logo
‘Bernie Madoff of cows' orchestrated $100M ‘ghost cattle' Ponzi scheme: lawsuit

‘Bernie Madoff of cows' orchestrated $100M ‘ghost cattle' Ponzi scheme: lawsuit

New York Post6 days ago
Victims of an alleged $100 million Ponzi scheme orchestrated by a Kentucky rancher dubbed the 'Bernie Madoff of cows' have filed suit against lenders for allegedly failing to heed red flags, according to a report.
Brian McClain, of Benton, Ky. — who died by suicide at age 52 on April 18, 2023, just days before the fraud was uncovered — is accused of orchestrating a yearslong 'ghost cattle' scheme that promised investors 30% returns while relying on borrowed money to pay off early participants.
Last week, McClain's victims filed a class action lawsuit against Community Financial Services Bank, Rabo AgriFinance and Mechanics Bank – alleging that the lenders enabled the fraud and ignore 'clear signs of misconduct, causing devastating financial losses for dozens of Kentucky investors.'
Advertisement
4 Brian McClain, 52, of Benton, Ken., has been dubbed the 'Bernie Madoff of cows.'
Collier Funeral Home
News of the lawsuit was reported by The Independent.
'CFSB strongly denies the allegations in question, and believe the claims against the bank to be entirely without merit,' the bank said in a statement to The Post.
Advertisement
'The bank through counsel has filed a Motion to Dismiss in the suit brought by the bankruptcy trustee.'
McClain's operation appeared to grow on paper — but in reality, the livestock didn't exist, according to Drovers Magazine, a trade publication covering the beef cattle industry.
4 While McClain claimed to have 88,000 head of cattle, only about 10,000 were found during an audit, exposing the bulk of the herd as 'ghost cattle,' according to a lawsuit.
Luis – stock.adobe.com
According to those familiar with the case, the business relied on a classic Ponzi scheme structure, where new investments were used to pay earlier backers. As his paper herd grew, the gap between reality and records ballooned.
Advertisement
The scheme collapsed in April when officials at Rabo AgriFinance, McClain's primary lender, discovered a massive discrepancy in inventory.
While McClain claimed to have 88,000 head of cattle, only about 10,000 were found during an audit, exposing the bulk of the herd as 'ghost cattle,' according to a lawsuit cited by Drovers.
The fallout has shaken the local agricultural community and left many investors grappling with financial losses and a sense of betrayal.
Many of McClain's alleged victims were people from his own community — friends and neighbors who say they were blindsided by someone they trusted. His promises of unusually high returns lured in dozens of investors, some of whom initially received payouts that appeared legitimate.
Advertisement
4 Last week, McClain's victims filed a class action lawsuit against Community Financial Services Bank.
CFSB
After McClain's death last year, representatives from Rabo AgriFinance seized the remaining cattle from McClain's operation and sold them through Blue Grass Stockyards.
Three of McClain's companies — McClain Farms in Benton, Ky.; 7M Cattle Feeders in Hereford, Texas; and McClain Feed Yard in Friona, Texas — filed for bankruptcy on April 28, 2023 in US Bankruptcy Court for the Northern District of Texas.
The US Department of Agriculture said unpaid livestock sellers may be protected under the Packers and Stockyards Act of 1921, which requires that all livestock purchased by a dealer in cash sales, along with any receivables or proceeds from those livestock, be held in trust for the benefit of unpaid sellers.
4 Bernie Madoff was a former Nasdaq chairman who ran the largest Ponzi scheme in history, defrauding thousands of investors
Steven Hirsch
Bernie Madoff was a former Nasdaq chairman who ran the largest Ponzi scheme in history, defrauding thousands of investors by using new money to pay fake returns to earlier clients.
His scheme, which created the illusion of nearly $65 billion in profits, collapsed in 2008 during the financial crisis. Madoff pleaded guilty in 2009 and was sentenced to 150 years in prison, where he died in 2021 at age 82.
The Post has sought comment from Rabo AgriFinance, Mechanics Bank, the USDA and trustees.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Miami money advisor accused of swindling $94M from Venezuelans, Catholic groups
Miami money advisor accused of swindling $94M from Venezuelans, Catholic groups

