Sunday, 9 November 2014

"World's future richest man" arrested in Phuket

Zhang Jian.
BANGKOK: Chinese national Zhang Jian, the self-proclaimed "future richest man in the world", has been arrested in Thailand.
According to Thailand daily The Nation, he was arrested by local police over a pyramid scheme that reportedly duped people in China and Malaysia out of 6bil bhat (RM600mil) and 3bil bhat (RM300mil) respectively.
Police are looking for Thais who may have been caught in the scheme, which was launched in June.
They also seized assets from the three worth 240mil bhat (RM24mil) in total.
The daily also reported that Bangkok police arrested Song Miqui, 37, and Wang Wenfang, 29, at a condominium in Pathumwan on Monday and seized cash in various currencies worth nearly 1mil bhat (RM100,000) in total, five Phuket land sale contracts worth 22.3mil bhat (RM2.3mil) two Phuket land title deeds, Wang's bank account with 1.5mil bhat (RM150,000) in it, and the suspects' Thai ID cards.
The 26-year-old Zhang, who founded the controversial YSLM multi-level marketing business, underwent a 100-day temporary ordination programme at a temple in Phuket since early August.
In early July, Zhang made headlines in the Malaysian media when billboards of him appeared in Penang, proclaiming himself as the "future richest man in the world".
He also awarded his lucky "distributors" with luxury cars.
Malaysia's Domestic Trade, Cooperatives and Consumerism Ministry had launched an investigation on YSLM - also known as Yun Shu Mao - of being linked to a get-rich-quick scam before Zhang left to Thailand.
The company later offered a refund to those who had not introduced any new members to the company.
Hundreds of people accepted the offer.

Sunday, 17 August 2014

The father of Ponzi Scheme

Charles Ponzi

Carlo Pietro Giovanni Guglielmo Tebaldo Ponzi, (March 3, 1882 – January 18, 1949), commonly known as Charles Ponzi, was an Italian businessman and con artist in the U.S. and Canada. His aliases include Charles Ponci, Carlo and Charles P. Bianchi. Born in Italy, he became known in the early 1920s as a swindler in North America for his money making scheme. Charles Ponzi promised clients a 50% profit within 45 days, or 100% profit within 90 days, by buying discounted postal reply coupons in other countries and redeeming them at face value in the United States as a form of arbitrage.In reality, Ponzi was paying early investors using the investments of later investors. This type of scheme is now known as a "Ponzi scheme". His scheme ran for over a year before it collapsed, costing his "investors" $20 million.

Arrival in America

On November 15, 1903, he arrived in Boston aboard the S.S. Vancouver. By his own account, Ponzi had $2.51 in his pocket, having gambled away the rest of his life savings during the voyage. "I landed in this country with $2.50 in cash and $1 million in hopes, and those hopes never left me," he later told The New York Times. He quickly learned English and spent the next few years doing odd jobs along the East Coast, eventually taking a job as a dishwasher in a restaurant, where he slept on the floor. He managed to work his way up to the position of waiter, but was fired for shortchanging the customers and theft.

Ponzi aka "Charles Bianchi" under arrest circa 1910

In 1907, Ponzi moved to Montreal and became an assistant teller in the newly opened Banco Zarossi, a bank started by Luigi "Louis" Zarossi to service the influx of Italian immigrants arriving in the city. Zarossi paid 6% interest on bank deposits – double the going rate at the time – and was growing rapidly as a result. Ponzi eventually rose to bank manager. However, he found out that the bank was in serious financial trouble because of bad real estate loans, and that Zarossi was funding the interest payments not through profit on investments, but by using money deposited in newly opened accounts. The bank eventually failed and Zarossi fled to Mexico with a large portion of the bank's money.

Ponzi stayed in Montreal and, for some time, lived at Zarossi's house helping the man's abandoned family, while planning to return to the United States and start over. As Ponzi was penniless, this proved to be very difficult. Eventually he walked into the offices of a former Zarossi customer Canadian Warehousing and, finding no one there, wrote himself a check for $423.58 in a checkbook he found, forging the signature of a director of the company, Damien Fournier. Confronted by police who had taken note of his large expenditures just after the forged check was cashed, Ponzi held out his hands wrist up and said "I'm guilty." He ended up spending three years at St. Vincent-de-Paul Federal Penitentiary, a bleak facility located on the outskirts of Montreal. Rather than inform his mother of this development, he posted her a letter stating that he had found a job as a "special assistant" to a prison warden.

After his release in 1911 he decided to return to the United States, but got involved in a scheme to smuggle Italian illegal immigrants across the border. He was caught and spent two years in Atlanta Prison. Here he became a translator for the warden, who was intercepting letters from mobster Ignazio "the Wolf" Lupo. Ponzi ended up befriending Lupo. It was another prisoner who became a true role model to Ponzi: Charles W. Morse. Morse, a wealthy Wall Street businessman and speculator, fooled doctors during medical exams, poisoning himself by eating soap shavings, toxins that left his body as quickly as the doctors left his bedside. Morse was soon released from prison. Ponzi completed his prison term following Morse's release, having an additional month added to his term due to his inability to pay a $500 fine.

Origin of the term "Ponzi scheme"

After Ponzi's release from prison, he made his way back to Boston. There he met Rose Maria Gnecco, a stenographer, to whom he proposed marriage. Though Ponzi did not tell Gnecco about his years in jail, his mother sent Gnecco a letter telling her of Ponzi's past. Nonetheless, she married him in 1918. For the next few months, he worked at a number of businesses, including his father-in-law's grocery, before hitting upon an idea to sell advertising in a large business listing to be sent to various businesses. Ponzi was unable to sell this idea to businesses, and his company failed soon after.

