Paperwork Dotted with Legal-Sounding Gibberish

Whenever you hear about a “prime bank” investment opportunity, walk away. A prime bank opportunity generally is described by the sponsor as an international investing program involving complex financial instruments that are too technical and complicated for non-experts to understand. If it’s too technical for you to invest why would you? – Astronomical returns are promised in exchange for secrecy about this lucrative international banking platform.

The SEC’s case against Frank L. Pavlico and his firm, The Milan Group, was just another prime bank scheme. It caught my eye because the SEC also brought charges against a lawyer involved in the scheme, Brynee K. Baylor.

What kept my attention was this quote from Stephen L. Cohen, Associate Director of the SEC’s Division of Enforcement:

“Pavlico and Baylor produced paperwork dotted with legal-sounding gibberish designed to deceive investors into believing this is a highly-sophisticated investment opportunity.”

And in the complaint:

“These documents were legal-sounding gibberish dotted with meaningless legal and financial terms that were designed to deceive investors into believing they were participants in a legitimate investment.”

A complaint by one of the deceived investors (.pdf) lays out what the scheme was offering. if the investor would deposit $325,000 into Baylor’s trust account Milan would provide a leased instrument with a value of $10 million. This would then be monetized and the resulting funds would be used to acquire a larger instrument.

These are just allegations, nothing has been proven and the defendants have not settled the charges.

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