"a number of these people either plowed their earnings back into NASI, moved the money elsewhere or blew it in."
"It still comes down to saying someone was a 'net winner' and them still having the money are two entirely different things."
and this'un, which uses "that" instead of "the," but the point it the same
"the salespeople were living on that money, and that it is long gone in to living expenses etc, and therefore non-recoverable"
Unless an investor had the insight to discretely keep all NASI loot in a separate holding account from assorted bond and stock dividends, savings accounts and assorted earnings from heroin sales and crooked gambling, or had a specific lock box designated with the label "Crooked ATM Profits Only," one has to assume all funds paid from NASI to an investor were comingled with the investor's other income. There's no other way to say, "Oh, yeah, I got $500,000 from those crooks, but that's all gone. This $2,000,000 over here was something else entirely, so you can't touch that, nyah nyah nyah-nyah nyah."
Point being-- it makes no difference that a given net winner spent the money he or she got in 2009, or 2011, or 2014. If they've got assets now, then for the purpose of clawback and redistribution of embezzled funds, whatever that person has now is subject to seizure.
I agree and never implied differently, but since they played an aggressive role in the scam rather than purely a passive one, the attitude toward them must therefore be different, with regard to legal status and potential recovery.observer wrote:
I don't have any reason to disagree with you on those points. I just think that none of the salespeople are going to be in the Top Thirty Netwinner's Circle.