There’s a saying, “Strong tides float most boats.” Well if you look at the robust years leading up to the financial bust in the fall of 2008, this appears to be the case. However as the economy turned down, the ponzi scheme marketplace appears to be especially difficult to keep afloat. Names like Madoff, Stanford, Petters, Kenneth Starr and a host of others verify this phenomenon. And today, almost 2-years since the financial fallout, another surfaces.
Authorities say a former Wethersfield, Conn., resident has pleaded guilty to federal charges he operated a $100 million Ponzi scheme that ripped off hundreds of investors.
Federal prosecutors and the FBI say Michael Goldberg stole more than $30 million in 12 years by promising investors huge returns quickly on money they gave him to buy diamonds for resale or to buy foreclosed assets from the JPMorgan Chase & Co. bank.
Prosecutors say he didn’t invest the money and paid old investors with funds from new investors. They say the result was “financial misery” for many of them.
Goldberg revealed his scheme to authorities. He’ll be sentenced Dec. 2 on three counts of wire fraud. The 39-year-old faces up to 60 years in prison.
Unfortunately, new ponzi schemes are being exposed monthly, and at times, weekly. The trail of broken dreams - endless. Yet in many respects, ponzi schemes reveal a vulnerability and gullability within a society. And its this gullability in risky dreams is sinking many boats. And my guess is, there are many more yet to meet their demise.
Yes, what many considered to be “safe money,” wasn’t very safe after all.
Over the past week, I’ve been playing farmer. Actually that connotation seems quite appropriate in today’s agrinomic landscape of 4-wheel drive tractors, triple stack genetics, and behemoth farms. Yes, it is quite different than when I was growing up in Northern Illinois during my youth. A lot has changed and continues to change.