A few weeks later, Ponzi received a letter from a company in Spain asking about the catalog. Inside the envelope was an international reply coupon (IRC), something which he had never seen before. He asked about the IRC and found a weakness in the system which would, in theory, allow him to make money.
 The purpose of the postal reply coupon was to allow someone in one country to send it to a correspondent in another country, who could use it to pay the postage of a reply. IRCs were priced at the cost of postage in the country of purchase, but could be exchanged for stamps to cover the cost of postage in the country where redeemed; if these values were different, there was a potential profit. Inflation after World War I had greatly decreased the cost of postage in Italy expressed in U.S. dollars, so that an IRC could be bought cheaply in Italy and exchanged for U.S. stamps of higher value, which could then be sold. Ponzi claimed that the net profit on these transactions, after expenses and exchange rates, was in excess of 400%. This was a form of arbitrage, or profiting by buying an asset at a lower price in one market and immediately selling it in a market where the price is higher, which is not illegal.

Seeing an opportunity, Ponzi quit his translator's job to set his scheme in motion. He borrowed money and sent it back to relatives in Italy with instructions to buy postal coupons and send them to him. However, when he tried to redeem them, he ran into an avalanche of red tape.Undaunted, Ponzi went to several of his friends in Boston and promised that he would double their investment in 90 days. The great returns available from postal reply coupons, he explained to them, made such incredible profits easy. Some people invested and were paid off as promised, receiving $750 interest on initial investments of $1,250.

Soon afterward, Ponzi started his own company, the "Securities Exchange Company," to promote the scheme. He set up shop in a building on School Street. Word spread, and investments came in at an ever-increasing rate. Ponzi hired agents and paid them generous commissions for every dollar they brought in. By February 1920, Ponzi's total take was US$5,000, (approximately US$54,000 in 2010 dollars). By March, he had made $30,000 ($324,000 in 2010 terms). A frenzy was building, and Ponzi began to hire agents to take in money from all over New England and New Jersey. At that time, investors were being paid impressive rates, encouraging others to invest. By May 1920, he had made $420,000 ($4.53 million in 2010 terms).

He began depositing the money in the Hanover Trust Bank of Boston (a small bank on Hanover Street in the mostly Italian North End), in the hope that once his account was large enough he could impose his will on the bank or even be made its president; he bought a controlling interest in the bank through himself and several friends after depositing $3 million. By July 1920, he had made millions. People were mortgaging their homes and investing their life savings. Most did not take their profits, but reinvested.

Ponzi was bringing in cash at a fantastic rate, but the simplest financial analysis would have shown that the operation was running at a large loss. As long as money kept flowing in, existing investors could be paid with the new money. This was the only way Ponzi had to pay off those investors, as he made no effort to generate legitimate profits.

Ponzi lived luxuriously: he bought a mansion in Lexington, Massachusetts, with air conditioning and a heated swimming pool, and he maintained accounts in several banks across New England besides Hanover Trust. He also brought his mother from Italy in a first-class stateroom on an ocean liner. She died soon afterward. On July 31, 1920, Ponzi told Father Pasquale Di Milla the director of the Italian Children's Home in Jamaica Plain that he would donate $100,000 in honor of his mother.

Suspicion

Ponzi's rapid rise naturally drew suspicion. When a Boston financial writer suggested there was no way Ponzi could legally deliver such high returns in a short period of time, Ponzi sued for libel and won $500,000 in damages. As libel law in those days placed the burden of proof on the writer and the paper, this effectively neutralized any serious probes into his dealings for some time.

Nonetheless, there were still signs of his eventual ruin. Joseph Daniels, a Boston furniture dealer who had given Ponzi furniture which he could not afford to pay for, sued Ponzi to cash in on the gold rush. The lawsuit was unsuccessful, but it did start people asking how Ponzi could have gone from being penniless to being a millionaire in so short a time. There was a run on the Securities Exchange Company, as some investors decided to pull out. Ponzi paid them and the run stopped. On July 24, 1920, the Boston Post printed a favorable article on Ponzi and his scheme that brought in investors faster than ever. At that time, Ponzi was making $250,000 a day. Ponzi's good fortune was increased by the fact that just below this favorable article, which seemed to imply that Ponzi was indeed returning 50% return on investment after only 45 days, was a bank advertisement that stated that the bank was paying 5% returns annually. The next business day after this article was published, Ponzi arrived at his office to find thousands of Bostonians waiting to give him their money.

Despite this reprieve, Post acting publisher Richard Grozier and city editor Eddie Dunn were suspicious and assigned investigative reporters to check Ponzi out. He was also under investigation by the Commonwealth of Massachusetts, and on the day the Post printed its article, Ponzi met with state officials. He managed to divert the officials from checking his books by offering to stop taking money during the investigation, a fortunate choice, as proper records were not being kept. Ponzi's offer temporarily calmed the suspicions of the state officials.

Collapse of the scheme

By this time, Ponzi was seeking another deal to get him out of trouble, but time was running out. On July 26, the Post started a series of articles that asked hard questions about the operation of Ponzi's money machine. The Post contacted Clarence Barron, the financial analyst who published the Barron's financial paper, to examine Ponzi's scheme. Barron observed that though Ponzi was offering fantastic returns on investments, Ponzi himself was not investing with his own company.
Barron then noted that to cover the investments made with the Securities Exchange Company, 160 million postal reply coupons would have to be in circulation. However, only about 27,000 actually were. The United States Post Office stated that postal reply coupons were not being bought in quantity at home or abroad. The gross profit margin in percent on buying and selling each IRC was colossal, but the overhead required to handle the purchase and redemption of these items, which were of extremely low cost and were sold individually, would have exceeded the gross profit.
The stories caused a panic run on the Securities Exchange Company. Ponzi paid out $2 million in three days to a wild crowd outside his office. He canvassed the crowd, passed out coffee and donuts, and cheerfully told them they had nothing to worry about. Many changed their minds and left their money with him. However, this attracted the attention of Daniel Gallagher, the United States Attorney for the District of Massachusetts. Gallagher commissioned Edwin Pride to audit the Securities Exchange Company's books—an effort made difficult by the fact his bookkeeping system consisted merely of index cards with investors' names.

