Press Release
Slidell Man Sentenced for Operating a National Ponzi Scheme
For Immediate Release
U.S. Attorney's Office, Eastern District of Louisiana
U.S. Attorney Kenneth A. Polite announced that JOHN SPOSATO, age 64, of Slidell, was sentenced today after previously pleading guilty to wire fraud for his role in promoting and operating a national Ponzi scheme.
U.S. District Judge Susie Morgan sentenced SPOSATO to 84 months imprisonment to be followed by 3 years of supervised release. Additionally, SPOSATO was ordered to pay $2,559,725 in restitution.
According to court documents, since approximately 2010, SPOSATO was affiliated with, owned, or operated numerous different companies, including Pegasus Investment & Development Corporation, LLC; Pegasus Investments; Oil Eaters, LLC; Organic Miracle Incorporation; S&J Corporate Properties, LLC; Pegasus Demolition & Debris Removal Service, LLC; and Pegasus Truck Lines, Inc. SPOSATO represented to potential investors that the companies were all investment entities that offered participants the chance to invest in various low-risk, high-reward investment vehicles, including international bank instruments, cutting edge oil remediation and recovery products, and real estate transactions. SPOSATO primarily relied upon word-of-mouth and e-mail correspondence, in which he fraudulently represented that he had knowledge and expertise in financial investing, to attract new investors. SPOSATO told investors that the alleged investments were safe, secure, and never at risk.
In fact, SPOSATO did not actually invest the money in any legitimate investment vehicle, instead using it to make retail purchases for himself and his friends for various goods and services, including luxury items such as a new Chevrolet Camaro for one girlfriend and breast augmentation surgery for another girlfriend. In total, between about January 2010, and April 2014, approximately forty-eight (48) individuals invested approximately $811,305 with SPOSATO and his companies.
To perpetuate his scheme, SPOSATO guaranteed extraordinarily high rates of return – rates much higher than market rates – for so called “guaranteed” investments to potential investors, such as a $25,000 investment in “oil-clean remediation work” in the Gulf of Mexico and another $25,000 investment in the purchase of “1,000,000 gallons of EP 55 Bio Fertile” fertilizer. SPOSATO promised that the first investment would result in a profit of $25,000 within approximately two weeks and the second investment would result in a profit of up to $3,000,000 within one year. SPOSATO provided prospective investors false or fraudulent documents to make the investments appear legitimate and to conceal the true nature of the Ponzi scheme. When investors became impatient, SPOSATO used new investor money to make lulling payments to other investors, which he characterized as partial payments for investments with an overdue return, in an effort to give investors a false sense of security, to deceive investors into believing their money was invested legitimately, and to conceal the true nature of the Ponzi scheme.
U.S. Attorney Polite praised the work of the Federal Bureau of Investigation in investigating this matter. Assistant United States Attorney Jordan Ginsberg was in charge of the prosecution.
Updated November 30, 2016
Topic
Financial Fraud
Component