grimreaper wrote:
Good point. When I say *no trials* I'm not saying they aren't within the realm of being *a possibility*..that's absurd, but I'm convinced that there simply won't be any for the reasons Ted states here AND the fact there's no legal defense to get you *off the hook*. If there are any errors/false claims in the receiver's calculations/determination of profit or loss, then that can be adjudicated in a hearing where the judge will rule on the merits of the investors claim. But this really amounts to MODIFYING an existing judgment or lawsuit. No *trials* as characterized above...yes, this my OPINION.
Bullshit, there is always a legal defense...with just 30 seconds of trying to come up with one, let me offer this...
hypothetical net winner wrote:I'm an old retired investor on a fixed income, of limited means, but I did come across this little gem and made, oh let's say $50,000 of clawback subject return over a few years, and mind you that money stopped more than a year ago, unlike my current expenses.
I don't have many investments, never had the money for them except in this one, my former job provided the services for retirees of a money class and I took it one year. The guy who taught it was a fully accredited financial adviser licensed by the state, holder of an accounting certificate and certified financial planner. (currently doing 35 months at Lompoc for elder fraud, BTW) and he convinced me to put every penny of my meager savings into this can't miss investment that his friend was running, not normally available to little guys like me, but he would get me an "in".
So, I liquidated an IRA and bought 2 machines, and used the returns, until they stopped when the scam collapsed, to pay my day to day expenses. Since they stopped I have struggled to get by, but I manage, thank goodness my house is payed for, aside from less than $1,000 in savings, its my only asset, it's worth, on paper, $75,000. I can only afford to have a lawyer in this case because part of my retirement includes pre paid legal services.
So, who wants to be the farm on this, if it goes to trial, either way? Is a jury gonna take a truly innocent "net winner" and throw him out of house and home? Note, he got involved because of the advice of an outwardly expert adviser, sanctioned by the industry and State, anyone think that might be enough to be called "a defense"?
Aside from his many other errors in how the real world works, our commentator makes many glaring errors because he fails to even recognize the vocabulary of the various fields and professions he speaks of with so little credibility.
A trial may be called "begun" at many different stages by laymen, the technical definition I would defer to the opinion of someone who practices law, or is qualified to do so. A defense is, to me at least, some reason why what the complaint states is not wholly true, and that doesn't mean it has to work, or is even very good, but as I think I've shown above, there is at least one coherent defense to being a big winner in the ponzi fraud game, even if you pocketed a few checks above what you put in.
My own biggest problem with our friend is that, on more than several occasions, he has openly taunted and questioned to opinions of genuine experts to the point of being like a heckler in a crowd at an expert performance. He has tried to lecture law to attorneys, accounts to accountants, forensic reconstruction to people who have done it more than a few times and I took personal offense at least once myself on his counter to my views on some banking detail or another, the area in which I earned my doctorate and one of my master's degrees. All this without taking into account that the long time regulars of this board, of which he was distinctly not at the time, have seen dozens and in some cases HUNDREDS of ponzi schemes rise, fall and the aftermath both legal and financial. Which is just all a fancy way of saying he was a first rate no-it-all prick a few times or more.
I am, and have never apologized for being, an arrogant son of bitch myself. I allow myself that indulgence because, well, it works out more often than not, to be honest. I do kind of understand what he's aiming for and missing so wide. On most matters outside my chosen fields I defer to the views of the experts, and as for building cars and, oddly enough, central banking, I pretty much don't feel inadequate to participate in the discussions with people widely held to be expert. As a hobby I've spent more than 10 years studying scams and online fraud, which is longer than I spent by far earning any one of my degrees, and as such feel as if I know more about them than most people. In perfect frankness, I don't like being mocked about how I feel about building cars, central banking/economics/accounting, or analyzing scams by many people, least of all by someone with all the style and subtlety of a 14 year old boy in a brothel with a gift certificate.
As Forrest Gump would say "and that's all I'm gonna say about that"