In the meantime, Ponzi had hired a publicity agent, William McMasters. However, McMasters quickly became suspicious of Ponzi's endless talk of postal reply coupons, as well as the ongoing investigation against him. He later described Ponzi as a "financial idiot" who did not seem to know how to add.
The denouement for Ponzi began in late July, when McMasters found several highly incriminating documents that indicated Ponzi was merely robbing Peter to pay Paul. He went to his former employer with this information. The paper offered him $5,000 for his story. On August 2, 1920, McMasters wrote an article for the Post declaring Ponzi hopelessly insolvent. The article claimed that while Ponzi claimed $7 million in liquid funds, he was actually at least $2 million in debt. With interest factored in, McMasters wrote, Ponzi was as much as $4.5 million in the red. The story touched off a massive run, and Ponzi paid off in one day. He then sped up plans to build a massive conglomerate that would engage in banking and import/export operations.
Trouble came from an unexpected quarter—Massachusetts Bank Commissioner Joseph Allen. An initial investigation into Ponzi's banking practices found nothing illegal, but Allen was afraid that if major withdrawals exhausted Ponzi's reserves, it would bring Boston's banking system to its knees. When Allen found out a large number of Ponzi-controlled accounts had received more than $250,000 in loans, he ordered two bank examiners to keep an eye on Ponzi's accounts. On August 9, they reported that enough investors had cashed their checks on Ponzi's main account there that it was almost certainly overdrawn. Allen then ordered Hanover Trust not to pay out any more checks from Ponzi's main account. He also orchestrated an involuntary bankruptcy filing by several small Ponzi investors. The move forced Massachusetts Attorney General J. Weston Allen to release a statement that there was little to support Ponzi's claims of large-scale dealings in postal coupons. State officials then invited Ponzi note holders to come to the Massachusetts State House to furnish their names and addresses for the purpose of the investigation. On the same day, Ponzi received a preview of Pride's audit, which revealed Ponzi was at least $7 million in debt.

On August 11, it all came crashing down for Ponzi. First, the Post came out with a front-page story about his activities in Montreal 13 years earlier—including his forgery conviction and his role at Zarossi's scandal-ridden bank. That afternoon, Bank Commissioner Allen seized Hanover Trust after finding numerous irregularities in its books. Although the commissioner did not know it, this move foiled Ponzi's last-ditch plan to "borrow" funds from the bank vaults after all other efforts to obtain funds failed.
With reports that he was due to be arrested any day, Ponzi surrendered to federal authorities on August 12 and was charged with mail fraud for sending letters to his marks telling them their notes had matured.[10] He was originally released on $25,000 bail, but after the Post released the results of the audit, the bail bondsman withdrew the bail due to concerns he might be a flight risk.

Magnitude of losses

The news brought down five other banks in addition to Hanover Trust. His investors were practically wiped out, receiving less than 30 cents to the dollar. His investors lost about $20 million in 1920 dollars ($225 million in 2011 dollars); as a comparison, Bernard Madoff's similar scheme that collapsed in 2008 cost his investors about $18 billion, 53 times the losses of Ponzi's scheme.

Prison and later life

Ponzi circa 1920

In two federal indictments, Ponzi was charged with 86 counts of mail fraud, and faced a lifetime in jail. At the urging of his wife, Ponzi pleaded guilty on November 1, 1920 to a single count before Judge Clarence Hale, who declared before sentencing, "Here was a man with all the duties of seeking large money. He concocted a scheme which, on his counsel's admission, did defraud men and women. It will not do to have the world understand that such a scheme as that can be carried out ... without receiving substantial punishment." He was sentenced to five years in federal prison.
He was released after three and a half years and was almost immediately indicted on 22 Massachusetts state charges of larceny, which came as a surprise to Ponzi; he thought he had a deal calling for the state to drop any charges against him if he pleaded guilty to the federal charges. He sued, claiming that as a federal prisoner he could not be tried by the state. The case, Ponzi v. Fessenden, made it all the way to the Supreme Court of the United States. On March 27, 1922, the Supreme Court ruled that plea bargains on federal charges have no standing regarding state charges. It also ruled that Ponzi was not facing double jeopardy because Massachusetts was charging him with larceny while the federal government charged him with mail fraud, even though the charges implicated the same criminal operation.

In October 1922, he was tried on the first ten larceny counts. Since he was insolvent, Ponzi served as his own attorney and, being as persuasive as he had been with his duped investors, the jury found him not guilty on all charges. He was tried a second time on five of the remaining charges, and the jury deadlocked. Ponzi was found guilty at a third trial, and was sentenced to an additional seven to nine years in prison as "a common and notorious thief."
After word got out that Ponzi had never obtained American citizenship (despite having lived in the United States for most of the time since 1903), federal officials initiated efforts to have him deported as an undesirable alien in 1922.
Ponzi was released on bail as he appealed the state conviction, and fled to the Springfield neighborhood of Jacksonville, Florida and launched the Charpon Land Syndicate ("Charpon" is an amalgam of his name), offering investors in September 1925 tiny tracts of land, some under water, and promising 200% returns in 60 days. In reality, it was a scam that sold swampland in Columbia County. Ponzi was indicted by a Duval County grand jury in February 1926 and charged with violating Florida trust and securities laws. A jury found him guilty on the securities charges, and the judge sentenced him to a year in the Florida State Prison. Ponzi appealed his conviction and was freed after posting a $1,500 bond.

