By ROBERT CHEW (for Time.com)

With so many Ponzis and so little time to know if you’ve been hoodwinked, there are some red flags even the most trusting investors can bank on: yachts, mansions, jets and women. If your investment adviser is dabbling in any of the above, there’s a good chance you’ve been “Ponzi-ed” or are about to be.
Creating the illusion of fantastic success, of course, is chapter one in the Scammer’s Handbook. But many, like R. Allen Stanford and Bernie Madoff, among the most egregious alleged billionaire bamboozlers, are taking the art of thievery to the next level. Some don’t even bother opening an investor account when new monies come in, they just go shopping. It’s enough to make Gordon “Greed is Good” Gecko blush.
Take Stephen Walsh and Paul Greenwood, operators of Westridge Capital Management, with $1.3 billion in assets, who last week were charged by The Commodity Futures Trading Commission for allegedly “misappropriating” at least $553 million for either personal expenses or to cover trading losses. The CFTC is the sister agency of the Securities and Exchange Commission and covers fraud in the commodities, futures, and foreign exchange markets.
Read the original TIME story
Posted via email from Jay’s posterous
Start Slide Show with PicLens Lite 
            Tags: How to spot a Ponzi Con Artist, Madoff scandal Ponzi scam, Ponzi Con Artist


 Subscribe Newsletter
Subscribe Newsletter Contact
Contact Rss
Rss Entrepreneur.com – Small Business News and Articles – Latest Articles
 Entrepreneur.com – Small Business News and Articles – Latest Articles