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Press Release

California Investment Manager Found Guilty after Trial for Leading $33 Million Fraud Scheme

For Immediate Release
U.S. Attorney's Office, District of Utah

            SALT LAKE CITY - A California investment manager was found guilty in federal court in Salt Lake City, Utah, late Tuesday afternoon for his role in a $33 million investment fraud scheme.

            Robert L. Holloway, 55, was found guilty after a seven-day trial by a federal jury in the District of Utah of four counts of wire fraud and one count of making and subscribing a false income tax return.

            Evidence presented at trial established that Holloway operated an investment entity called US Ventures LC, which was founded in 1999. Holloway served as the chief executive officer and managing partner of US Ventures. From October 2005 until at least April 2007, Holloway recruited investors for US Ventures by making false representations about the company, including that US Ventures used proprietary trading software that was consistently profitable, US Ventures generated returns of 0.8 percent per trading day and US Ventures would retain a 30 percent share of investors’ profits as a management fee.

            Additionally, during the course of US Ventures’ existence, Holloway generated and distributed reports to investors showing false daily returns on their investments. The evidence introduced at trial showed that between October 2005 and April 2007, contrary to the returns shown on the reports Holloway distributed, US Ventures in fact lost more than $10 million in trading and the “profit” figures on the investor reports were entirely fabricated. Holloway and US Ventures also made “profit distributions” to investors that consisted of funds solicited from new investors, not actual profits. US Ventures raised more than $33 million from investors for its trading activities.

            Evidence at trial also showed that Holloway misappropriated investors’ funds for a variety of personal expenses, including supporting his then-wife’s eBay business and purchasing hundreds of thousands of dollars of jewelry. During 2006 alone, Holloway diverted more than $1.2 million in investor funds to a “business” account that Holloway used for as a personal account, despite the fact that he falsely claimed a gross income of only $27,500 on his personal tax return for 2006.

            U.S. District Court Judge Robert J. Shelby, who presided over the trial, set sentencing for October 20, 2014. Judge Shelby ordered Holloway to be taken into custody following the jury verdict.

            The case was investigated by the FBI’s Salt Lake City Field Office and the IRS-CI’s Las Vegas Field Office. This case was prosecuted by Assistant U.S. Attorney Jason R. Burt from the U.S. Attorney’s Office in Utah and Trial Attorney Thomas B.W. Hall of the Criminal Division’s Fraud Section. The department thanks the Commodity Futures Trading Commission and the Securities and Exchange Commission for their assistance.

Updated March 17, 2015

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