Former Hedge Fund Chief Draws 20 Years' Prison For $450 Million Fraud
The Law Jobs and Legal NewsWire MICHAEL J GARCIA, the United States Attorney for the Southern District of New York,
announced that DANIEL E. MARINO was sentenced today to 20 years in prison for defrauding investors in the now-collapsed
Bayou hedge funds of more than $450 million.
The sentence was imposed by United States District Court Judge COLLEEN MCMAHON in Manhattan federal court. MARINO
pleaded guilty on September 29, 2005, to conspiracy, investment adviser fraud, mail fraud and wire fraud.
In imposing the sentence, Judge MCMAHON said that she was sending a message to the securities and other industries that
people entrusted with other people's money have an obligation to be truthful and forthright, at whatever cost to
themselves. She described MARINO as "the linchpin of the fraud."
According to publicly filed documents, between 1996, when the first Bayou fund was opened, and August 2005, when a
series of Bayou funds collapsed, the funds sustained consistent losses. Investors, however, were regularly told that the
funds were reaping substantial gains. MARINO, who was the Chief Financial Officer and Chief Operating Officer of Bayou,
admitted during his guilty plea that he and SAMUEL ISRAEL, III, the Chief Executive Officer of Bayou, along with JAMES
G. MARQUEZ, who ran the first Bayou fund with ISRAEL, hatched a scheme in 1998, after the fund sustained a second year
of losses.
At that time, the three agreed that MARINO, a Certified Public Accountant ("CPA"), would form a sham CPA firm called
Richmond-Fairfield Associates to sign off on the fraudulent financial statements that were disseminated to future and
current investors. Thereafter, according to the Information to which MARINO pleaded guilty, beginning in 1999, they sent
out, among other things, financial statements, in which Bayou falsely reported profits and falsely asserted that
Richmond-Fairfield Associates was an independent auditor that had audited Bayou and certified its financial statements.
According to publicly filed documents, the Bayou funds collapsed in August 2005, after ISRAEL and MARINO attempted to
recoup mounting losses by investing contributions to the funds in private placement transactions in the United States
and abroad. The private placement transactions turned out to be frauds, according to publicly filed documents.
ISRAEL pleaded guilty on September 29, 2005, to conspiracy, investment adviser fraud and mail fraud. He is awaiting
sentencing. MARQUEZ pleaded guilty on December 14, 2006, to conspiring to defraud Bayou investors between July 1996 and
October 10, 2001. He was sentenced on January 22, 2007, to a term of 51 months' imprisonment, to be followed by two
years of supervised release. The Court also ordered that MARQUEZ forfeit certain property and securities and pay
$6,259,650 in restitution to his victims.
The three guilty pleas followed the filing of a civil forfeiture action against the remaining Bayou assets on September
1, 2005, by the United States Attorney's Office for the Southern District of New York. According to the Civil Complaint,
approximately $100,010,673.68 in Bayou funds were the subject of an Arizona state court seizure order Those were the
funds that had been transferred by Bayou in connection with purportedly legitimate private placement transactions that
turned out to be a fraud. In connection with these transactions, Bayou transferred investor funds through various banks
-- the funds moved from New York to London to Hamburg and then back to London -- and ultimately to an account in
Flemington, New Jersey, where it was seized and forfeited pursuant to an order of the Arizona Superior Court.
In October 2006, as a result of the submission of facts by the Federal Bureau of Investigation sufficient to demonstrate
that the seized money was the property of the victims of the Bayou fraud, the Arizona Superior Court issued an order
directing that the funds be transferred to the custody of the United States Marshals, and $106,541,628.64, representing
proceeds of the fraud, along with accrued interest, was transferred to the United States Marshals.
According to the federal civil Complaint, the United States Attorney's office will, upon entry of a final order of
forfeiture, request that the forfeited property be distributed pro rata to victims of the fraud offenses.
MARINO was remanded to begin serving his sentence in a federal prison. Judge MCMAHON also sentenced MARINO to three
years of supervised release to follow his incarceration. The Court also ordered that MARINO forfeit certain cash,
property and interests in partnerships. A final Order of Restitution will be issued within the next 90 days.
Mr. GARCIA praised the efforts of the Federal Bureau of Investigation.
Assistant United States Attorneys MARGERY B. FEINZIG, PERRY A. CARBONE, SHARON LEVIN, and BARBARA WARD are in charge of
the criminal prosecution.
ENDS