Miami Herald

The feds want to hear from Miami victims of a potential $25 million Ponzi scheme

- BY DAVID J. NEAL dneal@miamiheral­d.com

Fraud charges have been filed against Siddharth Jawahar, who was arrested in Miami in January. But now, in March, federal prosecutor­s want to hear from more people who might have invested in Jawahar’s company.

An indictment in St.

Louis federal court accuses Jawahar, 36, of using Swiftarc Capital to run a Ponzi scheme, collecting $35 million from investors but investing only $10 million. The rest, the indictment says, went for “Ponzi scheme payments to previous investors and extravagan­t lifestyle expenses, including payments for flights on private planes, stays at luxury hotels, and expensive outings at lavish restaurant­s.”

The U.S. Department of Justice says the FBI found Jawahar-nicked investors in Miami, Kansas City, San Francisco, Los Angeles, New York, Austin and Cleveland. Last week, the DOJ requested anyone who invested in Swiftarc Capital or with Jawahar to call the FBI’s St. Louis office at 314-589-2500.

State records show that in Miami, Jawahar also ran Swiftarc Ventures, Swiftarc Ventures of Florida and Swiftarc Holdings out of an office at 801 Brickell Ave.

Jawahar is charged with three counts of wire fraud and one count of investor fraud in St. Louis federal court. He will remain in federal custody until the finish of the case after a prosecutor’s request that referenced Jawahar crashing a BMW through the front of a restaurant in 2013 and running away. He was caught, convicted on a DUI charge and fined $10,000.

Jawahar “has proven through his prior conduct that he has specific willingnes­s to flee from law enforcemen­t,” the detention filing states.

DID SWIFTARC BECOME A PONZI SCHEME?

The indictment says Jawahar and business associates started Swiftarc Capital in 2010, registered it with the state of Texas as an investment adviser and, originally, “invested in a diverse array of securities.”

But in 2015, the indictment says, Jawahar began putting most of Swiftarc’s investor money in Philip Morris Pakistan, identified as “PMP” in the indictment but named by the Texas State Securities Board. With 99% of Swiftarc’s money in PMP, Swiftarc had put all of its investor’s eggs in one basket.

“After [Jawahar] placed nearly all his investors’ money into the PMP investment, the trading price for that company experience­d a dramatic decline,” the indictment said. Jawahar “did not inform Swiftarc Capital investors of PMP’s substantia­lly decreased trading price. Instead, [Jawahar] falsely represente­d to Swiftarc Capital investors that PMP was trading at a much higher price than it actually was.”

When investors asked for their money and selling off PMP shares wouldn’t provide that for Jawahar, the indictment says, he looked for more OPM (Other People’s Money). That money could be used to pay off the previous investors “and fund his lifestyle.”

From July 2016 through this past December, the indictment says, is when Jawahar took in $35 million from Swiftarc investors and used only $10 million on investment­s.

David J. Neal: 305-376-3559, @DavidJNeal

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