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NY Financial Advisor Accused Of Misappropriating More Than $1M From Client, Prospective Clients

A former registered investment adviser and founder of a New York financial advisory firm has been charged with fraud and money laundering.

A former registered investment adviser and founder of a New York financial advisory firm has been charged with fraud and money laundering.

A former registered investment adviser and founder of a New York financial advisory firm has been charged with fraud and money laundering.

Photo Credit: Pixabay/Maklay62

An indictment was unsealed on Monday, Dec. 6 in federal court in Central Islip charging Long Island resident Jeffrey Slothower, of Suffolk County, with wire fraud, investment adviser fraud, and money laundering in connection with a scheme to misappropriate more than $1 million from current and prospective clients.

Slothower was arrested earlier in the day at his home in Southampton.

“As alleged, Slothower executed a calculated scheme in which he repeatedly lied to his current and prospective clients about putting their money into legitimate investments, when in reality he stole their money to fund his lavish lifestyle,” said Breon Peace, United States Attorney for the Eastern District of New York.  “This office will vigorously investigate and prosecute corrupt financial advisers like the defendant who abuse their clients’ trust and violate the law to enrich themselves.” 

Slothower was the founder and operator of the firm Battery Private. 

According to the indictment:

  • While operating Battery Private, Slothower solicited business from a California couple whose money Slothower had managed at another financial services firm. 
  • Slothower promised the victims he could beat any rate of return they were receiving and do so without market risk. 
  • Victim 2 then signed an investment advisory contract with Battery Private. Slothower continued soliciting Victim 1’s business, and, in 2017, he offered to invest Victim 1’s money into what Slothower described as bonds backed by homeowner’s association fees, which would pay Victim 1 an eight percent return. Based on these representations, Victim 1 agreed to invest money with Slothower through Battery Private.
  • Slothower sent Victim 1 wiring instructions for his investment and attached a document that made additional representations about Victim 1’s purported investment, claiming that Victim 1’s money would be held in the “capital reserves” of Battery Private. 
  •  Then, between Jan. 25, 2017, and Jan. 27, 2017, Victim 1 sent more than $500,000 to Slothower at Battery Private to be invested in the purported HOA Bonds. However, that money was not invested in HOA Bonds or held in “capital reserves” as represented by Slothower. Instead, Slothower used that money to, among other things, wire money to himself, purchase a luxury automobile, and pay fees for a private golf club on Long Island. To further the fraudulent scheme, Slothower thereafter made payments to Victim 1 that were falsely represented as quarterly distributions from Victim 1’s investment.
  • Later, Slothower sought out additional funds and asked Victim 1 to find money to invest including money from Victim 2 who was then a Battery Private client. Victim 2 learned about the HOA Bond investment from Victim 1, including the fact that Victim 1 had been receiving purported quarterly returns from the investment. 
  • Victim 2 then agreed to invest in the same purported HOA Bonds, and in or about December 2017, Victim 2 sent more than $500,000 to Slothower at Battery Private that was for investment in the HOA Bonds. However, like Victim 1, Victim 2’s money was not invested in HOA Bonds or held in “capital reserves” as represented by Slothower. Instead, Slothower used that money to, among other things, pay personal credit card bills. To further the fraudulent scheme, Slothower made payments to Victim 2 that were falsely represented as quarterly distributions from Victim 2’s investment
  • In June 2018, Victim 1 made an additional investment of approximately $84,000 into the purported HOA Bonds. Again, Slothower did not invest that money in HOA Bonds or hold it as “capital reserves,” as he previously represented. Instead, Slothower used Victim 1’s money to, among other things, make purported quarterly payments to Victim 1 and Victim 2 that were falsely represented as their investment returns and to pay the private golf club on Long Island.

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