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Riots Break Out Across Colombia After Investment Scam Collapses

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Posted by: forwardone

Riots have flared across Colombia over the collapse of a pyramid investment scam that left thousands of investors broke and furious. Police used teargas and batons to quell crowds that tried to storm the offices of rogue investment firms, some of which had left notes taunting their victims for being gullible.

Mobs smashed doors and windows in a vain effort to enter the premises and recoup savings, or at least take revenge on fraudsters, who had vanished overnight.

"Dear investors, thanks for trusting us and depositing your money," said a note on the door of a company in the province of Cauca. "Now, for being stupid and believing in financial witchcraft, you will have to work for your money."

Enraged investors looted the company's office before being subdued by riot police. In Pereira, police allegedly arrested two loan managers fleeing out of the back door of an investment office with four suitcases filled with cash. The two are said to have tried to buy their freedom by offering police some of the money, only for bribery to be added to their charge sheet.

The government has launched an investigation into how a network of at least 66 agencies in nine cities conned so many people, promising returns of up to 150%. One agency alone had managed to take in more than £110m in the last four months, the finance ministry said. High fees deter many poorer people from putting their money into banks in Colombia.

Oscar Naranjo, the head of the country's police, said the scheme appeared to be a money-laundering enterprise organised by drug traffickers. President Álvaro Uribe has urged congress to pass a law penalising the fraudsters.

"Everybody was full of hope for December, for the holidays," said a man in Popayán who had lost nearly £1,000. "The people thought their lives would change."

Luis Alberto Sierra, in a crowd gathered outside an office belonging to the parent company Fast, Easy and Effective Money, in the town of Armenia, told Caracol TV he had lost £11,400 - a fortune for most Colombians. "I mortgaged my house, invested all my savings," he said.

But the vice-president, Francisco Santos, said: "When someone promises to double your money in six months they are trying to trick you. Nothing is free in this world, and that is not going to change."

http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/200...ment-scam-riots



Posted by: golddust

What a surprise...



Posted by: candy

You have to expect high risk if being offered high returns. The pity is that recently the stock exchanges have proved just as risky as HYIPs.



Posted by: golddust

Quote:
Originally Posted by candy
You have to expect high risk if being offered high returns. The pity is that recently the stock exchanges have proved just as risky as HYIPs.


Basically, the trickle down effect of the global economic crisis has caused almost every investment venue losses and a propensity for higher risk. Some HYIP programs are paying out very well right now and attracting many newbies to "too good to be true" scenarios.

Here's a followup to the Columbian Scammer:

Colombian scam suspect extradited


Quote:
Panama has extradited a Colombian man suspected of running the country's biggest pyramid scheme, which collapsed last week after taking $200m (£133m).

David Murcia Guzman was president of the DMG Group, whose collapse led to street protests across the country by investors, in which two people died.

Mr Murcia Guzman faces charges including money-laundering and illicit enrichment. He denies the allegations.

DMG had promised investors returns of up to 150% a month on their deposits.

On Wednesday, Colombia's attorney general said prosecutors had evidence that the company was also a front for money-laundering.

Rapid ascent

The rise of Mr Murcia Guzman has been spectacular, says the BBC's Jeremy McDermott in Colombia.




In just a couple of years, he went from being a poor cameraman's assistant to the head of DMG, a multi-million dollar business.

His fall looks like it will be even quicker, our correspondent says.

The 28-year-old was extradited to Colombia to face accusations that his business was a pyramid scheme that duped at least 200,000 Colombians out of their life savings.

The irony is that DMG had not shut its doors to investors and was continuing to honour its obligations.

Unlike other schemes, which had shut up shop and escaped with the money collected, DMG was still operating until the police closed its 60 branches across Colombia.

Venezuela and Ecuadorian authorities have followed suit by shutting offices in their respective countries.

Indeed, our correspondent adds, there have been protests against the government by DMG investors who insist that the company is legitimate and that the government has now forced its collapse.

Investigations by the Colombian authorities show that DMG was the most sophisticated of all the pyramid schemes.

Police are also investigating leads that suggest DMG received money not only from drugs-traffickers but Marxist rebels and right-wing paramilitaries involved in Colombia's four-decade old civil conflict.





Story from BBC NEWS:
http://news.bbc.co.uk/go/pr/fr/-/2/...cas/7740032.stm

Published: 2008/11/20 15:36:01 GMT

DMC continued to pay and operate yet it's alleged to have "duped" Columbians of their "life savings". I don't see the proof of this. IMO it's the charges of money laundering that caught the attention of authorities.



Posted by: andr107

Hi! Thanks for the article! With Hyips nobody can be sure that he or she will get profite so sometimes it's just a matter of luck.



Posted by: golddust

Your post is pointless and irrelevant to the thread.




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