Defendant pretended to be former Navy SEAL
COLUMBUS, Ohio – Edward I. Campbell, 41, of Reynoldsburg,
Ohio, was sentenced in U.S. District Court today to 60 months in prison for
charges related to a $1.4 million investment fraud scheme that defrauded at
least 44 individuals.
Benjamin C. Glassman, United States Attorney for the
Southern District of Ohio, Angela L. Byers, Special Agent in Charge, Federal
Bureau of Investigation (FBI), Cincinnati Division, and Ryan L. Korner, Special
Agent in Charge, Internal Revenue Service (IRS) Criminal Investigation
announced the sentence handed down today by U.S. District Judge Michael H.
Watson.
According to court documents, between July 2011 and June
2013, Campbell operated an investment business known as Rosewood Consulting LLC
in Baltimore, Ohio. Campbell told victims their contributions would be invested
through Rosewood Consulting into two types of investment programs: historical
bonds issued by China and the exchange of Bougainville Kina – illegal currency
from the autonomous region of Bougainville, Papua New Guinea – into U.S.
dollars.
Campbell represented that he had access to a trading
platform in which he could monetize gold-backed bonds issued by China in 1913
for a very high return. Campbell offered to sell the historical bonds to investors
for $10,000 to $15,000 each for a promised return on investment of anywhere
from $50,000 to upwards of possibly $10 million per bond within 10 to 60 days.
Campbell also offered to exchange the Bougainville Kina,
which he allegedly possessed, into U.S. dollars if the investors hired him for
a $100,000 fee. The investors were supposed to receive a return of $1.5 million
or more within 10 to 120 days.
Campbell told investors that their investments were
refundable if the returns were not paid within the provided timeframes. In
addition, he told investors that he had prior success with these investment
programs, was a former Navy SEAL, once worked in an investment house, had
traveled internationally closing deals and he had nearly 600 investors.
The investigation revealed that none of the investors
received the returns on their investments that Campbell had promised. Only a
few of the 44 investors have been refunded the money they paid for his services
and those refunds were paid for with other investors’ funds.
Campbell usually depleted the funds he received from
investors shortly after receiving them, by using the funds for personal
expenses, including the purchase of two automobiles and expenses at hotels and
restaurants.
To appease investors regarding delays in paying them the
returns on their investments, Campbell represented that their money was being
held up by various United States agencies and or catastrophes to his family or
other individuals who were important for these deals to be completed.
For example, Campbell told investors his niece was a student
and had been shot at Sandy Hook Elementary School, but later changed his story
when the names of the school-shooting victims were released to the public. He
also fabricated that his attorney’s daughter had been in a motorcycle accident.
Campbell pleaded guilty on September 21, 2017 to charges of
money laundering and wire fraud. As part of his plea agreement, Campbell agreed
to pay $1,408,854 in restitution.
“Campbell blatantly and repeatedly lied to and violated the
trust placed in him by the individuals who invested with him,” U.S. Attorney
Glassman said. “Besides falsely representing experience and expertise, he told
contemptable lies about a tragic incident.”
“When you knowingly mix deceit and trickery into the
financial well-being of individuals, you create a recipe for devastation that
could last a lifetime,” said Ryan L. Korner, Special Agent in Charge, IRS,
Criminal Investigation, Cincinnati Field Office. “Today's sentencing demonstrates
how federal law enforcement will band together to help put an end to the
criminal behavior of those who prey on investors for their personal financial
gain. IRS Criminal investigators will continue to use their financial expertise
to identify and trace laundered funds in these types of investor fraud
schemes.”
U.S. Attorney Glassman commended the investigation of this
case by the FBI and IRS, as well as Assistant United States Attorney Jessica H.
Kim, who represented the United States in this case.
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