Medicine Hat News

Crown calling for sentence of up to 12 years for man in multi-million dollar fraud case

-

The Crown asked for a sentence of 10 to 12 years Wednesday for a Calgary man who bilked clients out of millions of dollars in a Ponzi scheme.

Arnold Breitkreut­z, 74, was convicted on June 29 of fraud over $5,000 for what the Crown described as a multimilli­ondollar scheme in which investors believed they were putting money into safe first mortgages.

Court heard the money from his company, Base Financial, was instead loaned to an energy industry promoter and used in a risky oil play in Texas that was secured against oil-and-gas leases and equipment.

“The Crown submits that this actually was a trust situation,” said Crown prosecutor Shelley Smith, who told court that Breitkreut­z was held in “high regard” by many clients after successful­ly running a mortgage-broker business for years.

Smith said during the period of the offence, between May 1, 2014, and Sept. 30, 2015, investors provided Breitkreut­z with more than $21.4 million as a result of his “deceit.”

“The scheme was due to collapse at some point, but the fraud persisted for a period of 17 months,” she said.

“False contracts were distribute­d to investors, T5 (investment income tax slips) were also distribute­d to investors providing a gloss of legality to the scheme. With respect to the large number of victims in this case, 107 individual­s were defrauded money.”

Smith is also asking that Breitkreut­z pay restitutio­n of more than $3.1 million.

The court received 29 victim impact statements. Two of the victims were in court to read them.

William Janman and his wife invested nearly $3 million with Breitkreut­z and trusted him so much they would invite him to barbecues and out to dinner.

“We will never in our lifetime recover from this loss. We find ourselves struggling with unmatched loss on a daily basis instead of enjoying the end of our life and retirement,” he told the court.

He said he and his wife have experience­d guilt, shame, selfblame and depression.

“The nightmare continues.” Another investor, whose identity is protected by a publicatio­n ban, said she feels like a fool for ignoring her initial intuition after putting her finances and company at risk.

“Who would have believed that ignoring that niggly feeling would lead to the near collapse of our business and devastatin­g financial impacts to all of our employees,” she said.

“Please remember all the victims. I ask that you sentence Arnold Breitkreut­z to the fullest extent of the law so he may think of all the lives that he has damaged.”

Breitkreut­z’s lawyer said his client should serve a sentence in the five-to-eight-year range and anything above that would be unfair considerin­g his age.

Cale Ellis-Toddington said the operations of his client were not complex and the wellheeled investors knew what they were getting into.

“It wasn’t a matter of trust. You look at the evidence of the investors and they said ‘I don’t really trust Arnold, but the fact of the matter is I was getting a great return on my investment and that’s why I invested,”’ he said.

Ellis-Toddington said his client was not motivated by greed but was trying to get his investor’s money back. He said his client’s level of moral blameworth­iness is low.

But Queen’s Bench Justice Colin Feasby questioned that argument.

“Is it not an abuse of trust to raise money on both the explicit and implicit representa­tion that you are a mortgage broker dealing in Alberta mortgages and then to bait-and-switch and put that money into a Texas investment?” he asked.

“Another way to look at it is: He was running Ponzi schemes and kept kicking things down the road so he never had to have a day of reckoning.”

Breitkreut­z, who has been in custody since he was found guilty, offered a brief apology.

“I can feel your loss and for that I’m unbelievab­ly and indescriba­bly sorry. It was not my intention when I accepted your money,” he said.

Feasby is to deliver his sentence on Friday.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada