Geoffrey S. Berman, the United States Attorney for the
Southern District of New York, announced today that MICHAEL WRIGHT was
sentenced to 21 months in federal prison for his participation in a scheme to
defraud investors who invested millions of dollars based on false
representations that their funds would be used to purchase tickets to various
live events for re-sale at a profit on the secondary market. WRIGHT pled guilty on September 27, 2018
before Magistrate Judge Stewart D. Aaron to one count of wire fraud. His plea was accepted by Chief U.S. District
Judge Colleen McMahon, who also imposed today’s sentence.
U.S. Attorney Geoffrey S. Berman said: “Michael Wright previously admitted to his
conduct related to an elaborate ticket-buying scheme to defraud investors of
millions of dollars. Wright and his
co-defendants induced their clients to invest in their phony business through
false representations and lies, when in fact, it was a Ponzi-like enterprise. While Michael Wright’s ticket-buying business
operated as a fiction, now a 21 month term in federal prison will be his stark
reality.”
According to allegations in an Indictment filed in Manhattan
federal court, previous court filings, and statements made in public court
proceedings:
WRIGHT participated in a scheme along with Craig Carton and
Joseph Meli to induce investors to provide them with millions of dollars, based
on representations that the investor funds would be used to purchase blocks of
tickets to concerts and other live events, which would then be re-sold on the
secondary market. Carton and Meli
purportedly had access to those blocks of tickets based on agreements that Meli
had with a company that promotes live music and entertainment events (the
“Concert Promotion Company”) and that Carton had with a company that operates
two arenas in the New York metropolitan area (the “Sports and Entertainment
Company”). In fact, neither the Concert
Promotion Company nor the Sports and Entertainment Company had any such
agreement with Carton, Wright, or Meli, or any entity associated with
them. After receiving the investor
funds, Carton, Wright, and Meli misappropriated those funds, using them to,
among other things, pay personal debts and repay prior investors as part of a
Ponzi-like scheme.
For example, on December 8, 2016, a New York-based hedge
fund (the “Hedge Fund”) and Carton executed a revolving loan agreement (the
“Revolving Loan Agreement”), under which the Hedge Fund agreed to provide
Carton with up to $10 million, for the purpose of funding investments in the
purchase of tickets of events. The
Revolving Loan Agreement provided, in sum and substance, that the proceeds of
the loan would be used only to purchase tickets pursuant to agreements for the
acquisition of tickets and for limited business expenses. The Hedge Fund would
receive a share of the profits from the resale of the tickets.
Later in December 2016, Carton induced the Hedge Fund to
wire $2 million to the Sports and Entertainment Company, based on a purported
agreement he had with the Sports and Entertainment Company (the “Sports and
Entertainment Company Agreement”). Under
this supposed agreement, the Sports and Entertainment Company Agreement gave an
entity controlled by Carton (the “Carton Entity”) the right to purchase $2
million of tickets to concerts at one of the venues operated by the Sports and
Entertainment Company. Carton, among
other things, sent the Hedge Fund a copy of the Sports and Entertainment
Company Agreement that purportedly had been signed by the chief executive
officer of the Sports and Entertainment Company. However, this agreement was fraudulent and
had never been entered into by the Sports and Entertainment Company or signed
by the chief executive officer.
On December 20, 2016, when the Hedge Fund wired the $2
million to the Sports and Entertainment Company for the purchase of tickets,
Carton contacted the Sports and Entertainment Company and told them, in sum and
substance, that the wire had been sent in error and should be sent to the bank
account for an entity operated by Carton and WRIGHT, for which WRIGHT is the
signatory. The prior day, December 19, 2016, WRIGHT had e-mailed Carton wire
information for this account. After the
Sports and Entertainment Company’s $2 million investment was diverted to that
account, WRIGHT wired $966,000 to WRIGHT’s bank account, of which WRIGHT sent
approximately $690,000 to repay a gambling loan of Carton’s which WRIGHT had
guaranteed and approximately $250,000 to repay WRIGHT’s personal home equity
line of credit. WRIGHT further diverted
$40,000 of the Hedge Fund’s investment for his own personal expenses, including
to pay off credit card debt, and nearly $1 million to Carton’s personal bank
account.
*
* *
WRIGHT, 42, of Upper Saddle River, New Jersey, pled guilty
to one count of wire fraud, which carries a maximum sentence of 20 years in
prison and a maximum fine of $250,000 or twice the gross gain or loss from the
offense. The maximum potential sentence
in this case is prescribed by Congress and is provided here for informational
purposes only, as any sentencing of the defendant will be determined by the
judge.
Carton was convicted on November 7, 2018, of securities
fraud, wire fraud, and conspiracy to commit those offenses, and will be
sentenced before Chief U.S. District Court Judge Colleen McMahon on April 5,
2019.
Meli pled guilty to securities fraud in October 2017 and is
currently serving a 78-month sentence imposed by U.S. District Court Judge
Kimba M. Wood in April 2018.
Mr. Berman praised the investigative work of the Federal
Bureau of Investigation and thanked the Boston Regional Office of the U.S.
Securities and Exchange Commission.
This case is being handled by the Office’s Securities and
Commodities Fraud Task Force. Assistant
U.S. Attorneys Brendan F. Quigley and Elisha J. Kobre are in charge of the
prosecution.
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