Los Angeles Times

Film finance Ponzi scam alleged

- By Joseph Serna joseph.serna@latimes.com Times staff writer Richard Verrier contribute­d to this report.

In retrospect, the title of the film seems almost prescient.

Six years after the film “Not Forgotten” was released in a handful of theaters in the U.S., L.A. County prosecutor­s have revisited the movie — but only to go after its director and insurer.

The district attorney’s office announced Thursday that the film’s director, Dror Soref, 65, and its insurance agent, Michelle Seward, 43, were charged with 72 counts of being involved in whitecolla­r crime. Authoritie­s allege the two operated a Ponzi scheme to fund the movie.

They were charged with 56 counts of securities fraud, 15 counts of sale of unregister­ed securities and one count of using a device to defraud a securities transactio­n. Authoritie­s have accused the pair of operating the scam from 2007 to 2010 and luring in nearly 140 investors, many of them elderly. One victim lost nearly $400,000, prosecutor­s say.

“They were promised double-digit returns on their investment­s that carried no risk,” prosecutor­s said in a statement.

Seward, a former licensed insurance agent and chief executive of Protégé Financial and Insurance Services Inc. and Saxe-Coburg Insurance Solutions, persuaded her clients to invest their life savings in the film, prosecutor­s say.

Authoritie­s estimated the total loss at about $21.5 million, some of which they say was used to pay the film’s employees or to repay earlier investors.

Neither Seward nor Soref was licensed to sell securities or provide investment advice, according to the California Department of Insurance.

Nonetheles­s, Seward persuaded clients to cash in their annuities early, causing them to pay steep penalties, by promising returns of 10% to 18% on their investment in “Not Forgotten,” according to investigat­ors.

After the film’s completion, Seward and Soref solicited more funds from investors to produce several films through a company called Windsor Pictures. However, money supposedly used to form Windsor Pictures was instead used to pay back investors in the movie flop.

The alleged scheme is thought to be among the most elaborate film investment frauds the department has investigat­ed.

The pair have pleaded not guilty and are due back in court Nov. 16. They each face up to 75 years in prison if convicted on all charges.

As for the movie, “Not Forgotten” was released in four U.S. theaters, where it ran for seven weeks and grossed about $54,000, according to Box Office Mojo. It grossed an additional $88,000 internatio­nally. It received a 15% rating on Rotten Tomatoes.

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