« The Number 1 Tip for Due Diligence - from Taleb | Main | What is the difference between and a game theory model and reality? »

Criminalizng Bad Business

Several days ago, I attended along with twenty or so of my clients, a meeting with Chief of Police, a Crown Attorney, and senior Detective. The purpose of the meeting was to explain why fraud charges could not be brought against a noted franchisor fraud.

The key to the Chief/Crown's position was this: how could we prove to the Jury that the individual was a criminal as opposed to simply being a bad businessman?

However, in Grand Rapids, we have an excellent example of a Judge not buying the bad businessman excuse.

A judge did not buy John Sims' excuse that bad business led to the downfall of his ATM leasing company.

And his victims celebrated outside the courtroom after the judge exceeded sentencing guidelines and sent the once-prominent businessman to prison for up to 21 years.

'It shows crime doesn't pay,' said Steve Morin, who said his family lost more than $450,000. 'He deserves every day.'

Sims, 51, is headed to prison for 'lying, cheating and stealing' from people he was supposed to be working with in a legitimate enterprise, Kent County Circuit Judge Mark Trusock said Tuesday. State sentencing guidelines called for 10 to 28 months.

In all, Sims was charged with a series of scams that cost partners about $750,000.

'There is a pattern of criminality here,' Trusock said, referring to fake contracts Sims presented to partners. 'This is not someone going into business and, unfortunately, the business goes bad. It's lying, cheating and stealing, and that cannot be tolerated

ATM leasing frauds are ponzi schemes in which the fraudster shows fake leases to investors, which are supposed to be generating cash, and then uses the proceeds from new investors to pay out the old investors -hiding the fact that the leases were bogus to begin with.

Lying, cheating, and stealing. The three elements that push bad business practices into the realm of criminal behavior -in this case 21 years of criminal time.

Post a comment

(If you haven't left a comment here before, you may need to be approved by the site owner before your comment will appear. Until then, it won't appear on the entry. Thanks for waiting.)

TrackBack

TrackBack URL for this entry:
http://www.bizop.ca/MT-4.21-en/mt-tb.cgi/906

Ads

Ratings

ABA Advertising Law Blogs

Law Blogs - Blog Top Sites Featured in Alltop

Recommended Reading

Ads

How to Subscribe

Privacy Policy

Subscribing allows you to be updated with either email or RSS, automatically and without having to return to the site. You will never have concerns about privacy or spam.

Enter your email address:

Delivered by FeedBurner

feed.jpg