NORTHERN
CALIFORNIA MAN CONVICTED IN FRAUD SCHEME THAT BILKED ELDERLY
VICTIMS AT O.C. RETIREMENT COMMUNITY OUT OF NEARLY $5 MILLION SENTENCED
TO 7½ YEARS IN PRISON
A Redding,
California man who was found guilty of running a fraud scheme that defrauded
elderly victims out of nearly $5 million was sentenced today to 90 months
in federal prison.
Christopher
Peter Cook, 39, was sentenced by United States District Judge Audrey B.
Collins in Los Angeles. In addition to the prison term, Judge Collins
ordered Cook to pay more than $1.23 million in restitution.
A federal
jury in 2004 convicted Cook of four counts of mail fraud and eight counts
of money laundering. During a trial that last nearly a month, the jury
heard from several elderly individuals who said the scheme cost them their
life savings. During the time of the scheme, Cook lived in several Southern
California cities including Long Beach, Trabuco Canyon and Rancho Santa
Margarita.
Christopher
Cook's brother - Perry Cook, a 32-year-old resident of Kirkland, Washington
- pleaded guilty during the course of the trial to two counts of mail
fraud. Perry Cook, who previously lived in Long Beach, Trabuco Canyon
and Snohomish, Washington, was sentenced in May 2004 to one year in prison.
The
evidence presented at trial showed that Christopher Cook and others operated
several companies from July 1995 until July 1998. Those companies included
CD Services, Inc., which had offices in Long Beach and Laguna Hills; Nationwide
CD Corp. in Laguna Hills; Leisure World Financial in Seal Beach; and U.S.
Financial Advisors in Redding. These companies solicited senior citizens
to invest in certificates of deposit which the Cooks and co-schemers told
victims were identical to those at local banks. The Cooks and their associates
promised victims that their CDs had higher interest rates than those offered
at local banks and that the CDs could be withdrawn at any time. Additionally,
victims were told that the CDs would be held by a third party custodian,
namely CD Services.
In fact,
CD Services and the other companies were controlled by Christopher Cook
and the co-schemers. CD Services placed the money invested by the elderly
and widowed victims into CDs that had maturities of up to 25 years, and
they commingled victims' monies to purchase jumbo CDs exceeding the FDIC
insurance limit of $100,000. CD Services also diverted significant percentages
- up to 52 percent - of victims' monies to members of the scheme to pay
"commissions."
When
victims asked to withdraw their monies, the Cooks and representatives
at CD Services explained that an "early withdrawal penalty and market
valuation" of up to 50 percent would be assessed in order to disguise
the fact that the scheme diverted victims' monies for the personal benefit
of the Cooks and other co-schemers.
CD Services
targeted elderly victims, many of whom lived in Orange County's Leisure
World retirement community.
CD Services
and Nationwide CD were placed into receivership by the California Department
of Corporations in July 1998. The receiver appointed in the case was able
to recover approximately $3.5 million for victims.
During
the course of the scheme, the Cooks and the co-schemers solicited more
than $12 million from elderly and infirmed investors. From that total,
approximately $4.8 million was diverted to the Cooks and their associates.
This
case was investigated by the Federal Bureau of Investigation, the United
States Postal Inspection Service, IRS-Criminal Investigation and the California
Department of Justice.
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