Beach Funds when trying to solicit money from banks and institutional investors.

From 1999 through September 2008, all paperwork and communication between PCI and the Arrowhead Funds and Palm Beach Funds went through Vennes or one of his employees. At the same time, Vennes received “commissions” from Petters for brokering deals involving both Funds. His commissions were based on the amount of money he raised for Petters and PCI. Between 2001 and 2008, Vennes received more than $100 million in commissions.

During that same time period, Vennes knew that those acting on his behalf were making material misrepresentations and omissions to investors in the Arrowhead and Palm Beach Funds and did nothing to correct the situation. Investors were told, for example, that whenever a retailer purchased consumer electronics or other goods from PCI, those products were paid for by the retailer with funds directly deposited into a bank account under the control of a management company. Thus, investors were falsely assured that all PCI transactions were, in fact, taking place, and all money was secure. However, Vennes, among others, was well aware that no payments were ever received from retailers and, instead, came from PCI alone. Furthermore, investors were never informed of Vennes’ criminal record or his involvement in the Arrowhead and Palm Beach Funds’ transactions. And, finally, they were kept unaware that in late 2007 and early 2008, the PCI notes held by the Arrowhead and Palm Beach Funds were delinquent and were approaching default.

On October 11, 2013, Vennes’s co-defendant in this case, James Nathan Fry, age 60, of Orono, Minnesota, was sentenced to 210 months in prison on five counts of securities fraud, four counts of wire fraud, and three counts of making a false statement to the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission during its investigation of investments in PCI by hedge funds under the management of Fry’s company, Arrowhead Capital Management. Fry was convicted on June 12, 2013.

On October 25, 2013, sentencing is scheduled for the investment managers of the Palm Beach Funds, who have pleaded guilty to committing fraud in connection to this scheme by making material misrepresentations to investors in their hedge funds concerning investments in PCI. David William Harrold, age 54, of Del Ray Beach, Florida, and Bruce Francis Prevost, age 53, of Palm Beach Gardens, Florida, await sentencing, each on four counts of securities fraud.
A final quick sketch of Mr. Vennes:





Tuesday, October 8, 2013

Will Vennes Sentencing be Delayed by Government Shutdown?

U.S. Courts website:
Following a government shutdown on October 1, 2013, the federal Judiciary will remain open for business for approximately 10 business days. On or around October 15, 2013, the Judiciary will reassess its situation and provide further guidance. All proceedings and deadlines remain in effect as scheduled, unless otherwise advised. Case Management/Electronic Case Files (CM/ECF) will remain in operation for the electronic filing of documents with courts.
If the government shutdown delays the day (October 18) when Frank Vennes receives his sentence,  he can thank his ol' pal Rep. Michele Bachmann who is reported to have said she was "very excited" about the shutdown.

UPDATE: The courts will apparently stay open:
THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE DISTRICT OF MINNESOTA WILL CONTINUE NORMAL OPERATIONS. ALL CASES, INCLUDING CIVIL AND CRIMINAL JURY TRIALS, WILL BE PROCESSED AND ARGUED AND JUDGMENTS WILL BE ISSUED AND ENFORCED ACCORDING TO USUAL SCHEDULES AND PRIORITIES. THE CLERK'S OFFICE WILL BE FULLY OPERATIONAL AND CM/ECF WILL CONTINUE TO BE FULLY FUNCTIONAL.

Bachjmann Pardon signature

Tuesday, October 1, 2013

Frank Vennes to be Sentenced October 18, 2013

From the docket:

Frank Elroy Vennes, Jr: Sentencing set for 10/18/2013 09:30 AM

Frank's partners in crime will sentenced later.

David William Harrold: Sentencing set for 10/25/2013 at 1:30 PM 

Bruce Francis Prevost: Sentencing set for 10/25/2013 at 11:00 AM 

There will be a sentencing hearing for  James Nathan Fry October 9th.

Monday, September 16, 2013

The Fifth Anniversary of the Petters/Vennes Raid

A week from tomorrow,  September 24, 2013 will mark the fifth anniversary of biggest raid by Federal law enforcement officials in Minnesota history. The raid was part of the investigation into the $3.6 billion Ponzi scheme orchestrated by Tom Petters. Tom Petters was arrested, tried and convicted and is now serving a long prison sentence in Leavenworth Prison (release date: April 25, 2052).

But another man was the target of that raid five years ago.  Tom Petters' self-described financier Frank Vennes. Unlike his cohort, Frank Vennes has managed to stay out of prison all these years.

How did he do it? It certainly has been a long, mysterious tale....




Saturday, September 14, 2013

The Fraudster and the Demagogue

Yesterday, Eva Young and I donated the late Karl Bremer's Edwatch CD of the infamous 2004 speech by then MN Senator Michele Bachmann titled "The Effect of Gay Marriage on Education" to the Tretter Collection in Gay, Lesbian, Bisexual and Transgender Studies at the University of Minnesota. This is the speech in which Bachmann said:

 "It’s a very sad life. It’s part of Satan, I think, to say this is gay..."