Ponzi traveled to Tampa, where he shaved his head, grew a mustache, and tried to flee the country as a crewman on a merchant ship bound for Italy. The ship, however, made one last American port call; he was caught in New Orleans and sent back to Massachusetts to serve out his prison term. Ponzi served seven more years in prison.

In the meantime, government investigators tried to trace Ponzi's convoluted accounts to figure out how much money he had taken and where it had gone. They never managed to untangle it and could conclude only that millions had gone through his hands.

Ponzi was released in 1934. With the release came an immediate order to have him deported to Italy. He asked for a full pardon from Governor Joseph B. Ely. However, on July 13, Ely turned the appeal down. His charismatic confidence had faded, and when he left the prison gates, he was met by an angry crowd. He told reporters before he left, "I went looking for trouble, and I found it."

Rose stayed behind and later divorced him in 1937.She had not wanted to leave Boston, and Ponzi would have had no way to support her in any event. Rose, who later remarried, eventually became the bookkeeper for the New Cocoanut Grove Inc, the parent company of Boston's Cocoanut Grove nightclub.
In Italy, Ponzi jumped from scheme to scheme, but little came of them. He eventually got a job in Brazil as an agent for Ala Littoria, the Italian state airline. During World War II, however, the airline's operation in the country was shut down after the British intelligence services intervened and Brazil sided with the Allies. During that time, Ponzi also wrote his autobiography. He was sentenced to 17 total years in prison for fraudulent scam.

Death

Ponzi spent the last years of his life in poverty, working occasionally as a translator. His health suffered. A heart attack in 1941 left him considerably weakened. His eyesight began failing, and by 1948, he was almost completely blind. A brain hemorrhage paralyzed his right leg and arm. He died in a charity hospital in Rio de Janeiro, the Hospital São Francisco de Assis of Federal University of Rio de Janeiro on January 15, 1949.

    Supported by his last and only friend who spoke English and had notions of Italian, the barber Francisco Nonato Nunes, Ponzi granted one last interview to an American reporter, telling him, "Even if they never got anything for it, it was cheap at that price. Without malice aforethought I had given them the best show that was ever staged in their territory since the landing of the Pilgrims! It was easily worth fifteen million bucks to watch me put the thing over."



YSLM Rep Awarded Datoship


KUALA LUMPUR, Aug 7, 2014:
The Pahang Sultanate has conferred the title of “Datuk Seri” to the media officer of controversial company YSLM International, owned by self-proclaimed Chinese millionaire Zhang Jian.
Datuk Seri Jessy Lai confirmed that she was among 10 people conferred titles by the Sultan of Pahang Sultan Ahmad Shah this morning.
Lai apparently told friends about the news by chat message application WeChat although there were no public announcements in the news or photos of the event on YSLM’s official Facebook page.
Pictures of the title conferment were shared via a Facebook account Malaysia Youth Team.
Lai, who later confirmed receiving the title via a phone conversation with The Rakyat Post, said that she believed that the person who publicly announced her new title on Facebook did so out of joy.
Although Lai knew a month back that she would be conferred the title of “Datuk Seri”, she said did not tell others about it because she was busy handling YSLM matters and wanted to keep a low profile.
She was sure that others would attack her over her title, but she did not want to respond or answer those who accused her of cheating.
Lai said she felt happy and was nervous about receiving the honour and denied that she was conferred the title in Thailand.

Saturday, 16 August 2014

Genneva Gold Sdn Bhd Malaysia

I think I know how this Genneva Gold ponzi scam thing works. Assuming that 1 gram of gold is RM100.
  • 1. Five ‘buyers’ buy 1 gram of gold at RM120/g (20% above market price)
  • 2. Genneva collects a total of RM600, bought 6 grams of gold, distributes the other 5, keep 1 gram for themselves.
  • 3. After 1 year, assuming that gold price goes up by 50%, they will then sell the 1 gram of gold to a new buyer for RM180 (market price RM150, marked up 20%).
  • 4. Genneva make a gross profit of RM80. The net profit will probably be 5 buyer x RM2.40 hibah x 6 months (based on contract) = RM72, leaving RM8 for commision, rent, etc.
  • 5. Their prediction is Gold will explode in value, and as long as gold price goes up 50% every year, they will make money or break even.
  • 6. Unfortunately, gold price remained stagnant for almost 1 year. This explains why the pyramid is collapsing and it took them 3 months or more to deliver the gold.
The answer is yes, 100% yes. Genneva Gold ‘investment’ is a Ponzi scheme, also known as a pyramid scheme. To understand how a Ponzi Scheme works, you have to think small, not big. Ask yourself, if you are the founder of Genneva, how do you make money by selling gold at 20 – 30% above market price and continue to give ‘hibah’ up to 1.5 to 5%? It doesn’t make any business sense.
Is Genneva Gold Sdn Bhd Malaysia and Singapore a Ponzi Scheme Scam?
  • The name ‘Genneva’ is already skeptical, it is like buying a BMV or BMMW car or Merdedez-Benc. Geneva (only 1 n, is a famous city in Switzerland, known for their gold watches).
  • If the founder is that good at generating 20 – 30% return per year just by investing gold, BNM should invest the entire country’s wealth with his company and in a few short years time all Malaysians can retire. Every single race will be rich, no more fighting over who is richer.
  • Hopefully EPF will buy gold from Genneva. Then we don’t have measly 5% return every year. Can have 24% return. Then Malaysia will have at least 50% millionaire by 2050 when people retired.
  • Genneva 20 – 30% return outperform every single fund in the world, even Warren Buffett. How is that even remotely possible?
If it is too good to be true, chances are, it is. Common sense tells us that this Genneva is nothing more than a Ponzi Scheme. Putting capital appreciation aside and assumed that you have invested RM100,000 in Genneva Gold. How are they able to pay you the ‘hibah’ on the 2nd year? The capital appreciation is yours to keep, they’ve already return you the 20-25% marked up price when you purchase the gold, therefore the only way for them to continue paying you is none other than to recruit new ‘investors’.
Is Genneva Gold Sdn Bhd Malaysia and Singapore a Ponzi Scheme Scam?
As much as they want to twist the hibah or interest or investor or buyer word, a pyramid scheme is a pyramid scheme regardless of how it is sold to the victims.

