Yes and no. Let's say Menard was successful in his GoFundMe campaign for his C3PO dream and got a pile of money to promote his private police force ideas. When he failed (which he would) that can be considered just a pie in the sky scheme that didn't work out. If people gave him money for that and the money just disappeared with no results, tough. Rob might well believe in it himself and be sincere in his plans. He's just fighting a hopeless battle.Kiwi is right. Legally the gurus are not committing fraud generally. People go to them. Get told what they want to hear. Then give them some money.
Bad advice? Generally.
Morally reprehensible? Often yes.
Illegal? Generally no.
Every multi millionaire religious grifter on the TV would be in jail. Along with the psychics and peddlers of everything from yoga to acupuncture. And many of the medical ones actually harm and/or kill people.
People have a right to spout bs as much as folks have a right to buy it and belive it.
But if he ran an ACCP scheme saying that paying him $250 a month will allow participants to pay off ten times that amount of debt that might be fraud if he issued worthless credit cards that didn't work and he knew they wouldn't work. We don't know because his plan didn't get off the ground and, like the Peter of England WeRe scheme, it appears nobody can be bothered to get all official about it. Point is that giving a guru money may or may not involve a fraudulent scheme depending on what the scheme is, what was promised, if deceit and sham was involved, and what the guru actually did compared to what he promised to do. Dean Clifford is going to jail but I don't think anyone here claims he's acted fraudulently. He was convicted of crimes totally unrelated to fraud. He's frantically trying to get money right now but there is no hint of fraud involved. He's just asking for it to promote his grandiose dreams. So ninja is right, the various gurus are not committing fraud generally but some might be on specific schemes.
Now K1W1, you say;
What is the "it" that I'm saying is fraudulent? Rub my nose in it with a quote from my past comments rather than just making an unfocused unsupported statement. If you are talking about the COMER lawsuit, the point of this discussion, there is nothing whatever fraudulent about it. It is just legally wrong and the applicants will lose. However from that vague statement you build to this;Burnaby, you say it’s a fraud because (shock, horror!) people give them money.
This implies that I've somehow, somewhere, said that any money paid to any guru for any reason involves fraud. So please, verify with a quote from a past statement instead of just attributing positions to me. Actually I agree with you in general. If you want to empty out your piggy bank and give it all to Menard to get you a shiny toy policeman's badge go for it, that's your right.I hate to inform you of this at this stage of your life, Burnaby, but people are allowed to spend their money as they see fit, not how you might want them to spend their money, and if they believe giving their money to a so-called guru is best for them then it’s none of your business nor anyone else’s. [Edit: Actually, I didn’t hate doing that at all; someone had to. Lol.]
But if that was all that constitutes committing a fraud, receiving money from people for an idiotology, for a bullshit idea or theory, then the likes of Ray Comfort would have been jailed years ago.
I've noticed that nobody over at WFS has posted about the Federal Court's comments regarding the implications of the Mancuso case. No doubt You're going to get right on it.