Connecticut Post

After prison, former club owner finds redemption

Convicted of fraud, Danbury’s Ian Bick, has found a new passion: podcasting

- By Kendra Baker STAFF WRITER

DANBURY — Ian Bick says fear of letting people down played a large role in the life-changing decisions that landed him in federal prison several years ago, but the former nightclub owner convicted of fraud says he’s now on a path to redemption.

“I was a cocky kid who thought it was me against the world, but you can’t judge someone on their actions from 10 years ago when they’re not the same person,” Bick said. “I could understand if I got out of prison and was doing the same thing as before, but that’s not the case.”

It has been five years since he completed a nearly three-year federal prison sentence. And Bick, now 28, has found a new passion — one he’s not only turned into a full-time job, but through which he says he also finds fulfillmen­t and a sense of purpose: podcasting.

Inspired by his own experience behind bars, Bick launched “Locked In with Ian Bick” in January 2023. Since then, he said the podcast has evolved into a platform from which people of various background­s and experience­s can share their stories.

“The whole arc of the podcast is overcoming challenges. They’re able to tell their stories from beginning to end, no interrupti­ons. It’s like a therapy session,” said Bick, whose guests have included former inmates, people recovering from addiction, law enforcemen­t officers and criminal justice system profession­als, as well as celebritie­s including comedian Chevy Chase and motivation­al speaker and former profession­al skateboard­er Brandon Novak.

Bick said he chimes in, but the guests — some of whom have felt shunned due to their past — are the main focus of his podcast. Like them, Bick said he knows what it’s like to be rejected and judged because of previous wrongdoing­s.

Over seven years ago, he was sentenced to 36 months in federal prison for defrauding investors out of nearly $500,000 — money that was supposed to be used to purchase electronic­s for online resale, as well as organize and promote concerts. Instead, federal prosecutor­s said Bick diverted the money “for his own personal use and benefit,” including to fund hotel stays, purchase jet skis and pay other victim-investors.

He was indicted and arrested in January 2015 on 11 counts of wire fraud, three counts of money laundering and one count of making a false statement. Ten months later, Bick was found guilty on six of the wire fraud and one of the money laundering counts in a jury trial at U.S. District Court in New Haven.

Bick — who became owner of the Tuxedo Junction music venue and nightclub on Ives Street in Danbury when he was about 19 — said he didn’t know that what he was doing was illegal.

“I didn’t know what a Ponzi scheme was, Bernie Madoff or any of that,” Bick said. “Everything happened so fast. One day I’m one of the top 10 most (fascinatin­g) people of Connecticu­t and then the next minute I’m the arrested nightclub owner.”

The 2015 grand jury indictment against Bick claimed that he “induc (ed) numerous victim-investors to provide him funds for investment­s based on the false and fraudulent pretenses, representa­tion and premises.”

“The investigat­ion started in January 2014, but I didn’t reopen Tuxedos until June 2014,” he said, adding that Skyy Bar and Lounge — an 18and-over nightclub he opened at the Ives Street location in October 2013, which closed in early 2014 — “was the only thing that was a part of it.”

Federal prosecutor­s accused Bick of using entities he “controlled and was a principal and/or managing member” to solicit investment funds from friends, former classmates, acquaintan­ces and their parents “by promising high investment returns over relatively short periods of time.” They also claimed he did so to “enrich himself, his various entities and certain associates.”

According to Bick, social acceptance — not personal indulgence — contribute­d to his money-making ambitions, which he said predated his involvemen­t in the concert or electronic­s businesses.

“In high school, I made money and took care of my friends,” he said. “We went out to dinners and did all this stuff no one else in high school could.”

Looking back, Bick said he believes many of his actions and decisions were driven by a desire to be liked.

“I was bullied in school. People would pick on me and I always wanted to be liked — and I think that got me into a lot of trouble, which is why I told lies. I wanted people to like me, and I didn’t want to lose friends,” he said.

According to the grand jury indictment, Bick’s “scheme to defraud” involved him falsely representi­ng to certain victiminve­stors that he had made significan­t profits by organizing and promoting concerts, when he in fact had not.

While some big-name acts performed at Tuxedo Junction during his tenure as owner — including The Chainsmoke­rs in 2014 and 21 Savage in 2016 — and he did successful­ly organize concerts elsewhere, not all of Bick’s endeavors worked out as planned.

‘One defining moment’

Bick said his lies started in 2013, after a concert he organized at the University of Rhode Island and that he thought made money had actually tanked. He refers to it as “the one defining moment.”

“I was telling my friends and family it made money, only to find out that it didn’t,” he said. “I realized at that moment that I had two options — either tell them it didn’t make money and have them think I’m lying because I’d been telling them they’d been making money, or actually lie and say it made money and keep those friendship­s and relationsh­ips.”

Bick said he chose the latter.

“That was the moment that triggered everything, and if I could take that lie back, I would,” he said.

He didn’t know then, Bick said, but he knows now, that what he did with investors’ money was wrong and he regrets it.

“People seem to forget that I was young when I made all these decisions that ultimately landed me in prison,” said Bick, a 2013 Danbury High graduate who believes immaturity and misguided passion were at the root of many of his past actions.

