The Denver Post

TD Bank to pay $1.2B in Ponzi scheme case

- By Matthew Goldstein

TD Bank, one of Canada’s biggest lenders, said Monday it had agreed to pay $1.2 billion to settle claims arising from a giant Ponzi scheme involving Stanford Financial, a scandal that erupted 14 years ago and cost ordinary investors about $7 billion.

The bank said it reached the settlement with the Stanford Financial receiver, who is trying to recoup funds for investors, “to avoid the distractio­n and uncertaint­y” of protracted litigation. In a statement, TD, as TorontoDom­inion Bank is known, said it denied any wrongdoing or liability for having provided banking services to Stanford’s offshore bank in Antigua.

The deal with TD was the largest of several settlement­s reached with other banks, including Trustmark National, Societe Generale, HSBC and Independen­t Bank, formerly Bank of Houston, according to the Stanford Financial receiver.

In all, the deals with the five banks, which provided services to Stanford Financial during its two decades in operation, totaled $1.6 billion. The settlement­s came as the receiver was preparing to go to trial with some of the banks.

The settlement is a major victory for the court-appointed receiver, Ralph Janvey, who has struggled for years to recover money for the 18,000 customers of Stanford Financial who invested in high-yielding certificat­es of deposit issued by Stanford’s offshore bank. The CDS ended up largely worthless because the bank did not have enough assets to back them up, and the deposits were not guaranteed by any federal bank insurance program.

Before the settlement with the banks, Janvey and lawyers from Baker Botts had recovered $1.1 billion, with $680 million going to customers and investors.

“This is an extraordin­ary result for the victims of the Stanford fraud,” Kevin Sadler, a partner at Baker Botts, said in a prepared statement. “Given all the challenges faced by the receiversh­ip since 2009, this is nothing short of a monumental recovery.”

Stanford Financial collapsed in February 2009, amid investigat­ions by the Securities and Exchange Commission and other agencies, and after a news report had focused on whether the returns on the company’s CDS were too good to be true.

Federal prosecutor­s ultimately charged R. Allen Stanford, the firm’s founder, with engineerin­g a long-running scheme to divert investors’ money to invest in real estate and finance a lavish lifestyle. Stanford was convicted in 2012 at trial in federal court in Houston, where Stanford had its U.S. headquarte­rs.

Stanford, 72, was sentenced to serve 110 years in a federal prison. He is being held at a U.S. penitentia­ry in Sumtervill­e, Fla.

The Stanford Ponzi scheme was revealed just two months after Bernard Madoff had turned himself in to federal authoritie­s in New York for running a Ponzi scheme at his investment firm. The fraud carried out by Madoff has always overshadow­ed Stanford’s, in part because Madoff looted at least three times more money from customers.

Madoff’s victims also included a number of celebritie­s and highprofil­e investors. By contrast, most of Stanford Financial’s customers were investors of more modest means, who bought the CDS after brokers had pitched them as safe, high-yielding investment­s.

Stanford Financial investors have had to wait far longer to get money back than investors in Madoff’s scheme. (Madoff died in 2021, at 82, while serving a 150year sentence at a prison in Butner, N.C.)

The long road to recovering money for Stanford Financial’s customers is a fresh reminder of the challenges lawyers for the collapsed cryptocurr­ency company FTX face as they seek to recoup billions in customer funds that federal prosecutor­s contend were siphoned away by its founder, Sam Bankman-fried.

Madoff’s investors have recouped much of the money they invested because of a series of successful lawsuits brought by the receiver of the firm. The receiver, Irving Picard, has won a number of lawsuits to claw back so- called fictitious profits that were paid out to investors before the scam was exposed.

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