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NY Man Admits To Running $200M Ponzi Scheme In Region

A 53-year-old man has admitted to running a $200 million Ponzi scheme in New York based on false statements to investors about inflated returns for nonexistent wholesale jewelry deals, federal authorities announced on Wednesday, Dec. 30.

A 53-year-old man has admitted to running a $200 million Ponzi scheme in New York based on false statements to investors about inflated returns for nonexistent wholesale jewelry deals, federal authorities announced on Wednesday, Dec. 30.

A 53-year-old man has admitted to running a $200 million Ponzi scheme in New York based on false statements to investors about inflated returns for nonexistent wholesale jewelry deals, federal authorities announced on Wednesday, Dec. 30.

Photo Credit: Pixabay/NikolayFrolochkin

Long Island resident Gregory Altieri, 53, pleaded guilty to wire fraud for running the scheme. 

As part of the plea, Altieri, of Melville in Suffolk County, also admitted to committing securities fraud in connection with the scheme. 

When sentenced, Altieri faces up to 20 years in prison. 

“With today’s guilty plea, Altieri is held accountable for duping dozens of investors, including retirees living off their pensions,” stated Seth D. DuCharme, Acting United States Attorney for the Eastern District of New York. “The defendant’s lies have caught up to him and he will now face the consequences of his fraudulent scheme.” 

According to DuCharme, beginning in August 2017, Altieri solicited between $75 million to $85 million in investments in his entity, LNA Associates, from over 80 investors located in Queens, Staten Island, Long Island and elsewhere. 

Altieri told investors that their money would be used to purchase jewelry at “closeout” prices, which would then be resold at a high profit yielding returns on those investments of between 30 and 70 percent in a matter of months, added DuCharme.

While Altieri initially purchased some jewelry with investors’ money, since approximately May 2018, he used money from new investors to pay earlier investors, representing to the latter group that they were receiving returns on their investments, said DuCharme. 

The purported “returns” were used by Altieri to convince the earlier investors to keep their money with LNA Associates by “rolling over” their funds into new investments based on false promises to use this money to purchase additional jewelry, noted DuCharme. 

 By January 2020, when Altieri stopped making payments to investors, he owed them approximately $200 million based on the falsely inflated promised returns.

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