World’s Strongest compressed wood table

This is definitely a compressed wood table, and amazingly it hold so many gold bars without collapsing. I am assuming those are 1kg gold bars.
  • (estimate) 21 columns x 30 bars x 1kg = 630kg.
  • Honda City – 1,155 kg

200kg seized gold bullion

Yup, according to Genneva World, BNM seized 200kg gold bullion, to put things into perspective. 200kg is 0.2 tons of gold.
  • Hong Kong Special Administrative Region – 2.1 tons gold
  • Republic of Fiji – 0.2 tons gold
That is 200kg gold in GennevaWorld office, how about those who brought back their physical gold instead of keeping it in their office? Genneva has more gold in their office than many other nations, perhaps even more gold than Maybank, CIMB, Public Bank, Kuwait Financial House and UOB. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gold_reserve

Playing with words

Genneva agents will try to convince you their system works by using bombastic words like ‘revolutionary’ or ‘blue ocean’ or ‘new business model’ etc, the best part is they can’t explain how it generates money. Their mother of all stories is Gold price will always go up and even if Genneva collapsed, they have nothing to fear because the Gold bar is in their hand, that is if they did not leave it with Genneva for safe keeping in exchange for a higher 4-5% hibah per month as oppose to taking 1.5 – 2% hibah for bringing back the gold.
The reason why this pyramid scheme collapse is because Gold price has been stagnant for almost 1 year, it hardly moves up.

Genneva Singapore Doesn’t Pay Their Customer

Probably the market in Singapore has saturated and the pyramid is collapsing or collapsed. Watch the news, if this is not the case of cheating, I am speechless. This is part 2, Youtube for part 1 and 3.
 Credits: http://www.misterleaf.com/2972/is-genneva-gold-sdn-bhd-malaysia-and-singapore-a-scam/

Most Popular Scams in Malaysia


1) The Cafe Scams - Island Red Cafe & Stevens Corner(strange, both in Pandan Indah) - Island Red Cafe collects members RM6,000 each and promised 5% return every month and even give you a name in the ROC as a shareholder but what's the point when they run away ? Stevens Corner, the famous indian coffee shop follows due to drop of business since their renovation. They collect RM3,000 per member and promise return of RM150 monthly and plans to open nice fanchisee cafe called StevensTeaGarden. Someone mentioned they will make you sign an agreement that give them the rights NOT to pay you anything in future. If you really wish to join, ask for a copy of their agreement and consult your lawyer BEFORE paying them. Bet you will NOT get a copy. Both collect monies from new members with MLM recruitment schemes and pay the old members like Sunshine Empire. You never know when they will run away.

2) Sunshine Empire - This licensed and legal Company has an impressive office at the ground level of KUB building along Jalan Yap Kwan Seng, near Menara Public Bank and AmBank Building. They also have a showroom office at the ground level in the next building. 2 or 3 months ago, Singapore's Straits Times and The Paper published big news reminding their people to be careful and NOT to believe in them. Hope someone can put up the link or google for it.(As expected, they STOPPED paying back members now and all investors LOST their money).

Someone below has put a link to the Singapore news. In fact there are more to it. Although Singapore is investigating them, they did not stop their business as the business is legal and so far, no Singaporean have failed to receive their commissions as promised. Thus, the government cannot stop them yet.

The news published that the founder, director and group president is someone named James Phang but he is NOT the owner. Isn't this quite strange ? At the end of the game, James Phang can just disappear from the Company easily and claimed that he was just "employed". Such trick always happened in scam businesses.

Now, the Company has STOPPED paying commissions and interests to members with the excuse that the Singapore government has freezed their bank account while under investigation. Do you think their boss will be so stupid to keep much monies in the bank to be freezed ? They are all transfered away. It's just an excuses not to pay back to members and members are only paid "e-bonus-points" which is cashless. If they wish to convert to cash, they have to recruit new members to pay them cash and the recruiter less out trom the amount. So victims act like Vampires and "forced" to victimise other victims if they wish to get their monies back. And their victims will later transform to vampires and the scam carries on.....

3) MOBILWALLET - This Company owned by 2 young men, Stanley & Rey Gan, office in Queens Avenue Park has collect multi-millions the last 2 years. Claimed that they tied up with Telekoms, Utility Board payment like Water & Electricity bills, even Maybank got fooled by them. Advertisement Billboards everywhere. They STOPPED paying back their members few months ago and the members cannot do anything because they are made to sign an agreement unaware that they have to claims if the company stopped paying them by CHANGING terms and policies.