The Edwatch speech was much quoted by the national blogs and news media during Bachmann's short-lived campaign for President of the United States. We can thank Karl for obtaining this recording of Bachmann's bigotry and extremism. Here is a You Tube version of this speech:



It should be noted while listening to this warped, bigoted speech that the person who gave the essential financial boost to Michele Bachmann's campaign for Congress that made her a frontrunner was Frank Vennes. Without Frank Vennes's purloined largesse Michele Bachmann likely would not have become a national embarrassment and a stain on the history of Minnesota politics.

I do not know whether Frank Vennes shared Michele Bachmann's bigoted views of  gay people. Perhaps Mr. Vennes and his cohorts donated thousands of dollars to Michele Bachmann only to obtain a letter addressed to the Pardon Attorney recommending a pardon for Mr. Vennes see Karl Bremer's three-part series on the effort to win a pardon for Frank Vennes including a timeline of donations and events relating to the Vennes request for a pardon Parts OneTwo & Three]. It really doesn't matter what his motives were - the facts speak for themselves.

If anything good comes from this sordid saga of dirty money for political favors is that it serves an object lesson about our broken electoral system. If the saying "Bad money drives out good" is true, there can be no worse money than money derived from criminal activity. Unless elections are publicly financed, we will likely see more unethical demagogues like Bachmann elevated to high public office by fraudsters like Vennes.



Monday, August 26, 2013

Frank Vennes Wants Little or No Punishment for HIs Crimes

Jacqueline Palank at the Wall Street Journal:
"...Mr. Vennes is asking the federal judge to issue him a shorter sentence, one that includes periods of home confinement and community system. Should he face time behind bars, he has asked that he be sent to a federal prison in Florida, “near his support system and in weather favorable to his medical condition.” Mr. Vennes not only has a pacemaker but also suffers from hypertension, osteopenia, psoriasis, and psoriatic arthritis."

And Frank Vennes was charitable and religious and he was a victim too.

Read the whole thing at the at the Wall Street Journal.


Friday, August 23, 2013

Judge Gives Green Light to Lawsuit Against G.E. Capital

Wall Street Journal:
A federal bankruptcy judge in Florida gave the green light Friday afternoon to a lawsuit alleging the commercial lender, a unit of General Electric Co., knew that one of its clients, Thomas Petters, was operating a Ponzi scheme.

This is what I wrote about the lawsuit in an October 2, 2012 Vennes Info post:

The attorney for the Palm Beach Finance Trustee filed a civil suit  (PDF) against GE Capital, one of the world's biggest financial firms  alleging GE Capital employees knew that Tom Petters was running a Ponzi scheme way back "on or about October 24, 2000" and did nothing to stop it:
GECC would remain silent about its discovery of the Conspiracy and assist in its continued fraudulent concealment. Petters would cause GECC to be paid from new, defrauded lenders rather than from the proceeds of legitimate operations.
Even worse, the document alleges GE Capital helped Tom Petters recruit more victims with a recommendation letter addressed to "Whom it May Concern" (see screenshot of the letter below).

Here's the part that mentions the role Vennes played in the scheme involving the letter:
In 2002, Vennes introduced the principals of the general partner of the Palm Beach Funds to Petters. Petters used his former relationship with GECC as a strategic selling point, representing to the Palm Beach Funds through Vennes and Vennes’ Minnesota legal counsel, that the GECC-Petters business relationship ended: (i) profitably for both sides; (ii) with appropriate and ordinary documentation; and (iii) because GECC wanted to be Petters’ sole lender but Petters refused. 
The Recommendation Letter was shared by Petters with Vennes. Vennes in turn waxed poetic about the successful Petters-GECC relationship as a part of his efforts to convince the Palm Beach Funds to lend to Petters. Vennes’ representations to the Palm Beach Funds in regards to Petters’ “excellent” relationship with GECC were influenced by the Recommendation Letter. The Palm Beach Funds, through its agent, justifiably relied upon these representations. 
These representations were false and Petters and GECC knew them to be when made.
Here is the infamous letter that GE Capital's  Richard Menczynski gave Petters to use to  convince victims to give money to Petters:





NOTE: The PBF Trustee is seeking the total losses of the Palm Beach funds (approximately $1.1 Billion) plus punitive damages.

ALSO: It appears another Palm Beach Bankruptcy lawsuit against BMO Harris Bank (M&I Marshall & Ilsley) got the green light too.

Friday, August 2, 2013

Tom Petters to Plead Guilty to Reduce HIs Sentence.

PiPress:
Convicted Minnesota Ponzi schemer Tom Petters -- who has always maintained his innocence -- is now ready to plead guilty in exchange for a shorter sentence, his attorney said Friday. Attorney Steve Meshbesher said Petters, who is serving a 50-year federal prison sentence in Leavenworth, Kan., will testify during a hearing scheduled for Oct. 15 and 16 in St. Paul before Judge Richard Kyle.
Interesting... still no word on his financier's sentencing date.

