San Bernardino County hosts the military's most cherished clubhouse, Ft. Irwin, and several other bases, active and closed. The county population is rich in military denizens, their derelicts, offspring, misfits and buffs. With the consequent prevalence of the classic sociopathy found in these people, predation, exploitation, corruption and virtual tyranny have spread throughout our courts, law enforcement and government. Discuss the disgraceful prison and military industrial complexes here.
2004-05-24
PERMANENT RECEIVER APPOINTED IN $144 MILLION PONZI SCHEME TARGETED AT ELDERLY INVESTORS IN SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA
Litigation Release No. 18724 / May 24, 2004
SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION v. D.W. HEATH & ASSOCIATES, INC., PRIVATE CAPITAL MANAGEMENT, INC., PRIVATE COLLATERAL MANAGEMENT, INC., PCM FIXED INCOME FUND I, LLC, DANIEL WILLIAM HEATH, AND DENIS TIMOTHY O'BRIEN, No. CV 04 - 02949JFW(Ex)(C.D. Cal.)
PERMANENT RECEIVER APPOINTED IN $144 MILLION PONZI SCHEME TARGETED AT ELDERLY INVESTORS IN SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA
The Securities and Exchange Commission announced that on May 19, 2004, the United States District Court for the Central District of California appointed Robb Evans and Associates, LLC as the permanent receiver over four Southern California companies alleged to have perpetrated a $144 million Ponzi scheme targeting the elderly. In a federal court complaint filed on April 28, 2004, the Commission alleged that the four receivership entities, D.W. Heath & Associates, Inc., Private Capital Management, Inc. ("PCM"), Private Collateral Management, Inc., and PCM Fixed Income Fund I, LLC ("PCM Fund"), and two individuals, Daniel William Heath, 47, of Chino Hills, and Denis Timothy O'Brien, 49, of Yorba Linda, fraudulently induced at least 803 elderly investors to invest in "secured" notes that paid a "guaranteed" return of 5.5% to 8% per year, and raised at least $60 million. The defendants agreed to the entry of the order appointing the permanent receiver over the entities.
In his first report to the court filed on May 14, 2004, the receiver stated that from July 1993 through March 31, 2004, approximately $144.8 million was raised from investors through PCM, and of that amount, approximately $39.6 million in principal and interest was returned to investors. According to the receiver's report, over the life of the company, PCM suffered a net loss of about $41.8 million and earned only $1 million in total income. The receiver concluded that the payments to investors could have only come from the money invested by other investors. Using funds from new investors to make principal and interest payments to existing investors without disclosing such a practice constitutes a Ponzi scheme.
The Commission's complaint alleged that the defendants fraudulently induced at least 803 elderly investors nationwide to invest in PCM notes that purportedly paid a "guaranteed" return of 5.5% to 8% per year. The defendants claimed that investor funds would be used to make secured loans to businesses. The defendants also represented that independent IRA administrators conducted "due diligence" on the PCM Notes and that either investors will be repaid their principal at maturity, or they may redeem all or part of their investment before maturity, subject to a 10% penalty. Finally, the defendants claimed that PCM and the PCM Fund are California entities.
According to the complaint, these representations are false. There is no evidence that there are any secured loans. The PCM Notes also are not liquid because the defendants have failed to promptly return investor funds. The complaint further alleges that some investors have had to threaten to file, or actually filed, lawsuits against the defendants to get back their money. Nor is it true that IRA administrators have conducted due diligence. Finally, there is no record that either PCM or the PCM Fund are California legal entities.
On May 6, 2004, the defendants consented to the entry of a preliminary injunction enjoining them from future violations of the registration and antifraud provisions of the federal securities laws, Sections 5(a), 5(c) and 17(a) of the Securities Act of 1933 and Section 10(b) of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 and Rule 10b-5 thereunder. The defendants also consented to the entry of orders freezing their assets (except against O'Brien), prohibiting the destruction of documents, requiring accountings, and expediting discovery. The Commission also seeks permanent injunctions and other relief, including disgorgement and civil penalties, against all defendants.
http://www.sec.gov/litigation/litreleases/lr18724.htm
2004-05-12
Missing Weapons Are Seen as a Threat
By Lance Pugmire
May 12, 2004 in print edition B-5
The hundreds of guns that former San Bernardino County Sheriff Floyd Tidwell allegedly took from evidence rooms and then handed out to family and friends are a “huge public safety concern” because authorities have no way of knowing who has the unregistered firearms, a prosecutor said Tuesday.