His attorney, Jonathan J. Einhorn, agreed that Bick is a different person today.

“He was an immature kid at the time in an adult world,” said Einhorn, who has served as Bick’s attorney since his January 2015 arrest. “Now, he’s grown up and he’s responsibl­e and understand­s the nature of what he was involved in before.”

Twenty-two days after getting his $250,000 post-conviction bond revoked for violating the conditions of his release by taking several unauthoriz­ed trips to a New York casino, Bick was sentenced in October 2016 to three years incarcerat­ion — which he served at various federal correction­al institutio­ns and detention centers, starting at a low-security prison at Fort Dix in New Jersey.

Bick, who was 21 at the time of his sentencing, was eventually transferre­d to the Federal Correction­al Institutio­n in Danbury, where he said he spent several months in solitary confinemen­t. The remainder of his approximat­ely three-year sentence included serving time at facilities in New York, Philadelph­ia, Oklahoma City and Chicago. He said his last year was at a prison camp in Wisconsin.

After getting out in January 2019, Bick said he went to a halfway house in Waterbury and was on home confinemen­t until May 2019, which was followed by three years of supervised release. Aside from one or two traffic tickets, Bick — who is no longer on probation — said he has stayed out of trouble.

When asked to pick a few words to describe himself eight or nine years ago, Bick said ambitious “would probably be the only positive word.”

“I was a little cocky, definitely arrogant, and not truthful,” he said. “Now, I would say I’m patient, still ambitious and very determined.”

Restoring balance for himself and his victims is what motivates him today, Bick said.

“I regret causing my friends to lose money, but they are eventually going to get it back,” he said.

According to a spreadshee­t Bick uses to track his payments — which his attorney confirmed to be accurate — he had paid nearly $33,000 of the $480,000 restitutio­n he owes as of Jan. 24, and he told Hearst he has no plans of stopping until he reaches a zero balance owed.

Bick said he’s driven to “get to even.”

“I’m in a fight to get to that because compared to the average person, I’m below that. I’m negative — I’m in the hole,” he said.

Working hard and second chances

Some of the misconcept­ions about him are that he’s spoiled, avaricious and doesn’t work hard for things, Bick said.

“When I wanted the new XBox, Nintendo Wii, my first car — my parents didn’t get me that. I was spoiled in the sense that they let me throw these big crazy parties at the house — but I worked hard for everything else that I got,” he said.

For as long as he can remember, Bick said he has been a hard worker.

“I was doing lemonade stands as a kid, selling candy out of my backpack in middle school and I worked at the Matrix Corporate Center when I was 16, and did that for a couple of years,” he said.

After prison, Bick said he got a job at Whole Foods and worked his way up from a hotbar cook to manager of prepared foods. Bick said he was working there when the episode of the HBO Max documentar­y series “Generation Hustle” about his story came out in April 2021, and also worked as an Uber driver for a few months last year.

Since prison, Bick has become involved in justice reform and serves as a member of the board of directors for the National Associatio­n for Re-Entry Profession­als — a nonprofit that provides education, training and profession­al services for individual­s getting out of prison.

“I’m trying to make changes in the world (in terms of ) reform, and reentry is a big aspect,” he said, noting that helping others is a goal of both his podcast and his recently establishe­d studio business.

With the success of “Locked In with Ian Bick,” he founded Creative Evolution Studios — a business offering podcast production and consulting, social media management and content production services — in September 2023.

The company’s headquarte­rs on Danbury Road in Ridgefield is where Bick records his podcast and helps other people with their own.

“I have a lot of clients who come in and I tell them, ‘The first one’s on me,’ because I remember how I was when I was starting out and no one would do that for me,” he said.

Bick said his work in podcasting may “ruffle some feathers,” but it’s something he is “extremely passionate about.”

“I love seeing something built from the ground up and grow,” he said. “It’s fulfilling, and we’re trying to make good, positive change in the process.”

Still, he said second chances have been hard to come by — particular­ly from those in Danbury. He said he has reached out to local and state leaders to discuss such topics as inmate reentry on his podcast and though many have declined, he said his offer stands.

“If I’ve learned anything in my life, it’s don’t burn bridges and keep an open mind,” he said.

Einhorn said Bick’s work in podcasting not only shows he’s grown, but also “serves an educationa­l purpose” and is useful to others.

“You can see the difference between a kid and a grown businessma­n with good judgment, and that’s who he is,” Einhorn said. “He’s come into his own.”

Even though it took going to prison — and the events, actions and decisions that led him there — to be where he is today, Bick said he’s glad he discovered podcasting.

“I feel like I’ve found my purpose and life calling,” he said. “Everyone has a journey, and this is the journey I’m on and I would love for people to see and understand.”

 ?? H John Voorhees III/Hearst Connecticu­t Media ?? Ian Bick at Creative Evolution Studios in Ridgefield where he records his podcast “Locked In with Ian Bick.”
H John Voorhees III/Hearst Connecticu­t Media Ian Bick at Creative Evolution Studios in Ridgefield where he records his podcast “Locked In with Ian Bick.”

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