Sunday, June 16, 2013

Agreement Between PCI Trustee and Palm Beach Trustee Over Michele Bachmann Clawback

The Palm Beach Trustee May 20, 2013 amended motion explains:

On May 18, 2012, the Liquidating Trustee filed with this Court his Motion For Approval of Settlement with Michelle Bachmann, Bachmann for Congress and Bachmann Minnesota Victory Committee and Payment of Contingency Fee [ECF No. 1242] (the “Original 9019 Motion”). Shortly after the Original 9019 Motion was filed, the PCI Trustee (as defined herein) asserted claims against the Bachmann Parties (as defined herein) for the return of the transfers covered by the settlement. The parties have since engaged in further discussions and negotiations which have resulted in a modification of the previously agreed to settlement to include a settlement with, and release by, the PCI Trustee, as set forth below.
The $14,000.00 settlement will be divided between PCI trustee ($8,600.00) and the Palm Beach Trustee ($5,400.00).

Also the Fidelis Foundation has to cough up $425,000.00 to the trustees.

Thursday, June 6, 2013

Last Day of Frank Vennes's Testimony

Frank Vennes did not do as well today as yesterday. Deanna Coleman showed up and testified that she received calls from Frank and his son requesting corrections on P.O.'s.  Next stop - sentencing.

Here's the sketches - click on them to make them bigger:

AUSA Tim Rank & Frank Vennes sketched by Ken Avidor.  Use only with permission.

Deanna Coleman sketched by Ken Avidor.  Use only with permission.



Wednesday, June 5, 2013

Vennes Testifying Today at the Trial of James Fry

Frank Vennes was a witness for the defense.

Frank Vennes was unflappable under a withering examination by Fry's attorney Joe Friedberg even when asked about a communication he received saying there was over a billion dollars in merchandise sitting in warehouses for big box stores B.J.'s and Sam's Club. Vennes got a little testy when Friedberg suggested Vennes knew about the fraud. Vennes claims he was clueless right up to the end.

Deanna Coleman will testify tomorrow.

Frank Vennes Testifies by Ken Avidor - Publish only with permission.

Frank Vennes Testifies by Ken Avidor - Publish only with permission.


Saturday, March 23, 2013

New Date for Fry Trial - Vennes Will LIkely be Called to Testify

UPDATE: It looks like the chances of Vennes testifying are getting very slim (I am not covering the Fry trial).

The trial of James Fry will begin May 20th.

Frank Vennes, Fry's former co-defendant has waived his right to refuse to testify.

Vennes will likely be sentenced before the trial - no date yet.

Stay tuned.




Wednesday, March 13, 2013

Third Superseding Indictment For James Fry

A Federal Grand Jury has added 5 more counts (ho-hum).

NOTE: This blog is about Frank Vennes, not James Fry.

James Fry, pardon the pun is small fry.

It's entirely possible that James Fry would have been just another hedge fund manager if he hadn't heard the sirens' song of quick and easy riches sung by Frank Vennes and Tom Petters.

James Fry was not the self-described financier for Tom Petters. James Fry was not a major source of funds for extremist, right-wing politicians including two presidential candidates.

James Fry did not distort the once-proud, progressive reputation of Minnesota politics into a twisted caricature of bigotry and demagoguery that is only now being repaired by a legislature that passes laws in the best interests of the state's citizens instead of grandstanding on divisive "wedge issues".

Politicians facilitated the illegal fund-raising of Mr. Vennes by writing letters supporting a presidential pardon for Mr Vennes - letters Vennes showed investors victims to assuage their concerns about his criminal history. If any one of these influential politicos had bothered to investigate Mr. Vennes how he obtained his vast wealth they would have learned the foundation of his financial empire was built on pile of promissory notes which the SEC website says is a huge red flag for fraud.

One politician in particular, Congresswoman Michele Bachmann accepted boatloads of dirty money from Vennes and his cohorts  when she was lagging behind her Republican rivals. There is no question Ponzi money played a part in Bachmann getting that crucial endorsement. It is very likely that Michele Bachmann would not be representing Minnesota's 6th Congressional District if it weren't for the purloined largesse of Frank Vennes and his cohorts.

Michele Bachmann continues to embarrass her district's constituents and the state of Minnesota, most recently when Bachmann was the only one of the state's congressional delegation to vote against the Violence Against Women Act.

With the plea deal canceling the trial of Mr. Vennes, we are unlikely to learn more about the role Ponzi money  played in distorting our political system. Without the facts to alert and  inform citizens and public officials how this occurred, the chances are favorable to it happening again.

So, I will not blog every legal maneuver leading up to Mr. Fry's trial,  plea or whatever. I have other, more important, interesting things to do.


