TelexFree Members Blame MLM Debacle On ‘Media Disinformation’; Judge Presiding Over SEC Case Receives Doodles


The PP Blog previously has reported on campaigns by members to petition judges to “bail out” TelexFree and consider the purported upside of the “program,” which may be the largest combined Ponzi- and pyramid scheme in MLM HYIP history. (Campaigns referenced in this May 10, 2014, PP Blog editorial.)
The docket of U.S. District Judge Nathaniel M. Gorton of the District of Massachusetts now shows that members have written letters to the court in support of TelexFree. Gorton is presiding over the SEC’s civil case against TelexFree. The complaint was brought on an emergency basis on April 15. Assets of TelexFree and alleged managers and certain promoters have been frozen.
At least one TelexFree supporter contended in a letter to Gorton that he can “assure” the judge that “media disinformation” is responsible for the problems at TelexFree” and that the company “revolutionized” MLM in a manner that “put out of extreme poverty thousands and thousands of people around the world, if not millions.”
TelexFree, according to the sender, was like a drop of “heaven for poor families.”
Some of the letters appear to be in Spanish, sent to the judge via fax. Some are handwritten. Some are typewritten. A few of them include doodles.
There are letters from the United States. There are letters from the Dominican Republic. Some of the letters appear to have used a shared template, which likely means TelexFree upline/downline groups organized the campaign.
In the 2008 AdSurfDaily case, shared litigation templates were used by certain members who appeared to be more interested in advancing conspiracy theories than understanding the facts of the case. Some of the letters/emails of “support” submitted by ASD in 2008 were used by the government to undermine ASD’s assertion it was not selling securities and was not a Ponzi scheme.
At least one TelexFree member asserted in a letter to Gorton that the “program” gave him an opportunity to earn money from TelexFree by posting ads on the Internet.
On Friday, it became known that the U.S. Department of Homeland Security was involved in an undercover probe of TelexFree that began at least by October 2013.
In a criminal complaint and affidavit filed in support of wire-fraud conspiracy charges against TelexFree figures James Merrill and Carlos Wanzeler, a DHS agent involved in the probe alleged an intelligence research specialist within DHS placed more than 700 ads for TelexFree online.
The ads have resulted in no retail sales of TelexFree’s VOIP product,” the agent alleged.
And, the agent asserted, “the sites on which these ads were posted contained page after page after page of hundreds of nearly identical ads placed by various TelexFree promoters for the identical VOIP service.”
Zeek Rewards, an $850 million Ponzi- and pyramid scheme shut down by the SEC in 2012, also had an “advertising” component. So did ASD, a $119 million Ponzi scheme shut down by the U.S. Secret Service in 2008.
MLM HYIP schemes have defrauded billions of dollars from participants in recent years. The combined hauls of TelexFree, Zeek and ASD alone may exceed $2.169 billion. That’s nearly double the size of the epic Scott Rothstein Ponzi and racketeering scheme in Florida in 2009.
MLM HYIP swindles typically are aimed at vulnerable populations, with MLMers who have big email lists and experience in one fraud scheme after another scoring tremendous windfalls.
TelexFree Members Blame MLM Debacle On ‘Media Disinformation’; Judge Presiding Over SEC Case Receives Doodles TelexFree Members Blame MLM Debacle On ‘Media Disinformation’; Judge Presiding Over SEC Case Receives Doodles Reviewed by Unknown on 11:11:00 AM Rating: 5

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