Tidwell, who allegedly took at least 523 guns while he served as sheriff from 1983 to 1991, pleaded guilty Monday to four felony counts of concealing stolen property.
Deputy Dist. Atty. Cheryl Kersey said that investigators were scrambling to recover the weapons and that it was believed that more than 400 of the unregistered guns – many seized from shootings, drug raids, suicides and other crime scenes – were still missing.
“The more guns out in the community that we aren’t aware of, the more concern we have for the community,” Kersey said. “Imagine the nightmare situation of Floyd Tidwell giving some guns to his buddy whose home is burglarized, with those guns then ending up in the hands of street gangs. All of these [missing] weapons are dangerous.”
Tidwell’s attorney dismissed those concerns, saying Tidwell took far fewer weapons than the prosecutor has alleged and that he gave away many of the illicit weapons to law enforcement colleagues.
“How many of these people with these guns have committed crimes? I don’t know of any,” said his attorney, David Call. Tidwell “wasn’t stupid. He wasn’t handing out guns to the Hells Angels.”
On Tuesday, a spokeswoman for the current county sheriff, Gary Penrod, said Tidwell called Penrod “about six or seven years ago and said he had guns that belonged to the department and wanted to give them back.”
Penrod told Tidwell he would either arrange for the guns to be picked up or that Tidwell could drop them off. The guns were never returned, said sheriff’s spokeswoman Cindy Beavers. Penrod “said he didn’t follow up on the discussion, that he assumed it was a small number of guns that were department-issued,” Beavers said.
2004-05-11
Ex-Sheriff Admits Guilt on Stolen Property Charges
By Lance Pugmire
May 11, 2004 in print edition B-1
Floyd Tidwell, the former sheriff of San Bernardino County, pleaded guilty Monday to four felony counts of concealing stolen property as investigators said he took at least 523 guns from evidence rooms during his eight-year tenure.
During his terms, from 1983 to 1991, Tidwell would walk through evidence rooms “as if shopping, to take his pick of weapons,” one sheriff’s official said. Among the weapons was a military M-2 carbine, a fully automatic assault weapon banned under state and federal gun control laws.
Under a plea agreement with the San Bernardino County district attorney’s office, Tidwell will pay a $10,000 fine and cooperate with investigators who are trying to recover the firearms. He will not serve any time in jail.
“Incarceration was never an option,” said Assistant Dist. Atty. Michael Risley. “He’s 74. He did serve the people well in many respects for many years. We wanted him to acknowledge his wrongdoing and to seek his cooperation in correcting this matter.”
Under state law, confiscated firearms must be returned to their owners, sold at public auction by the county or used for approved law enforcement purposes, such as target practice, Risley said.
“What you can’t do is take them,” Risley said.
Tidwell stashed boxes of guns in his garage in Phelan and would give them away to family and friends, his daughter-in-law told investigators.
Tidwell accepted the plea agreement to limit the stress of a trial on his ailing wife, according to his attorney, David Call.
“If I win a jury trial, but the result is his wife’s funeral, how do I win that?” Call said. “This was an opportunity for the sheriff to stand up and end this sorry mess.”
Call said Tidwell didn’t believe his handling of the guns was illegal, and that the number of guns Tidwell is accused of taking might be inaccurate.
“It used to be common practice for law enforcement officers to keep their guns,” Call said after the hearing. “This [case] is about different times, different eras and closed chapters.”
Tidwell first came under suspicion on June 25, when investigators with the San Bernardino County Sheriff’s Department executed search warrants at the homes of the former sheriff’s two sons, Danial and Steve Tidwell. The brothers were under investigation for illegally soliciting business for their Fontana-based bail bond company.
During the searches, detectives found 24 guns at the brothers’ homes in San Bernardino and Phelan. The brothers, both former deputies, told the investigators that their father gave them most of the firearms while he was sheriff.
“Guess what?” Steve said to investigators as they searched his home, according to a district attorney’s memorandum. “Those were given to me by Floyd Tidwell, so you might want to talk to him sometime. You know how we get those, don’t you?”
Danial Tidwell allegedly told a sergeant that he stole one of the guns, an illegal 9-millimeter machine pistol, from a suspect while he was a deputy. Danial Tidwell said that “Floyd knew about the stolen department weapons and told Danial not to worry about it,” prosecutors alleged in court records.
Prosecutors considered charging the former sheriff with theft and embezzlement, but under the statute of limitations, those charges must be filed within three years of the alleged crime. Instead, Tidwell was charged with four counts of concealing stolen property, which included 14 firearms.
“His possession of stolen property was his ongoing crime,” Risley said.