Thursday, March 7, 2013

Volling Letter Promises Vennes Will Testify Against James Fry

Attorney James Volling who has received huge fees (one estimate is $4 million) from who knows where (I assume the creditors) for defending Frank Vennes, now throws his client to  the wolves:
With regard to the trial of James Fry currently scheduled to begin May 14, 2013, I am writing to inform you that my client, Mr. Frank Elroy Vennes Jr. is willing to testify at that trial if he is called by either side. If he is called to testify, he will not assert his Fifth Amendment rights. Please contact me with any questions. Best regards.
Mr. Volling has asked for and received an extension on the pre-sentence investigation deadline and report to May 28th.

QUESTION: Will the jury believe the testimony of  Frank Vennes? Vennes stated over a year ago in court that he was "emphatically not guilty" but on the eve of his trial, last month admitted, perhaps not as emphatically that he was indeed guilty. 

Monday, February 11, 2013

When Did Frank Vennes First Learn About the Fraudulent PCI Notes?

When Frank Vennes pled guilty February 1st, he claimed he did not know of the Petters fraud until September of 2008 (I don't have access to a transcript, but my notes say Septermber 25, 2008). Federal agents raided the homes of Frank Vennes on September 24, 2008.

The Star Tribune reported back in 2009:
Frank Vennes Jr., a Shoreview businessman who recruited investors for Tom Petters, learned that the operation might be a fraud scheme in December 2007...
 Interesting...

Thursday, February 7, 2013

MN DOJ Posts the Frank Vennes Plea Agreement Online

Download the PDF for the February 1st plea agreement signed by Frank Vennes HERE.

I've opened up the comments again - please keep it nice. Comments aren't working, sorry.

Tuesday, February 5, 2013

The Trial of James Fry Postponed

The trial will instead begin Tuesday, May 14, 2013, at 9:00 a.m., in Courtroom 7A, Warren E. Burger Federal Building and United States Courthouse, 316 North Robert Street, St. Paul, Minnesota.

Frank Vennes will likely be called to testify.

The May 14th trial will, in effect be the trial of Frank Vennes that should have begun today but with some key differences. Frank Vennes will not have a choice about testifying. Frank Vennes will likely be sentenced before May 14th losing his 5th Amendment rights.

And Frank Vennes will face being interrogated by awesome, Super-Lawyer Joe Friedberg:


Monday, February 4, 2013

Fry's Attorney Wants to Question Vennes at His Client's Trial

As if last week's sudden turn of events weren't surprising enough, today's hearing took a bizarre twist.

I walked over to the Federal courthouse this afternoon expecting to watch Frank Vennes's co-defendant James Fry plead guilty, but that was not the case as James Fry was not in attendance. Fry's attorney Joe Friedberg asked for a continuance in light of the changed landscape. Friedberg claimed the Government was being unfair "right up to the due process line".

Friedberg claimed the Government's case implied Fry had knowledge of the Ponzi scheme at the heart of PCI.

Freidberg insisted on being able to question Vennes before the jury about the charges against his client.

Friedberg rejected the Government's contention that their witnesses could supply the necesary testimony regarding the specific charges against Fry saying such testimony was hearsay and that only Vennes had "a monopoly of knowledge".

In  particular, Friedberg pointed to the Government's evidence regarding how Fry and Vennes allegedly used  Vennes's quest for a presidential pardon to lull potential investors concerns. Friedberg said:
"Vennes told my client Michele Bachmann supported his pardon to the White House" 
Friedberg was also concerned that Vennes would still be covered by Fifth Amendment protections against giving testimony that could incriminate himself.

The Government asked for a short continuance of a few weeks, Friedberg asked for months.

The judge said he'd rule on a continuance this week.

Clearly, this trial has entered a new phase... stay tuned.

MInnPost Article on the Long Strange Journey of Convicted Fraudster Frank Vennes

A must-read article in MinnPost:"Frank Vennes and the Petters Ponzi scheme: a long, mysterious tale" by Beth Hawkins.




Friday, February 1, 2013

Frank Vennes to Plead Guilty

Just learned it.

I will update this post after the hearing in an hour or two.

UPDATE: Vennes pled guilty to two counts. Will cooperate. Out on bond awaiting sentencing.


UPDATE:  The MN DOJ Press release:

Frank Vennes pleads guilty to lying to investors in Petters’ Ponzi scheme

MINNEAPOLIS—Late this afternoon in federal court in St. Paul, a business associate of Thomas J. Petters, the Minnesota businessman convicted in 2009 of orchestrating a $3.65 billion Ponzi scheme, pleaded guilty to fraudulently raising money from individuals and through hedge funds for investment in Petters Company, Inc. (“PCI”). Frank Elroy Vennes, Jr., age 55, of Stuart, Florida, was charged on July 11, 2011, in a Second Superseding Indictment. Appearing today before United States District Court Judge Richard H. Kyle, he specifically pleaded guilty to one count of securities fraud and one count of money laundering. 
Following the plea hearing, U.S. Attorney B. Todd Jones said, “This case exemplifies one of the highest priorities of this office — protecting our citizens from financial fraud. Because of the tremendous dedication of this office and our investigative partners, we successfully constructed a very strong case. We were able to convict Tom Petters, the biggest fraudster in Minnesota history, who is now serving a 50-year sentence in Leavenworth. We also successfully prosecuted many of his associates, and today, yet another individual pleaded guilty. We are taking action to recoup the financial losses suffered by so many because of this fraud and know the court will appropriately sentence Mr. Vennes for his related crimes.” 
FBI Special Agent in Charge Chris Warrener added, “This guilty plea today symbolizes the ongoing joint efforts between the FBI, the U.S. Attorney’s Office, IRS-CI, and the U.S. Postal Inspection Service to combat significant fraud in the State of Minnesota. It also reflects our continued joint commitment to ensuring that those responsible for the Petters fraud are held accountable.” 
From 1995 through September of 2008, Vennes and his company, Metro Gem, obtained money from others for investment in PCI notes. He also assisted in the formation of hedge funds, known as the Arrowhead Funds, to help raise additional investment funds for that same purpose. Beginning in 2001 and proceeding through September 24, 2008, he knew that individuals associated with the Arrowhead Funds were making misrepresentations and omissions to investors regarding investments in PCI, and he aided and abetted in those misrepresentations. 
“This complex investigation shows that the appearance of success can be a mask for a tangled financial web of lies,” said Kelly R. Jackson, Special Agent in Charge of the St. Paul Field Office of the IRS-CI. “Ponzi schemes can thrive for a long time because of the false representations about the investments that were made to investors. But that time is gone, and as Mr. Vennes’ plea shows, it’s time for those responsible to face judgment.” PCI was owned and operated by Tom Petters, who, in or before 1993, initiated the Ponzi scheme by representing that funds invested in PCI promissory notes would finance the purchase of electronics and other consumer merchandise. Purportedly, PCI would resell that merchandise for a profit to certain “big box” retailers, including Sam’s Club and Costco. In truth, however, no merchandise was bought or resold. Instead, Petters diverted hundreds of millions of dollars for his own benefit and the benefit of his co-conspirators.
Petters’ Ponzi scheme unraveled in 2008, when federal agents executed search warrants at his business offices as well as other locations. He was subsequently prosecuted in federal court in the District of Minnesota and, in April of 2010, was sentenced to 50 years in federal prison. He is currently serving his sentence in the federal penitentiary in Leavenworth, Kansas. 
In his plea agreement, Vennes admitted that he raised funds for investment in PCI notes through third-party agents, particularly after 1998. Because he had a federal criminal record, having been previously convicted on federal narcotics, firearms, and money laundering charges, he had difficulty obtaining funding on his own. As a result, he regularly worked through others, especially when trying to solicit money from banks and institutional investors. Arrowhead Capital Partners II, L.P. and Arrowhead Capital Finance, Ltd., collectively known as the Arrowhead Funds, were among those third-party agents. 
From 1999 through September 2008, all paperwork and communication between PCI and the Arrowhead Funds went through Vennes or one of his employees. At the same time, Vennes received “commissions” from Petters for brokering deals involving the Arrowhead Funds. His commissions were based on the amount of money he raised for Petters and PCI. Between 2001 and 2008, Vennes received more than $48 million in commissions.

During that same time period, Vennes knew that those acting on his behalf were making material misrepresentations and omissions to investors in the Arrowhead Funds and did nothing to correct the situation. Investors were told, for example, that whenever a retailer purchased consumer electronics or other goods from PCI, those products were paid for by the retailer with funds directly deposited into a bank account under the control of a management company. Thus, investors were falsely assured that all PCI transactions were, in fact, taking place, and all money was secure. However, Vennes, among others, was well aware that no payments were ever received from retailers and, instead, came from PCI alone. Furthermore, investors were never informed of Vennes’ criminal record or his involvement in the Arrowhead Funds’ transactions. And, finally, they were kept unaware that in late 2007 and early 2008, the PCI Notes held by the Arrowhead Funds were delinquent and were approaching default. Instead of disclosing that information to investors, Vennes and others arranged to secretly extend the due dates on the notes, the intent being to conceal the payment problems and to lull investors into believing their investments were secure and performing well. 
Vennes’s co-defendant in this case, James Nathan Fry, age 59, of Orono, Minnesota, was charged with five counts of securities fraud, four counts of wire fraud, and three counts of making a false statement to the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission during its investigation of investments in PCI by hedge funds under the management of Fry’s company, Arrowhead Capital Management. His trial is scheduled to begin on February 5, 2013. For his crimes, Vennes faces a potential maximum penalty of ten years in prison on the money laundering count and five years on the securities fraud count. Judge Kyle will determine his sentence at a future hearing, yet to be scheduled. 
If convicted, Fry faces a potential maximum penalty of 20 years on each wire fraud count and five years on each securities fraud and false statement count. Two Florida hedge fund managers have pleaded guilty to committing fraud in connection to this scheme by making material misrepresentations to investors in their hedge funds concerning investments in PCI. David William Harrold, age 53, of Del Ray Beach, Florida, and Bruce Francis Prevost, age 52, of Palm Beach Gardens, Florida, await sentencing, each on four counts of securities fraud. 
This case is the result of an investigation by the Federal Bureau of Investigation, the Internal Revenue Service–Criminal Investigations, and the U.S. Postal Inspection Service. It is being prosecuted by Assistant U.S. Attorneys Timothy C. Rank, Kimberly A. Svendsen, and Robert M. Lewis. This law enforcement action is in part sponsored by the interagency Financial Fraud Enforcement Task Force. The task force was established to wage an aggressive, coordinated and proactive attack on financial crimes. It includes representatives from a broad range of federal agencies, regulatory authorities, inspectors general, and state and local law enforcement, who, working together, bring to bear a powerful array of criminal and civil enforcement resources. The task force hopes to improve efforts across the federal executive branch, and, with state and local partners, investigate and prosecute significant financial crimes, ensure just and effective punishment for those who perpetrate financial crimes, combat discrimination in the lending and financial markets, and recover proceeds for victims of financial crimes.

