Houston Chronicle

‘King Perry,’ who led Ponzi scheme, facing prison time

- By Michael Rubinkam

SCRANTON, Pa. — The fraudster called himself “King Perry,” and for a while he lived like royalty.

Perry Santillo mastermind­ed a long-running investment scam that collected more than $115 million from 1,000 investors around the country, using some of the proceeds to fund a lavish lifestyle of cars, casino junkets and houses in multiple states, according to federal securities regulators.

At one point, Santillo threw himself a party at a Las Vegas club and had a song written for the occasion — the lyrics of which boasted that “King Perry” wears a “$10,000 suit everywhere he rides,” the Securities and Exchange Commission said in a complaint.

The Ponzi scheme eventually collapsed, and Santillo, of Rochester, N.Y., is likely to trade his fancy duds for prison attire when he is sentenced on criminal conspiracy and fraud charges.

Santillo appeared Monday in federal court here to plead guilty to a federal fraud charge, having already entered a guilty plea last month to similar charges in Rochester. Each charge carries a maximum 20-year prison sentence.

Prosecutor­s say Santillo’s victims include elderly people who lost their life savings.

“It is absolutely brazen theft occasioned by nothing other than greed,” said U.S. Attorney David Freed of Pennsylvan­ia, whose office is helping prosecute Santillo.

Santillo, 39, and his lawyer declined to comment Monday.

Between 2008 and 2018, according to court documents, Santillo and alleged conspirato­rs coaxed clients to cash in their retirement accounts and invest in sham companies under their control, using the money from newer investors to repay earlier investors.

To ensure a fresh supply of victims, Santillo and his confederat­es bought the businesses — and client lists — of a series of investment advisers and brokerages, prosecutor­s said. Over the years, they acquired investment firms in Texas, Tennessee, Ohio, Minnesota, Nevada, California, Florida, South Carolina, Pennsylvan­ia, Maryland and Indiana, according to court documents.

“It’s particular­ly insidious to me because of the method that was employed,” Freed said. “There’s a level of criminal sophistica­tion to finding victims in the way that they did.”

Retirees Joe and Gail Malocheski of Saylorsbur­g, Pa., said Santillo and his sales staff persuaded them to shift their entire nest egg of $314,000 from annuities to what they later learned were phony companies. They said Santillo, whom they met in 2016 after he bought their financial adviser’s business and client list, had appeared competent and confident.

“We felt we would be in good hands,” said Gail Malocheski, 74.

The couple began to suspect that something was wrong when the promised dividend checks failed to materializ­e. When the FBI showed up in September 2018 to interview them about Santillo, an agent told them their money was likely gone.

Joe Malocheski, 75, a former union electricia­n who had a second career as a public school music teacher, said he suffered weeks of physical and mental anguish.

“It was very heartbreak­ing, because not only was it the money for our future elderly care, but I wanted to leave something to our children,” he said. “It’s heartbreak­ing that somebody you trusted could do that to you. All your life’s work, gone down the drain for somebody else’s enjoyment.”

His wife, a former school board president, said, “They need to pay dearly for what they did.”

Santillo stole at least $13.4 million, according to federal regulators, while co-defendants in an SEC civil action allegedly stole millions more. The Ponzi scheme returned nearly $45 million to investors, but nearly $71 million more is still owed, court documents said.

The SEC complaint names four co-defendants, all of whom had been suspended or banned by the securities industry’s regulatory body. Santillo is the only person in the case to face criminal charges.

Albert Murray Jr., an attorney who represents the Malocheski­s, said it’ll be up to federal investigat­ors “to discover where he’s got the money” so he can begin to make restitutio­n.

“It’s his best interest because it’s going to ultimately impact his sentence,” he said.

 ?? Michael Rubinkam / Associated Press ?? Prosecutor­s say victims of Perry Santillo, shown Monday, include seniors who lost their life savings.
Michael Rubinkam / Associated Press Prosecutor­s say victims of Perry Santillo, shown Monday, include seniors who lost their life savings.

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