4) Water businesses - Oxygenated and alkaline water products - Some of these are bottled water and some are filters or equipment that claimed the trick. One of the better known Company that sold "oxygen" water is SITO(supposed to stand for Selangor International Trading Organiszation and claimed Selangor State Government owned some share in it). The key person and founder is a Dato Robert Ong from Rawang but his name is no longer in the business now. Their products are sold for RM2 to RM3 for a 350ml bottle and now concentrating mostly in the Indian market. Their Chinese and Malays market are long gone since a year or 2 ago. Their customers are made to believe that their water has more oxygen and able to give miraculous effects for the body. Water is H2O, how to put more O into it ? Anyone knows how much oxygen do we breathe into our body everyday at FOC ? Latest news is that this SITO Company is going to create new label to market under a new Company since the SITO name has already gone bad. Someone informed that this Company is owing alot of money(due to refunds) to ex-stockists but just refuse to pay them.
(Latest news, SITO shifted to another place and their MLM business has closed but planning to start again with a different name, beware !!)
Alkaline Products - Can anyone explain how it can work for the body ? The stomach's gastric liquid is so acidic that water of any pH that goes through it will not make any difference.

5) Car Fuel Booster - K-Link, the famous scam MLM Company that sold the footpatch TAKARA, later the "cock-ring" and energy-card launched the patrol-saving pills last year. Got so hot that even grocery shops are selling for them. Recently many of these cars that used the pills are rushing to the workshops to clean the residual. Few months ago, another MLM Company launched a fuel booster gadget, claimed that saves up to 20% fuel, that is attached to the cigarette lighter. Started off well using binary plan but businese begin to fade now and most users find it NOT effective.

6) Perfumery Products(eg. Lampe Berger & Bel Air)(more details later). Lampe Berger is not so hot now in the neighbouring countries but there are still new victims every month in Malaysia. Must thanks to those who have contributed and kept the thread alive here in Kopitiam. Bel-Air have closed in Malaysia. LB is almost zero in Singapore. This perfumery product from France with over 100 years history are just bottles and fragrances(check the factory's website) but the Company marketing them in Asia claimed "aromatheraphy" products. Hong Kong TVB aired a program that exposed their scam but their members claimed that HK's TVB already apologised to them(no evidence, of course). Note that the biggest strenght in a MLM Scam is their members will go all the way to lie in order to defend for their Company. The reason is simple; these members fear that they will not be able to make their money back if the Company collapsed. Knowing that the Lampe Berger products are moving slow, they add a line of skincare products named Estebel, also claime to have over 100 years history in France.(Hardly anymore Chinese newcomers, they are now tapping the Malays in Malaysia). Mostly only Bumis active members now but their top earner Steven Yeam have already left and started a new MLM Company(see No. 21 below).


7) Energy Products(eg. stone pendants, bracelets, mattress and pillows). They use all sorts of gimmicks and demonstration to make you into believing them. They will do some tricks and demo to prove that these products really produce energy BUT is there any tricks in their demo ? So what if there really produce energy; is it good or strong enough to help the body ? Are those simple products made of some simple materials worth RM300 to up to RM3000 each ? The effect is actually PLACEBO which I will elaborate in a new thread soon.(more details later)

8) Hi-Tech products(names like bio-tech, nano-tech that claimed millions of dollars of research involved, eg Bio-Young and XKL few years ago). Most of these will claimed a professor behind them(even with name and picture of a person) or used words like "U.S.A. formula", "German Technology" or "Nanotechnology" but with no further details. If you ask for more details like the professor or factory's address, the answer will be "trade secrets".

9) Investment Schemes - SWISSCASH is the King of all. Swisscash is nearly over now but there are many similar and smaller ones that are still on.(Now, it's closed or stopped paying back members)

10) GoldQuest - This Company that claimed to be HK-based started with some non-value gold-plated coins that are sold for over RM2,000 have several names and changed products several times. QuestVacation, QuestNet, etc. They have several offices in Amcorp Mall, PJ and their key person(in fact, the owner), a Malaysian Indian was arrested last year in Indonesia for having involved in a very big Phillipines scam. Most of their overseas offices are closed or inactive but their Malaysia business is still hot, with some "energy" products.(Can someone please provide a link which showed the news that their boss was involved in a big scam in Philippines and was arrested last year ?)

11) Numerology & Fortune telling - A Company named Visiber is using MLM to sell fortune telling classes using your birthday based on Numerology fortune telling. Prpspects will be told that they need to buy a certain "number" between 1 to 9 in the form of pendants or bracelets made of silver with stainless steel or platinum plated, and sold from RM600 to RM20,000. Customers, or rather victims are mostly females from rural areas. Very hot in Penang now and a number of spin-off Companies have started.

12) MJ-Life - This Company boost of a very big background with many many years of history which is NOT true. Their people or associates may be long in business but nothing to do with their MLM launched recently. Why do I consider it a scam or bad ? New members are told to pay a sum of money(up to RM1000) and you get NOTHING for it. You only get a membership can entitle you to enjoy all sorts of special price and discounts when you have medical check-ups in their centres. They will claim all those check-ups cost more if done elsewhere. It's not true. Only the naive and those new to medical check-ups will fall victims to them. Most members who paid the money ended up with nothing.

13) Seaweed Venture Scams - 1 such Company is located in Taman Maluri, Cheras. They will ask you to invest a few thousands ringgits for their venture of growing seaweeds in East Malaysia and you are guaranteed returns. To gain your confidence further, they will tell you your investment money is secured by "insurance" or "unit trusts" & "trustees". When you ask for further documents to prove, they will give all sorts of excuses or just ignore you because they know they cannot get you. These Seaweed scam is one of the hottest now, warn all your friends about it before they are victimised.