Thursday, January 31, 2013

An Overview of the Trial of Frank Vennes

UPDATE: In a surprise move, Frank Vennes pled guilty Friday.

Frank Vennes goes on trial next week in a Federal court in St. Paul Minnesota for his role as financier for the $3.6 billion Ponzi scheme orchestrated by Tom Petters.

Former Senator Norm Coleman and Congresswoman Michele Bachmann wrote letters in support for a Presidential pardon of Frank Vennes to expunge prior convictions for money laundering, drug and gun trafficking. Other political figures including former Minnesota Governor and presidential candidate Tim Pawlenty supported the pardon.

In 2006, during orientation for freshman Congress members, a Star Tribune reporter asked Congresswoman Michele Bachmann (R, MN) what her goal was as a new representative. Bachman gave a puzzling answer: “My No. 1 goal is to not go to jail.”

Next week, February 5, 2013, we may finally understand why Representative Bachmann made that statement as the top donor in her first campaign for Congress goes on trial in Federal Court in St. Paul, Minnesota for his role as financier for the massive Ponzi scheme orchestrated by Tom Petters. Tom Petters was convicted in 2010 for his role in the Ponzi scheme and sentenced to 50 years in prison.

On April 20, 2011, convicted money launderer and cocaine/gun runner Frank Vennes Jr., a close personal friend and a major campaign contributor of Minnesota presidential candidates Michele Bachmann and Tim Pawlenty, was indicted on federal fraud and money-laundering charges for his alleged role in the Tom Petters Ponzi scheme.

The origins of this trial go back decades when Frank Vennes Jr. was charged in May 1987 and convicted in North Dakota on federal charges of money laundering, cocaine distribution, and illegal firearms sales, to which he pleaded guilty and no contest. He was sentenced to five years in prison. Vennes was sentenced to five years in the Sandstone (Minnesota) Federal Correctional Facility. He served thirty-eight months in prison; was released on parole on December 12, 1990; and completed his sentence on September 25, 1992. Vennes claims he found God in prison with the help of a prison ministry.

In subsequent decades, Frank Vennes found his criminal record was an impediment to his new role arranging financing for Tom Petters’ financial empire. Vennes asked several prominent politicians to help him expunge his criminal record by writing letters of support for a presidential pardon. These politicians also received hefty campaign contributions from Vennes, his business cohorts, family and friends. The timing of Frank Vennes’s largesse led many to speculate that it was part of a “pay-for-pardon” plot.

Court documents state that Vennes raised money from investors directly and also induced hedge funds to raise money from investors to purchase short-term, trade finance promissory notes in Petters’s company, PCI. In return, Vennes allegedly earned more than $105 million in commissions from 1995 to 2008. Prosecutors now claim the total take for Vennes may exceed $350 million. On September 24, 2008, federal agents raided Vennes’s $5 million Shorewood home on Lake Minnetonka in connection with the $3.5 billion Tom Petters Ponzi scheme and seized “boxes and buckets of silver and gold coins, trays of jewelry, five stacks of $100 bills, boxes of gem stones, silver plates and Rolex watches,” along with diamond rings and artwork. Two days later, Vennes’s $6 million oceanfront home in Jupiter, Florida, was also raided. Four years after the raid, Frank Vennes is finally getting his day in court.

In a pretrial document filed with the Federal Court February 14,2013, prosecutors argued that Frank Vennes' s three felony convictions for money laundering, gun and drug trafficking should be permitted as evidence at the trial in February with an instruction to jury that Vennes’s past criminal conduct won't be used by prosecutors to suggest an inclination by the defendant to commit crimes. Instead, the evidence will be necessary to explain the peculiar history of fraud and deceit at the heart of every transaction Vennes controlled between co-defendant James Fry's Arrowhead hedge funds and Petters Company Inc. (PCI). In addition, it became necessary for the Vennes and Fry to conceal his criminal record from investors. Normally, prior convictions are precluded as prejudicial to juries.

