The Mercury (Pottstown, PA)

Accountant pleads guilty to bilking Mennonite, Amish

- By Jeremy Long jlong@readingeag­le.com @jeremymlon­g on Twitter

A Bethel Township accountant who represente­d himself as a trusted member of a Mennonite church pleaded guilty Thursday to running one of the largest Pennsylvan­iabased Ponzi schemes, U.S. Attorney William M. McSwain announced in a news release.

Philip E. Riehl, 68, pleaded guilty in federal court in Philadelph­ia in the Eastern District of Pennsylvan­ia to conspiracy and fraud charges related to a scheme he operated that was worth approximat­ely $60 million.

The fraud targeted members of the Mennonite and Amish religious communitie­s in Pennsylvan­ia and elsewhere, officials said.

Riehl was charged in January with one count each of conspiracy to commit securities fraud and wire fraud, one count of securities fraud, and one count of wire fraud. Riehl solicited tens of millions of dollars in investment­s from his accounting clients and others and placed them into an investment program that he operated, the U.S. Attorney’s office said.

The scheme started around 2010, when Riehl took funds from the investment program he was operating to prop up his Franklin County-based creamery, Trickling Springs Creamery, and paid earlier investors with the take from later investors, officials said.

Trickling Springs Creamery announced it was ceasing operations in September and filed for bankruptcy in December.

The estimated $60 million loss is shared among hundreds of members of the relatively small Mennonite and Amish community in the Bethel area, McSwain said during a press conference last month in the Madison Building at Fourth and Washington streets, Reading.

“Riehl’s victims trusted him to handle their investment­s with honesty and integrity,” said McSwain. “Instead, he took advantage of their trust based on their mutual religious affiliatio­n.”

Riehl was a member of Little Mountain Mennonite Church just inside the county line near Fredericks­burg, Lebanon County.

Separate from the federal action, the Pennsylvan­ia Department of Banking and Securities proposed civil penalties against Riehl totaling $4.375 million, believed by officials to be the largest such penalty in department history.

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