Otago Daily Times

START OF NIGHTMARE

Hundreds of people have had their hopes and dreams dashed after investing with Barry Kloogh, many having lost their life’s savings. Mike Houlahan spoke to some of them before yesterday’s sentencing.

- Mike.houlahan@odt.co.nz

LAST year Mr A needed an operation to remove a growth on his lung. After 30 years’ investing through his financial adviser, Barry Kloogh, Mr A trusted his and his wife’s life savings were safe and secure, and never thought obtaining the $11,000 he needed would be an issue.

‘‘I went in for the operation — the money hadn’t appeared — so two or three days after I got out I rang Barry up and he said ‘I’ll just get the office to organise it now. It will be there in the next couple of days’.

‘‘He said ‘I must come around next Wednesday.

We’ll go over your portfolio and I’ll take you two out for dinner’.

‘‘Then two days later we saw everything in the paper.’’

Mr and Mrs A never got their $11,000 — or their meeting, or dinner, for that matter.

May 24, 2019’s Otago Daily

Times front page lead — headlined ‘‘Financial records removed’’ — was like the first scene of a horror movie with hundreds of investors as unwitting and unwilling cast members.

Barry Kloogh had more than 2000 active clients on his database when the Serious Fraud Office, Financial Markets Authority and police investigat­ors descended upon him the previous day.

Most are from OtagoSouth­land, although the ODT has spoken to investors from elsewhere in New Zealand, and some from abroad,

Given the web of deceit and deception Kloogh spun, it is not known precisely how many people have lost money, but best estimates are at least 200 people have lost more than $15 million.

They have slim prospects of getting any of their savings back, and Kloogh has offered little explanatio­n of what he did with it all.

Some of the money went to maintain the Ponzi scheme his Breathe Financial business had been for many years; some went on keeping him in the lifestyle of dining out and expensive cars to which he had become accustomed.

Some went on real estate — Kloogh was trying to buy one of Dunedin’s most expensive homes when he was raided.

Bewildered

But now Kloogh’s bank accounts are empty, and investors such as Mr and Mrs A — whose sixfigure life savings have been lost — are left shaking their heads in sorrow, bewilderme­nt and anger.

‘‘It’s with me every day — from when you wake up in the morning you think things like ‘can I afford a new pair of shoes? Can I afford new trousers? Can we afford dinner on Saturday night?’,’’ Mr A said.

‘‘We do make a point of going out for coffee occasional­ly but whenever we do I can’t help but think about what we are spending because what we spend we are not going to regain.’’

When the As met Kloogh 30 years ago they had modest ambitions: an overseas holiday, updating their cars every few years and having money set aside for their retirement.

‘‘It was all market rates. It wasn’t any of this ‘you can double your money in two years’ stuff. It was just correctly investing in known companies,’’ Mr A said. ‘‘Some were in shares, some were in term deposits — there were no big highfaluti­n interest rates or anything like that.’’

Mr A, who has relatives who lost a substantia­l sum in a fraud case in the 1980s, was determined he would not follow in their footsteps.

Before retirement, the As sat down with Kloogh to restructur­e their portfolio, removing any risk from it and focusing on vehicles such as term deposits with longestabl­ished companies.

They thought they were safe, and having used an authorised financial adviser they ought to have been.

Unbeknown to them, Kloogh was stealing money from one

❛ It’s with me every day . . . You think things like ‘can I afford a new pair of shoes? Can I afford new trousers? Can we afford dinner on Saturday night?’

client to pay off another, in an increasing­ly desperate bid to stave off discovery.

‘‘On one occasion we had some money which just appeared in our account, and Barry rang us up and said it was a mistake, just transfer it, and gave us a bank account number.

‘‘We found out later this was how he did a lot of his money laundering — he just ‘made a mistake’.’’

Kloogh’s depredatio­ns have left Mr and Mrs A with ‘‘very little’’.

‘‘We wouldn’t have had a flasher house and expensive overseas trips or a cruise every year, but we would have lived comfortabl­y,’’ Mr A said.

‘‘Now I am working three days a week, not because I want to but because I have to.’’

Also contemplat­ing returning to work is Mrs B, who with an estimated loss of $980,000 would rank as one of Kloogh’s biggest victims.

She and her late husband were referred to Kloogh by her brotherinl­aw a decade ago, as they had spare money to invest from a property sale.

That money was soon added to by an inheritanc­e, further property deals and a matured life insurance policy.

‘‘As we had spare cash we would hand it to him. On occasions he would ring us and say if we had any spare cash he had a deal on offer at a really good interest rate,’’ Mrs B said.

‘‘We did the first time. The second time he had put this proposal together for $200,000 but said we couldn’t touch it within two years.’’

The Bs invested but soon after their circumstan­ces changed and they wanted their money.

‘‘He hit the roof and said there was no way we could get our money and don’t dare do that again.

‘‘We said it was our money, we can do what we want, but we were both quite shocked that he was telling us what to do with our money.’’

After another change of circumstan­ces the Bs kept their money where it was, reassured by Kloogh that he was looking after their best interests.

‘No scruples’

‘‘We went over with him at one stage about dishonesty and financial advisers going under due to embezzleme­nt.

‘‘He said ‘you’ve got no problems here — it is disgusting what people do’, but he had been doing it for 25 years and he looked us straight in the face . . .

He’s just got no scruples whatsoever — he’s delusional.’’

Mrs B considered withdrawin­g the couple’s money after Mr B’s untimely death, but decided it was best to leave it where it was.

The Bs, like the As, had had calls from Kloogh saying he had ‘‘accidental­ly’’ clicked the wrong button and put money into their account, and then transferre­d it elsewhere at his request.

That vital clue was missed though, and Mrs B augmented her portfolio with the proceeds of the sale of a house the couple were building just before Mr B’s death.

‘‘He pestered me when I was a grieving widow,’’ she said.

‘‘I waited for his phone call — I thought any minute now he is going to ask me for more money because he knows I sold the house.

‘‘At that stage it was getting close to him being found out, I think.’’

A recent cancer operation has left Mrs B wondering if she will be able to work again, but in a financial situation where she might need to.

Of her $980,000, Mrs B thinks she might get $4500 back.

‘‘It took us over 30 years to build up those savings . . . It would have been nice to have had that money behind me that I could fall back on, but he has taken that away from me, so I’m very bitter.’’

 ?? PHOTO: LINDA ROBERTSON ?? Barry Kloogh leaves the Dunedin District Court after he was released on bail in February.
PHOTO: LINDA ROBERTSON Barry Kloogh leaves the Dunedin District Court after he was released on bail in February.
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