In previous proceedings before a magistrate judge, Government attorneys successfully argued that Frank Vennes' prior convictions are an integral part of the alleged crimes Vennes and Fry are currently being charged.

In a pretrial document submitted to the Court January 23, 2013, attorney for Frank Vennes, Jim Volling made a last-ditch argument to have his client's 26-year-old prior felony convictions excluded from the trial. Volling goes on to disclose his strategy to counter the prejudicial evidence of his client's past criminality- he will call on additional evidence and character witnesses – as many as 45 witnesses testifying to Frank Vennes's "good acts" and rehabilitation. Whether Mr. Volling is referring to letters supporting a pardon for Mr. Vennes written by former Senator Norm Coleman and Representative Michele Bachmann remains to be seen, but there is no doubt that those letters and witnesses would be powerful evidence.

In their recently released trail brief, the Government stated they may ask the character witnesses about "...specific instances of the defendant’s past conduct relevant to the character trait at issue. In particular, a defendant’s character witnesses may be cross-examined about their knowledge of the defendant’s past crime..."

A Bachmann quote from her letter to the Pardon Attorney supporting a pardon for Vennes (see letter at the end of this diary):

As a U.S. Representative, I am confident of Mr. Vennes’ successful rehabilitation and that a pardon will be good for the neediest of society. Mr. Vennes is seeking a pardon so that he may be further used to help others. As I know from personal experience, Mr. Vennes has used his business position and success to fund hundreds of nonprofit organizations dedicated to helping the neediest in our society....
If Bachmann is called as a character witness by the defense, will prosecutors ask her what she knew about Vennes from "personal experience"? She can't say she lied in her letter; her letter was addressed to an Assistant U.S. Attorney... and lying to a Federal law enforcement officer is a felony offense - just ask Martha Stewart who was fined and sent to a Club Fed for that crime.

Read a summary of the Government's recently released, 52-page trial brief at the Vennes Info blog.

See the interactive Frank Vennes Pardon Timeline at Dipity.

Much of the research for this diary comes from “The Madness of Michele Bachmann” by Ken Avidor, Karl Bremer and Eva Young, published by Wiley & Sons.

Additional information about the investigation and trial of Frank Vennes can be found at the Ripple in Stillwater blog:



Bachjmann Pardon signature photo Pardon_Bachmann_Complete.jpg

Monday, January 28, 2013

Government Intends to Introduce Audio & Testimony of Religious Affinity Fraud

According to a pretrial document released today, some of the government’s witnesses are going to testify that they trusted Vennes because he prayed with them.

Some witnesses will testify that they failed to pursue due diligence in part because of his ardent professions of faith - if they asked questions about PCI, he treated the questions as evidence of a lack of faith.

Although they are not charging Frank Vennes with "affinity fraud",  that's what it's called:
Affinity fraud refers to investment scams that prey upon members of identifiable groups, such as religious or ethnic communities, the elderly, or professional groups. The fraudsters who promote affinity scams frequently are - or pretend to be - members of the group. They often enlist respected community or religious leaders from within the group to spread the word about the scheme, by convincing those people that a fraudulent investment is legitimate and worthwhile. Many times, those leaders become unwitting victims of the fraudster's ruse.

These scams exploit the trust and friendship that exist in groups of people who have something in common. Because of the tight-knit structure of many groups, it can be difficult for regulators or law enforcement officials to detect an affinity scam. Victims often fail to notify authorities or pursue their legal remedies, and instead try to work things out within the group. This is particularly true where the fraudsters have used respected community or religious leaders to convince others to join the investment.

Many affinity scams involve "Ponzi" or pyramid schemes, where new investor money is used to make payments to earlier investors to give the false illusion that the investment is successful. This ploy is used to trick new investors to invest in the scheme and to lull existing investors into believing their investments are safe and secure. In reality, the fraudster almost always steals investor money for personal use. Both types of schemes depend on an unending supply of new investors - when the inevitable occurs, and the supply of investors dries up, the whole scheme collapses and investors discover that most or all of their money is gone.
Here's some audio of a talk in 4 parts of  Frank Vennes mixing God & money:







The Prosecution Releases Trial Brief

Government attorneys released its summary of the criminal case against Frank Vennes and co-defendant James Fry. In an overview of their case, Assistant United States Attorneys Timothy Rank, Kimberly Svendsen and Robert Lewis claim Frank Vennes was the primary source of funds for the massive Ponzi scheme orchestrated by Tom Petters and the company at the heart of the scam Petters Company, Inc. (“PCI”).

Frank Vennes raked in millions from his role as financier for the Petters Ponzi scheme. Vennes made more than $100 million from interest derived from individual investors. He received commissions from To Petters totaling more than $100 million, including $60 million related to the Palm Beach hedge funds unds and $48 million related to the Arrowhead hedge fund.

