Las Vegas Review-Journal

Betting business charged by SEC

Investors call creator ‘ghost’

- By Bailey Schulz Las Vegas Review-journal

The U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission filed multiple fraud charges and violations against the founder of one of the first sports betting mutual funds in Nevada, which raised $145,500 from roughly 70 investors in more than 20 states.

The charges against Bettor Investment­s, formerly of Reno, and founder Matt Stuart come more than a year after several of Stuart’s clients told the Las Vegas Review-journal he had gone “radio silent” and was not responding to requests to return their money.

“Nobody was able to communicat­e with him whatsoever,” said Gary Lowitt, one of the investors in the fund. “He became a ghost.”

Stuart registered Bettor Investment­s in 2015, shortly after a law was enacted that authorized business entities to place wagers on behalf of investors from around the world, with investors sharing in the wins and losses.

Between 2016 and 2017, several of Stuart’s clients invested between $5,000 and $10,000, according to investors. The fund’s minimum was $500.

Stuart had a history of mismanagin­g funds. Before CG Technology ran a background check and gave Stuart permission to place bets on behalf of Bettor Investment­s in March 2016, he had filed for bankruptcy twice.

In late 2016, Stuart told investors that he no longer would place wagers through

CG Technology. He told the Review-journal that he shut his fund down because of regulation­s and concerns over the health of CG Technology, which had been fined for an illegal gambling and money laundering scheme.

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Matt Stuart

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