Miami Herald

time2 days ago

  • Miami Herald

Miami money advisor accused of swindling $94M from Venezuelans, Catholic groups

An investment adviser who lives in a Coconut Grove luxury high-rise condo was arrested Thursday on charges of operating a Ponzi scheme and swindling tens of millions of dollars from Venezuelan investors and two Catholic dioceses in the South American country, according to a federal indictment. Andrew H. Jacobus 'induced' dozens of Venezuelans living in South Florida and abroad to sink $94 million into investments that he stole from their accounts over the past two decades, according to the wire-fraud and money-laundering indictment filed in Miami federal court in July. Jacobus, who operated two investment businesses, Finser International Corp. and Kronus Financial Corp., promised yearly investment returns of 12% to 15% on certificates of deposit and other fixed-income securities as he secretly fleeced investors until some got wise to him in 2023 and complained to federal authorities, the indictment says. 'As a result, Jacobus had to use new investor funds to pay existing investors their promised returns to conceal the Ponzi scheme and the actual performance of the investments with the companies,' according to the indictment filed by Assistant U.S. Attorney Robert Moore. Jacobus, 64, could not be reached for comment because he's being held at the Federal Detention Center in Miami. No defense lawyer was listed for him on the court docket. In addition to the indictment, the Securities and Exchange Commission also recently sued Jacobus and his companies, alleging he committed the same fraud scheme in a civil lawsuit. The Venezuelan investors — 10 people are listed by their initials and two others as faith-based organizations in the indictment — turned to the United States as a safe haven to protect their money as their country economically collapsed during the administrations of Hugo Chavez and Nicolas Maduro. In recent years, several investors sued Jacobus and his firm, accusing them of fraud and civil theft involving tens of millions of dollars, according to civil court filings. They also notified the SEC, which had sanctioned Jacobus over pocketing exorbitant fees in a cease-and-desist order in 2020 when he and his Coral Gables-based firm, Finser International Corp., managed about $79 million in investment funds. Jacobus' investors accused their former investment advisor of withholding and misappropriating their funds after they demanded he return their money in recent years, according to at least four lawsuits filed in Miami-Dade Circuit Court. Among Jacobus' victims: a renowned sculptor, a plastic surgeon, and a wealthy businessman who owns a crane business, all from Venezuela, according to court records. Records show that Beatriz Aleman, an investment manager herself, and her husband, James Mathison, a sculptor whose work has been exhibited at shows in Miami, Venezuela and Europe, have had an investment relationship with Jacobus dating back to 2012. In their lawsuit, the couple said they invested about $2 million with Jacobus through the fall of 2022 and Aleman herself referred more than 20 investors to him over the past decade. The couple's lawyer, Clarissa Rodriguez, said that before filing suit, she sent a letter to Jacobus demanding that he return the couple's money — but he refused. The couple pursued legal action against Jacobus after they initially asked him to turn over about $760,000 in savings that he invested with the discount online firm, Interactive Brokers. According to the couple's suit, Aleman grew suspicious of Jacobus when she asked him to transfer $200,000 from her Interactive account to her bank in May 2023. In an email, Aleman gave him instructions on where to wire the money, but Jacobus gave her excuses about transferring it, according to the suit. She then asked for a conference call with Jacobus, and he responded in an email that he was tired of repeating himself 'ad nauseum' on the phone about the reasons for the delay. But they had never talked on the phone about the money transfer, leading Aleman to believe Jacobus 'gaslighted' her, according to the couple's suit. Aleman learned from Interactive that her log-in credentials no longer existed and that the email address on file for her account had been changed to Jacobus', the suit states. She found out that 'Jacobus had cleaned out her account,' leaving Aleman with only $15,000 in savings at Interactive. A representative told Aleman that the monthly statements Jacobus had sent her showing her savings intact were 'fake.' On June 21, 2023, Jacobus admitted that he took her money for his own personal needs. 'I want to begin this note by asking for your forgiveness,' Jacobus emailed Aleman in Spanish, which was translated in the couple's court filing. 'I needed to make an urgent payment and without consulting you first, I boldly borrowed funds in your account at Interactive, with all the intention of returning them to you with a 15% return and without causing you any loss.' Aleman and her husband, Mathison, never got back their money, according to their lawyer, Rodriguez. The first two cases accusing Jacobus of fraud and other civil violations were brought in 2022 by Miami attorney Michael Padula, a former prosecutor at the Justice Department and U.S. Attorney's Office who had focused on white-collar crime. Padula's two cases filed in Miami, in which he accused Jacobus of running a 'Ponzi scheme' by using newer investors' money to pay off older ones, caught the attention of other Venezuelans who invested millions of dollars with Jacobus. Padula's clients, Fermin Suarez, a wealthy Venezuelan crane business owner, and Tubalcain Morales, who lives in Venezuela and Spain, reached respective settlements with Jacobus totaling about $18.5 million and $650,000, according to court records. But recovering their funds from him proved difficult, Padula said. Another investor with Jacobus, Manuel Egea, a plastic surgeon residing in Venezuela, has also filed suit in Miami, claiming he invested his 'life savings' of about $9.5 million with him. The surgeon's money was mostly placed in fixed-income investment funds that regularly yielded substantial monthly returns for years, his lawsuit states. But in 2023, Egea claims in his suit, the payments stopped. 'Since March 2023, [Egea] has made several written requests to withdraw portions of [his] investment,' the suit states. 'Despite the various requests, [Jacobus and his company] have refused to transfer any of [Egea's] money, without justification.'