The Government traces the role of Frank Vennes back to 1995, only a few years after Vennes was released from a Club Fed at Sandstone, Minnesota. In a classic case of affinity fraud, Vennes began by borrowing money from people he met in the prison ministry that visited in prison.

Petters and Vennes needed to raise more money for their scheme, so Vennes tried to get funding from banks and other institutional lenders, but the lenders balked at lending to Vennes because of his criminal record. Vennes met James Fry in 1998. Fry managed an investment company. Arrowhead Capital Management, which had hedge funds invested primarily in medical device companies. Vennes was the go-between for Arrowhead's investments in PCI and for nearly eight years, Fry shoveled hundreds of million of dollars from investors into the gaping maw of PCI for the purpose of financing the purchase of consumer goods which Petters supposedly sold at a profit - the transactions did not exist. Fry lied to his investors about the transactions and Vennes knew Fry was lying to his investors.

Eventually, the relationship between Vennes and Fry "soured" when Fry tried and failed to deal directly with Tom Petters. Vennes recruited Bruce Prevost and David Harrold to help him find more money for PCI. In 2002 Prevost and Harrold created the Palm Beach Funds. They also were required to invest in PCI through Frank Vennes and could only contact Tom Petters through Vennes. As with Arrowhead, Vennes was aware that Prevost and Harrold were lying to investors (Prevost and Harrold have pled guilty).

Vennes also used his company Metro to attract investors to PCI. Vennes is also alleged to have lied to a bank to obtain a multi-million dollar line of credit.

The Government also charges James Fry with lying to the SEC about being unaware that Arrowhead funds were not paid directly from retailers and claiming he was unaware of marketing materials with false information.

The Government states that they are not out to prove that Vennes and Fry knew the full extent of the Ponzi scheme at the heart of PCI. The indictment, however claims Vennes and Fry's lies prevented investors from being able to doing due diligence on where their money was going. Vennes and Fry are alleged to have lied to investors by telling them that the Arrowhead and Palm Beach Funds were getting paid directly by the big box stores like Costco or Sam’s Club, which gave investors as if there were real transactions underlying the PCI investments. The funds Vennes and Fry controlled never received a single payment from a retailer. Payments on the PCI promissory notes came from PCI, which was, of course a Ponzi scheme paying old investors with money obtained from new investors. The PCI Ponzi scheme continued to grow until it inevitably collapsed.

The Government also seeks to prove the defendants concealed from investors Vennes’s role the transaction. They were aware that Vennes’s criminal history (money laundering, firearms and narcotics trafficking convictions) would make it difficult to raise money from institutional investors.

Vennes is charged with eight counts of aiding and abetting securities fraud, seven counts of aiding and abetting wire fraud, three counts of aiding and abetting mail fraud, three counts of bank fraud, two counts of making false statements on a credit application, and three counts of money laundering.

Fry is charged with five counts of aiding and abetting securities fraud, four counts of aiding and abetting wire fraud, and three counts of making false statements to the Securities and Exchange Commission.

The Government's brief goes on to relate the early history of Frank Vennes, much as I have transcribed in this Vennes Info post.

The brief goes on to describe some close calls in 2002 for the alleged scamsters when a bank, an Arrowhead employee and caught a whiff of the fraud. Sadly, the information was buried and Vennes and Fry continued to raise money without mentioning it to investors.

The prosecutors give a preview of the testimony of Harrold and Prevost with a glimpse of how Vennes impressed his clients with his ostentatious home and lifestyle as well as an anonymous donation of a million dollars (of other people's money) to a religious institution.

The brief goes on to describe the unravelling of the Petters Ponzi scheme in 2007 and how Vennes scrambled to conceal the inability of PCI to make good on its obligations. to pay investors - by May 2008, the PCI notes held by Metro Gem were being paid more than 50 days after they went into default. Vennes was using new investor money to pay off old investors (“lulling payments”). It got so bad by August, 2008 that Vennes used hundreds of thousands of dollars from "investor C.H." that was supposed to be invested in PCI, but was instead used to pay for his mortgage on two of his mansions, as well as car payments, credit card payments, and “lulling” interest payments to other Metro Gem investors.

The brief also addresses witness and evidentiary issues. Among the more interesting bits of information is that emails and other correspondence from Metro Gem and Arrowhead employees will be introduced as evidence. - including "prior statements" emails and correspondence from Craig Howse, Frank Vennes's attorney.

More interesting is the Government's position regarding character witnesses. They may ask about "...specific instances of the defendant’s past conduct relevant to the character trait at issue. In particular, a defendant’s character witnesses may be cross-examined about their knowledge of the defendant’s past crime..."

In anticipation of a defense use of the post-fraud, post-raid efforts of Vennes to mollify his victims with a voluntary receivership (see this Ripple in Stillwater post), the Government seeks to exclude that evidence as irrelevant and distracting from the charges and likely prolonging the trial. The trial begins a week from today - stay tuned.