14) MXM(previously MGM) - This is a master scam owned by a Dato Kam(Pathlab) tapping the younger group, very successful 2 or 3 years ago but since they moved to their big 10-storey office at Phileo Damansara and changed name to MXM, their business dropped. They collect members RM3,000 to RM4,000 with credit card monthly easy payment and in return you get a hospital benefits insurance from Pacific Insurance worth only a few hundred RMs together with some you-don't-need medical check-ups from their associate Company Pathlab. Also talk about fitness, lifestyles bullshit that is all worthless.

15) Gano Excel/I-Touch Life/GEW2u - This company from the north, a copycat of DXN selling Lingzhi capsules created a new Company called Gano iTouch to cash-in on the internet like e-Cosway after their Company went down the drain since the last 2 years, selling Linzhi and some no-value energy pendants and alkaline water gadgets. They provide free transport every weekend from KL to visit their Alor Star office. It did not work well and recently in mid-2009 changed name to GEW.

16) NuLife(HK) - This Company started by some HK people has been in Malaysia for more than 10 years but they have flopped in HK and Malaysia due to bad management and a product scam making use of a prosecuted American named Dr Jeffrey Bland, found guilty of false products claim. Since this case in the US leaked out and many Malaysians found out that the real boss in HK is a Steven Tang(he cheated many Malaysians in another scheme about 20 years ago) their business went down all the way. Now they claim Malaysian partners cheated them and start a new Company in Malaysia. Watch out, this new Company will come out with some investment scheme idea that will get many to lose their money.

17) Arowana Fish Breeding, Oora from Germany, Biofuel(Kompleks Maluri) etc - These are some newer scams. Arowana fish venture ask you to invest some money and give you fixed return. Biofuel will tell you their Indonesia connections(just like Sunshine Empire before using Taiwan) & Oora from Germany(I never trust those cruel Germans) that market some bio-chips and a gadget that claims to give energy and therapeutic effects of accupunture, tai-chi, yoga, etc depending how you set the toy-like gadget, wear it on your body and you get the effect later. They could not explain or provide any demonstration to prove their effectiveness. Only doctors and papers claim that I will never trust. The health effect is actually PLACEBO, which I will elaborate in a different thread.

18) Easy-Pharmax !! - How could I missed this out earlier. I thought I mentioned this until I got e-mails asking me about it. This is easily in the TOP 3 during the last 2 years. Owned by a Dato Yeap(another Dato !!) Members are tricked to invest up to RM40,000 with the false promise that the Company will use e-commerce and online selling to dispose their goods and recover their monies. It won't happen, of course.

19) Gold Investment Scheme - This is an old trick but back again by several Companies promising a GURANTEE FIXED RETURN income like many other schemes. Try to ask for a copy of their fixed return agreement and consult your lawyer. Common sense tell you any business that promises a fixed return to UNLIMITED numbers of investors, higher than bank interests must be a scam.

20) Score-A or Skor-A: This Company sells you an online program of past Malaysian examinations papers for primary and secondary school students for self-testing for up to a few hundred RMs per membership. It actually cost them nothing. Members are told to invest in a few units, again using MLM with the promise of getting rich. The same program can be purchased from Utusan for just a fraction of their price and you can get better programs.

21) NEW SCAMS :

a) GRI(Global Royal International) - The boss behind this scheme is multi-billionaire James Pang(the big scammer waiting for trial in Singapore because of Sunshine Empire). Before Sunshine Empire, he operated NOP and SwissCash. This time, he is using a lot of representatives and MLM leaders since his passport is held by Singapore government and he cannot come to Malaysia. I am told that anyone who is bold enough to call himself a MLM leader in Malaysia can visit his rep in Malaysia or Singapre and they will be given at least RM5,000 as some expenses subdsidy if you are willing to market for them.

b) One Community Worldwide - Tapping a mostly Bumi market and owned by Steven Yeam(SYN) and Willie Lim of Lampe Berger previously(the Chinese no longer trust them). They are selling a negative ion mattress for RM25,000 !! The same modal, I have seen before for RM2000 from Korea. If you cannot afford RM25K ??? You can buy therapy package for RM300. Don't believe in such product ? You can go for some chlorostrum(virgin cow's milk from nowhere)

c) English-Learning Program Online - ESL(an online English learning program) You are asked to pay RM100 for one or 2 years usage of online learning. Started by a Malaysian Indian man by the name of Dr. Edward, this program has changed names at least 2 or 3 times since the last one year due to poor response and a lot of "technical problems". I consider it a scam because you are paying money for nothing tangible to direct-selling company through MLM and their program has been very "unstable" as my source put it.

Pak Man Telo


 Pak Man Telo

Pak Man or Osman Hamzah, is a get rich quick scheme operator that is popular in Malaysia in the late 1980s.  Pak Man telo alleged operation get rich quick scheme, called Scheme Pestama Berhad since late 1970s. Get rich quick scheme is also known as Pak Man telo Scheme.

Pak Man telo is from Taiping, Perak. He served as the newspaper reporter in the 1960s and later became a freelance journalist in Bernama in the 1970s before joining the 'field' get rich quick scheme. In operation since the end of 1970, the Scheme Pak Man telo increased in popularity and gained the trust of the public because it is said to be able to maintain a smooth dividend payments to each investor in a period of many years.

March 8, 1992

The operation of the  Pak Man Scheme telo shaky start at the end of the 1980s. On October 1, 1989, several officers from Bank Negara Malaysia (BNM) has raided a house in Taiping telo Pak Man to investigate the activities of a get rich quick scheme operated. BNM raided the home of Pak Man telo for the second time on 23 November 1989 and seized cash deposit of RM1.7 million people. With the available evidence, Pak Man telo with his wife (Maimunah Taib) and their son (Abdul Rahman Osman) will face problems. 