Crypto: Searching For Salvation Or Scams
Crypto: Searching For Salvation Or Scams

Forbes

time3 days ago

  • Forbes

Crypto: Searching For Salvation Or Scams

A psychedelic vision of crypto spirituality, where meditation meets decentralization. CoinStructive, Inc. Deep in a coastal pocket of Montenegro, fog lingers over a makeshift village where the morning stillness is broken by the sound of meditative chants, laptop keystrokes, and the occasional impromptu DAO meeting. This is Zuzalu: an ephemeral, invite-only enclave dreamed up by Ethereum's Vitalik Buterin, equal parts tech incubator and techno-spiritual crypto commune. Attendees sip mushroom tea, debate the metaphysics of decentralization, and chart a new world, one block at a time. There are no signs, no sponsors, and no set agenda. There is just the conviction that something sacred is being built. Something more than money. But these crypto enclaves are not completely fringe. They are multiplying. From jungles in Central America to Latter-Day Saints compounds in Missouri, blockchain believers are gathering for what often resembles a cross between a startup retreat, a Burning Man temple camp, and a 1970s New Age awakening. Ayahuasca ceremonies or iconoclastic rituals are paired with token launches. Yoga flows into pitch decks. And enlightenment now comes with a whitepaper. This raises an uneasy question: is this the dawn of a new techno-spiritual order, or is it just a very well-branded scam? Crypto has always attracted zealots. Not just traders or developers, but those with a near-religious belief that code can liberate humanity from corruption, surveillance, and mediocrity. Add psychedelics, utopian architecture, and a distrust of fiat reality, and you do not just get a movement. You get a 'mission.' These retreats and micro-communities, Zuzalu included, present themselves not as vacations, but as experiments in post-nation-state living. Participants pay in ETH or stablecoins, sometimes via NFTs that act as passports. Workshops oscillate between talks on zk-rollups and quantum healing. Even Ethereum itself has spiritual roots. Vitalik once mused about 'ether' as the invisible medium for decentralized connection. To some, this is not metaphor, but gospel. Crypto believers sometimes call this 'the alignment era,' or 'crypto alignment,' where code, consciousness, and capital converge. It is seen as a transitory movement designed to outgrow the old world. While it is easy to dismiss these spaces as woo-woo playgrounds for the rich and bored, sometimes, they can be tools for exploitation. Take NovaTechFX, led by a woman who called herself 'Reverend CEO.' She blended Pentecostal-style sermons with promises of 3% weekly crypto returns. The SEC called it a Ponzi scheme. By the time it collapsed, nearly $1 billion was gone. These 'sermon' tapes still circulate on YouTube. Then there is INDXcoin, a Colorado-based 'Christian crypto' that raised $3.4 million from churchgoers. Investors were promised divine favor and a safe return. What they got was an illiquid token and a founder who claimed, under oath, that God told him to launch it. Cult, Scam, or Prototype for the Future? Nevertheless, not all of these communities are fraudulent. Zuzalu is, by most accounts, earnest—idealistic, even. It birthed spin-off projects focused on digital identity, biotech, and governance. Its residents speak in a blend of code and philosophy, quoting Satoshi and Foucault in the same breath. Even the psychedelic retreats, for all their cultish aesthetics, sometimes leave attendees with genuine breakthroughs of emotional clarity, entrepreneurial direction, or otherwise. Yet, there is a case to be made that these are just the messy early chapters of what could be a new civic structure. If a nation-state was built on borders and banks, maybe a post-state emerges from wallets and vibes. But when do we start labeling these collectives as cults? Do we consider the rituals? The charismatic founders? The token-gated access? Or the certainty of an unshakeable belief that this is the path to collective salvation, and everything else is FUD? At the edge of a Zu village, one attendee lights sage over a hardware wallet. Someone else codes a smart contract barefoot in the grass. A startup founder with a shamanic tattoo explains how DAOs will replace democracy, and then invites you to a cacao ceremony. Is this a scam? A new faith? Just a very weird off-site Web3 meet-up? Maybe it is salvation. Or maybe it is a grift. Maybe, like most things in Crypto, it is both.

