CFTC Charges Ronald Satterfield, His Two Companies and Nicholas Bos with Operating a Multi-Million Dollar Forex Ponzi Scheme in Four States

Monday, 15/11/2010 | 22:58 GMT by Michael Greenberg
CFTC Charges Ronald Satterfield, His Two Companies and Nicholas Bos with Operating a Multi-Million Dollar Forex Ponzi Scheme in Four States

Federal court freezes defendants’ assets and prohibits destruction of books and records.

Washington, DC - The U.S. Commodity Futures Trading Commission (CFTC) today announced that it charged Ronald E. Satterfield of Charleston, S.C., his South Carolina-based companies, Graham Street Forex Group, LLC and Shore-2-Summit Financial, LLC, and Nicholas Bos of Ludington, Mich., with operating a foreign currency (forex) Ponzi scheme that fraudulently solicited more than $3.3 million from more than 70 individuals in South Carolina, North Carolina, Michigan and Maryland. The defendants also allegedly misappropriated a significant portion of customer funds for their personal use.

The CFTC complaint, filed under temporary seal on November 8, 2010, also names Bos’ wife, Patricia L. Bos, as a relief defendant, because she allegedly received funds as a result of the defendants’ fraudulent conduct and has no legitimate entitlement to those funds.

On November 9, 2010, the Honorable Richard M. Gergel of the U.S. District Court for the District of South Carolina entered a restraining order freezing the defendants’ assets and prohibiting the destruction of books and records. The order also requires defendants to account for assets.

Specifically, the CFTC complaint alleges that, from at least March 2006 through March 2009, defendants solicited and accepted funds from retail investors to engage in leveraged or margined forex transactions. The CFTC complaint charges that Satterfield, in his solicitations, misrepresented that he was a successful forex trader, falsely guaranteed customers monthly returns of two to four percent based on his forex trading and falsely claimed that there would be no risk to customers’ principal investment. Satterfield allegedly made material omissions of fact by failing to disclose that 1) not all of the customer funds that he, Graham Street and Shore-2-Summit collected were used to trade forex and 2) customer funds were used to pay returns to other customers and for Payments to Bos and other agents, as is typical of a Ponzi scheme.

The rest here.

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CFTC Charges Ronald Satterfield, His Two Companies and Nicholas Bos with Operating a Multi-Million Dollar Forex Ponzi Scheme in Four States

Federal court freezes defendants’ assets and prohibits destruction of books and records.

Washington, DC - The U.S. Commodity Futures Trading Commission (CFTC) today announced that it charged Ronald E. Satterfield of Charleston, S.C., his South Carolina-based companies, Graham Street Forex Group, LLC and Shore-2-Summit Financial, LLC, and Nicholas Bos of Ludington, Mich., with operating a foreign currency (forex) Ponzi scheme that fraudulently solicited more than $3.3 million from more than 70 individuals in South Carolina, North Carolina, Michigan and Maryland. The defendants also allegedly misappropriated a significant portion of customer funds for their personal use.

The CFTC complaint, filed under temporary seal on November 8, 2010, also names Bos’ wife, Patricia L. Bos, as a relief defendant, because she allegedly received funds as a result of the defendants’ fraudulent conduct and has no legitimate entitlement to those funds.

On November 9, 2010, the Honorable Richard M. Gergel of the U.S. District Court for the District of South Carolina entered a restraining order freezing the defendants’ assets and prohibiting the destruction of books and records. The order also requires defendants to account for assets.

Specifically, the CFTC complaint alleges that, from at least March 2006 through March 2009, defendants solicited and accepted funds from retail investors to engage in leveraged or margined forex transactions. The CFTC complaint charges that Satterfield, in his solicitations, misrepresented that he was a successful forex trader, falsely guaranteed customers monthly returns of two to four percent based on his forex trading and falsely claimed that there would be no risk to customers’ principal investment. Satterfield allegedly made material omissions of fact by failing to disclose that 1) not all of the customer funds that he, Graham Street and Shore-2-Summit collected were used to trade forex and 2) customer funds were used to pay returns to other customers and for Payments to Bos and other agents, as is typical of a Ponzi scheme.

The rest here.

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CFTC Charges Ronald Satterfield, His Two Companies and Nicholas Bos with Operating a Multi-Million Dollar Forex Ponzi Scheme in Four States

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