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Lebanon Insurance Broker Sentenced to Over Seven Years in Federal Prison for Stealing Nearly $4 Million in “Ponzi” Scheme
July 9th, 2024
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News & Politics
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4 minute read
Lebanon Insurance Broker Sentenced to Over Seven Years in Federal Prison for Stealing Nearly $4 Million in “Ponzi” Scheme
INDIANAPOLIS - Brian Simms, 46, of Lebanon, has been sentenced to 90 months in federal prison, followed by three years of supervised release, after pleading guilty to wire fraud.According to court documents, between 2012 and 2020, Simms was a licensed insurance broker and registered agent at Brendanwood Brokerage.Beginning in 2013, and continuing through August 4, 2021, Brian Simms defrauded at least twenty-two victims by promoting investment services to current Brendanwood insurance clients and others. During that period, neither Simms nor Brendanwood were registered through the Financial Industry Regulatory Authority to provide financial advising services, or by the Indiana Securities Division or licensed to sell securities.As part of his scheme, Simms advised victims to liquidate their traditional and long-term insurance investments, such as 401(k)-retirement savings accounts and life insurance policies. He encouraged the victims to reinvest the funds with him at Brendanwood. In exchange, Simms told victims he would invest their money on their behalf and yield higher rates of return than their current investments. He directed them to deposit those liquidated funds into their personal bank accounts and wire transfer or make checks payable to Brendanwood.Instead of investing clients’ money as promised, Simms took it for his own personal benefit, such as paying Brendanwood’s payroll and other business expenses, and for his own personal expenditures including credit card payments, Amazon purchases, and other personal expenses.Simms concealed the scheme through Ponzi-scheme type payments—using funds wrongfully taken from some investors to pay purported returns to others. He also falsified financial reports and made it appear that the victims’ funds were earning an increased rate of return and properly invested in traditional, legitimate investment products.In total, Simms’ scheme caused 200 fraudulent deposits of client funds into Brendanwood’s accounts, totaling approximately $3,995,535.46 from at least twenty-two victim investors from Indiana, Ohio, and elsewhere. Simms stole significant portions of victims’ life savings, including six who lost over six-figure amounts, and two who lost over $1 million.
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