Cesar Pina Pleads Not Guilty To Bribery, Fraud, And Other Charges Brought About By Alleged Ponzi Scheme
Cesar Pina Pleads Not Guilty To Bribery, Fraud, And Other Charges Brought About By Alleged Ponzi Scheme

Yahoo

time4 days ago

  • Yahoo

Cesar Pina Pleads Not Guilty To Bribery, Fraud, And Other Charges Brought About By Alleged Ponzi Scheme

Things have gotten real for Cesar Pina, DJ Envy's former friend and business partner. After being indicted for his alleged Ponzi scheme, the controversial real estate investor has pleaded not guilty to all charges. AllHipHop reported that federal prosecutors laid out all of his charges this Tuesday (July 15). He has been accused of wire fraud, money laundering conspiracy, and bribery, all tied to federally funded programs. The U.S. Attorney's Office stated that he allegedly promised high returns to federal investors and used their money to pay off earlier investors and pocketed the rest. 'Cesar Pina is alleged to have misappropriated millions of dollars of peoples' hard-earned money, laundered money for narcotics traffickers, and bribed a politician in furtherance of real estate projects,' U.S. Attorney Alina Habba said. 'This multi-year torrent of criminal activity hurt investors around the United States, facilitated the scourge of narcotics trafficking, and undermined confidence in our public officials.' The aforementioned politician resided in his home state, New Jersey. Pina allegedly began this underhanded operation in 2017, procuring money by presenting himself as a real estate 'flipper' for residential properties in NJ and elsewhere. He went on to start a company called 'Flipping NJ,' and even convinced a Paterson, NJ, city official to greenlight 'Old School 5,' a real estate project that broadened his alleged illegal ventures. 'Rather than utilize his social media presence for the betterment of society, Mr. Humberto Pina chose to use it to expand his criminal activities,' DEA New Jersey Special Agent in Charge Cheryl Ortiz stated. 'His actions, along with his willingness to launder money from drugs proceeds, is no different than those individuals flooding our streets with illicit and diverted narcotics.' This indictment sets Pina on the path to potential jail time and having to fork over cash. Each wire fraud count could land him up to 20 years in prison and a $250,000 fine. The money laundering charges have the same potential prison time, but the fines are steeper at $500,000. The bribery charges are a bit lighter, at 10 years in prison and a $250,000 fine. More from Cesar Pina, DJ Envy's Former Business Partner, May Take Plea Deal In Real Estate Fraud Case Killer Mike Says He "Never Endorsed" Alleged Fraudster Cesar Pina After Video Of Them Together Surfaces Cesar Pina Claims DJ Envy Is Innocent Amid Real Estate Fraud Case Solve the daily Crossword

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store