Here is the sequence of the last moments of Pak Man telo Scheme:


     January 11, 1990 - Pak Man telo was brought to court on charges of violating the Banking & Finance Industry in 1989 for taking a deposit of RM20 million from the public without a license. Wife and son of Pak Man is accused of abetting. All three pleaded not guilty. Pak Man telo was bailed RM1 million and confiscated his passport, while his wife and their son were released on bail each with RM200 thousand. Their case will be tried.

     March 13, 1990 - Pak Man telo, his wife and their son tried in court. Pak Man telo pleaded guilty to taking deposits without a license. Pak Man sentenced on telo will be passed the next day. Wife and son of Pak Man telo released. Judges order RM1.7 million in cash seized from Pak Man telo returned to him because there is no provision to allow BNM to do so.

     March 14, 1990 - Pak Man telo sentenced to a fine of RM250 thousand or one year imprisonment. He paid the fine in cash. Although Pak Man telo guilty, but his supporters in the court celebrating 'culpability' Pak Man telo with joy (see picture above) and repeatedly shouted "Long live Pak Man"! Observers expect the scheme will telo Pak Man crushed after the get rich quick scheme but it has gained widespread exposure and become very popular.

     April to August 1990 - Scheme Pak Man telo operate as normal, fixed deposits accepted from the public that the number is increasing. Dividend yield of 10 per cent of the investment was paid without fail, but then the dividend rate was increased to 12 percent! Maybe a lot of people who managed to get rich quick in the 'glory' that.

     September 1990 - The Scheme investors Pak Man telo started tracking the return on their dividends are not included in the bank account as previous months. Some investors will only receive half of the dividend yield should be. While investors who receive a dividend yield through the checks was that it was a 'bad check'.

     19 September 1990 - Investors rushed home in Taiping telo Pak Man to seek clarification on the status of their investments.

     20 September 1990 - Pak Man telo announced a reduction in the dividend rate from 12 percent to only 5 percent. He reasoned that it was caused by the global economic recession caused by the Gulf War (which erupted on August 2, 1990). In addition, he blamed the incident deviations among the "agents".

     January 15, 1991 - The situation is getting worse, Pak Man telo failed to pay the promised dividend yield. Investors are flocking to his house to claim back their investment money. Commotion going on and cars were damaged Pak Man telo.

     February 28 to March 5, 1991 - Six men have been kidnapped Pak Man telo son, Abdul Razak Affendi (19 years), and locked up at the Tropicana Hotel, Kuala Lumpur, but all of them were arrested by the police.

     March 15, 1991 - The kidnappers Pak Man telo child was taken to court.

     6 April 1991 - An investor scheme telo Pak Man finally made ​​a police report about the abuse that occurred. Pak Man telo then was detained for several weeks by the police from Bukit Aman, Kuala Lumpur. After that Pak Man telo been banished in Kuala Terengganu, Terengganu.

     July 17, 1991 - As a result further investigation, Bank Negara Malaysia has claimed telo Pak Man in court for allegedly taking a deposit of RM99.09 million from the public (approximately 50 thousand people) without a license. Pak Man telo pleaded not guilty and claimed trial. He was granted bail of RM2 million while awaiting trial in early 1992.

     March 2, 1992 - After the trial finished, Pak Man telo who was then aged 65, was found guilty for the second time, and the court sentenced him to prison a year 'and' fine 500 thousand or one year's imprisonment. Pak Man telo eventually languished in jail for one year beginning on the date he was arrested (July 17, 1991). For the second sentence, Pak Man telo failed to pay a fine of 500 thousand and he was imprisoned again for one year beginning on March 2, 1992.


Daily reports of get rich quick scheme Pak Man telo as "one of the biggest financial scandal" in Malaysia, comparable to the case of Bumiputra Malaysia Finance (BMF) and the loss of more than RM22 million from Bank Negara Malaysia. The difference, Pak Man telo is a former journalist and not an expert in the field of economics or even skilled in the financial system, but with only backed the trust of the people, he was able to 'berskandal' (though ultimately defeated) involves an extreme amount of money.

Additional notes:

     According to the Dictionary of the House, the scheme means "plan", and get rich quick scheme means "investment scheme that supposedly can provide returns (profits) immediately and very lucrative".
     The origins of the nickname "Mr. Man telo" (Osman Hamzah) not described in the article referred to. In the local entertainment scene, a stage actor at the end of the 1980s have used Pak Man telo (he never Widow movie Exploded in 1990), but he was not Osman Hamzah.

     Besides Pestama Scheme Limited (Scheme Pak Man telo) of illegally collecting deposits of RM99.09 million from people, there are many get rich quick scheme that has operated in Malaysia until early 1992, include:
  •          350 schemes (collect deposit RM70 million)
  •          Tingcon Credit Scheme Development Sdn Bhd (RM60 million)
  •          Gems scheme Bakti (RM30 million)
  •          Scheme 120 (RM20 million)
  •          Permata Pintar Scheme (RM19 million)
  •          Sri Emas Enterprise Scheme (RM10 million)

Credits:
http://arkibnegara.blogspot.com/2013/09/skim-cepat-kaya-pak-man-telo-1992.html



Tuesday, 29 April 2014

Skim Penipuan Ponzi in Bahasa Malaysia

SCAM ALERT: 5 tanda-tanda untuk mengenal pasti skim penipuan Ponzi. Sumber: Bank Negara Malaysia