In November, while the sheriff’s investigation was well underway, Floyd Tidwell turned in 89 rifles, shotguns and handguns worth an estimated $25,000. Among the guns was a military .30-caliber M-2 carbine and two tiny “wallet” guns, all of which are illegal, authorities said. At least 38 of the 89 guns were identified as missing from the sheriff’s property room.
Tidwell’s daughter, Robin, told detectives that the former sheriff is “an avid gun collector” who displays many guns at his Phelan home.
Sheriff’s Capt. Dave Baker, who worked in the property division during Tidwell’s tenure, told detectives that Tidwell liked “old western-type” guns and would often take the guns from the evidence room without filing the required documentation.
Sgt. Gary Eisenbiesz said Tidwell “used to go through the division, as if shopping, to take his pick of weapons.” Eisenbiesz said he ultimately decided to hide guns from Tidwell so “he would have something to sell at the [county gun] auctions.”
In one case, a couple who tried to retrieve their guns were told the guns were lost, according to the district attorney’s case summary.
Finding the missing firearms might be difficult. Tidwell’s daughter-in-law, Karole Tidwell, told a sheriff’s detective that the former sheriff “would frequently clean out his garage or storage areas and would have boxes full of firearms he gave away to friends and family.”
On Monday, Tidwell appeared in court in a gray suit and powder-blue tie, with a San Bernardino County sheriff’s pin in his lapel. The 38-year law enforcement veteran shook hands with a sheriff’s deputy serving as bailiff, and shook his head in disgust as the court hearing progressed. “Forty years of service for this,” Tidwell muttered to his family.
San Bernardino County Superior Court Judge J. Michael Welch asked Tidwell to answer the charges.
“Guilty, your honor,” he said.
COMMISSION OBTAINS PRELIMINARY INJUNCTION IN $60 MILLION SECURITIES FRAUD SCHEME TARGETED AT ELDERLY VICTIMS IN SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA
Litigation Release No. 18703 / May 11, 2004
COMMISSION OBTAINS PRELIMINARY INJUNCTION IN $60 MILLION SECURITIES FRAUD SCHEME TARGETED AT ELDERLY VICTIMS IN SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA
SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION v. D.W. HEATH & ASSOCIATES, INC., PRIVATE CAPITAL MANAGEMENT, INC., PRIVATE COLLATERAL MANAGEMENT, INC., PCM FIXED INCOME FUND I, LLC, DANIEL WILLIAM HEATH, AND DENIS TIMOTHY O'BRIEN, No. CV 04 - 02949JFW(Ex)(C.D. Cal.)
On May 6, 2004, the Securities and Exchange Commission ("Commission") obtained a preliminary injunction in a multi-million dollar securities fraud scheme perpetrated by six Southern California defendants: D.W. Heath & Associates, Inc., Private Capital Management, Inc., Private Collateral Management, Inc., and PCM Fixed Income Fund I, LLC, all with offices in Hemet, Brea, Temecula, and Pasadena; Daniel William Heath, 47, of Chino Hills; and Denis Timothy O'Brien, 49, of Yorba Linda. The defendants agreed to the entry of the preliminary injunction. The Commission alleges that the defendants, who raised at least $60 million, lured elderly victims to workshops with the promise of a free lunch and then bilked them out of their retirement money by purporting to sell them safe, guaranteed notes. U.S. District Judge John F. Walter of the U.S. District Court for the Central District of California also set a hearing on the Commission's application for appointment of a permanent receiver for May 20, 2004.
The Commission's complaint, filed on April 28, 2004, in federal court in Los Angeles, alleges that the defendants fraudulently induced at least 803 elderly investors nationwide to invest in PCM notes that purportedly pay a "guaranteed" return of 5.5% to 8% per year. The defendants claim that investor funds will be used to make secured loans to businesses. The defendants also represent that independent IRA administrators conducted "due diligence" on the PCM Notes and that either investors will be repaid their principal at maturity, or they may redeem all or part of their investment before maturity, subject to a 10% penalty. Finally, the defendants claim that PCM and the PCM Fund are California entities.
According to the complaint, these representations are false. There is no evidence that there are any secured loans. The PCM Notes also are not liquid because the defendants have failed to promptly return investor funds. The complaint further alleges that some investors have had to threaten to file, or actually filed, lawsuits against the defendants to get back their money. Nor is it true that IRA administrators have conducted due diligence. Finally, there is no record that either PCM or the PCM Fund are California legal entities.
