Skip to main content
Press Release

Former New Hampshire Investment Banker Sentenced To 18 Months In Prison For Defrauding Client Of $2 Million

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

          CONCORD, N.H. -  Acting United States Attorney John J. Farley announced that Karl Edward Hahn, 44, of Manchester, Connecticut and formerly of New Castle, New Hampshire was sentenced to serve 18 months in prison for participating in a wire fraud scheme that defrauded a victim of approximately $2 million.

 

          According to court records and statements in court, Hahn lived in New Hampshire and was employed as an investment advisor at investment banks in Portsmouth, New Hampshire. Starting as early as March of 2009 and continuing until July of 2010, he invited one of his investment clients to join him in what he referred to as an “off the books” investment. He described that investment as follows: Hahn and the victim would each contribute approximately $2 million, which Hahn would then loan to three individuals who would repay the money within 90 days with interest substantially above market rates. Hahn told the victim the “loan” would be secured by three pieces of residential real estate, one owned by each of the three borrowers, which were all unencumbered and which collectively had a value far in excess of the approximately $4 million loan.

 

           Hahn told the victim that no one could know about the investment, including the defendant’s employer, because he was not allowed to enter into financial dealings with clients other than through his employment. In order to prevent his employer from learning of the “off the books” transaction, Hahn asked the victim to transfer the money into a bank account held by one of Hahn’s relatives and that Hahn would then get the money from his relative.

 

           The victim agreed and transferred to Hahn’s relative’s account, in separate transactions, $300,000, $1,600,000, $100,000, and $35,000, totaling $2,035,000. Hahn later admitted that the entire story of landowners wanting to borrow money was false, that there never were three landowners who wanted to borrow money collateralizing the loans with deeds, and that loans were never made to any landowners using the victim’s money. Hahn simply used the victim’s money to pay personal expenses. In 2011, the New Hampshire Bureau of Securities Regulation barred Hahn from being licensed to sell securities.

 

          Hahn also admitted that during the course of executing the scheme, he made additional materially false representations to the victim that lulled him into a false sense of security and caused him to temporarily refrain from reporting his dealings with the defendant to law enforcement authorities. Those false statements included: 1) that the supposed borrowers had defaulted on the loans; 2) that as a result of the alleged defaults, Hahn had possession of the deeds to the supposed borrowers’ properties; and 3) that Hahn had communicated with a hedge fund so the hedge fund could buy the properties, thereby resulting in the return of the victim’s money with interest. Hahn also later falsely represented to the victim that he had been successful in working with the supposed hedge fund and that he was confident that the victim would have his money back by early August of 2010.

 

          Hahn, who previously pleaded guilty, will be required to begin serving his sentence on December 4, 2017.

 

          This case was investigated by the FBI and United States Secret Service and was prosecuted by Assistant United States Attorney Arnold H. Huftalen.

 

 

 

###

 

Updated November 8, 2017

Topic
Securities, Commodities, & Investment Fraud