The Court's Order of May 6, 2004, preliminarily enjoins the defendants from future violations of the registration and antifraud provisions of the federal securities laws, Sections 5(a), 5(c) and 17(a) of the Securities Act of 1933 and Section 10(b) of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 and Rule 10b-5 thereunder. The Order also freezes the assets of all defendants (except O'Brien), orders an accounting, prevents the destruction of documents, and expedites discovery. The Commission also seeks permanent injunctions, and other relief, including disgorgement and civil penalties against all defendants. The Commission acknowledges the assistance of the Riverside County District Attorneys' Office, the California Department of Corporations, and the United States Postal Inspection Service.
http://www.sec.gov/litigation/litreleases/lr18703.htm
2004-05-03
FEDERAL, STATE, AND LOCAL LAW ENFORCEMENT HALT $60 MILLION FRAUDULENT SCHEME TARGETED AT ELDERLY VICTIMS IN SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA
Litigation Release No. 18689 / May 3, 2004
FEDERAL, STATE, AND LOCAL LAW ENFORCEMENT HALT $60 MILLION FRAUDULENT SCHEME TARGETED AT ELDERLY VICTIMS IN SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA
SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION v. D.W. HEATH & ASSOCIATES, INC., PRIVATE CAPITAL MANAGEMENT, INC., PRIVATE COLLATERAL MANAGEMENT, INC., PCM FIXED INCOME FUND I, LLC, DANIEL WILLIAM HEATH, AND DENIS TIMOTHY O'BRIEN No. CV 04 - 02949JFW(Ex)(C.D. Cal.)
The Securities and Exchange Commission ("Commission") filed an emergency action on April 28th to halt an on-going multi-million dollar securities fraud scheme perpetrated by six Southern California defendants: D.W. Heath & Associates, Inc., Private Capital Management, Inc., Private Collateral Management, Inc., and PCM Fixed Income Fund I, LLC, all with offices in Hemet, Brea and Pasadena; Daniel William Heath, 47, of Chino Hills; and Denis Timothy O'Brien, 49, of Yorba Linda. The Commission alleges that the defendants, who have raised at least $60 million to date, lured elderly victims to workshops with the promise of a free lunch and then bilked them out of their retirement money by purporting to sell them safe, guaranteed notes. The Commission coordinated its investigation with the United States Postal Inspection Service, the California Department of Corporations, and the Riverside County District Attorney's Office, which late yesterday executed criminal search warrants at the defendants' offices in Hemet, Brea and Pasadena and at Heath's and O'Brien's homes. Also yesterday, U.S. District Judge John F. Walter of the U.S. District Court for the Central District of California issued orders freezing the defendants' assets.
The Commission's complaint, filed in federal court in Los Angeles, alleges that the defendants fraudulently induced at least 803 elderly investors nationwide to invest in PCM notes that purportedly pay a "guaranteed" return of 5.5% to 8% per year. The defendants claim that investor funds will be used to make secured loans to businesses. The defendants also represent that independent IRA administrators conducted "due diligence" on the PCM Notes and that either investors will be repaid their principal at maturity, or they may redeem all or part of their investment before maturity, subject to a 10% penalty. Finally, the defendants claim that PCM and the PCM Fund are California entities.
According to the complaint, these representations are false. There is no evidence that there are any secured loans. The PCM Notes also are not liquid because the defendants have failed to promptly return investor funds. The complaint further alleges that some investors have had to threaten to file, or actually filed, lawsuits against the defendants to get back their money. Nor is it true that IRA administrators have conducted due diligence. Finally, there is no record that either PCM or the PCM Fund are California legal entities.
In its lawsuit, the Commission obtained an order freezing the assets of all defendants (except O'Brien), an accounting, an order preventing destruction of documents, an order expediting discovery, and an order temporarily enjoining all of the defendants from future violations of the securities registration and antifraud provisions of the federal securities laws, Sections 5(a), 5(c) and 17(a) of the Securities Act of 1933 and Section 10(b) of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 and Rule 10b-5 thereunder. The Commission also seeks preliminary and permanent injunctions, and other relief, including disgorgement and civil penalties against all defendants. A hearing to determine whether a temporary receiver should be appointed over Heath & Associates, PCM, Private Collateral Management, and the PCM Fund is scheduled for Monday, May 3, 2004 at 1:30 p.m. A hearing on whether a preliminary injunction should be issued against the defendants and whether a permanent receiver should be appointed is scheduled for May 10 2004, at 1:30 p.m. The Commission acknowledges the California Department of Corporations, the Riverside County District Attorneys' Office and the United States Postal Inspection Service for their assistance in this investigation.
SEC Complaint in this matter
http://www.sec.gov/litigation/litreleases/lr18689.htm