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Category Archives: Fair Financial

Tim Durham May Have Little To Smile About In New Year

Troubled financier Tim Durham can likely look forward to an equally troubled 2010. His reputation as a formidable businessman and leveraged buyout specialist is in obvious disarray. He is the subject of a federal investigation that accuses him of running a Ponzi scheme and defrauding Ohio investors of more than $200 million. And investor lawsuits against Durham and his company, Fair Finance, are growing in numbers. 

Here’s a look back at the 2009 timeline of Durham’s current business and legal issues. 

  • January 2009. Investors in Obsidian Enterprises, a leveraged buyout firm owned by Durham in downtown Indianapolis, charge in five lawsuits that Durham defaulted on promissory notes and owes them more than $200,000.
  • March 2009. Durham is accused of “self-dealing” after CLST Holdings, where Durham resides as chairman, acquires assets from Fair Finance, an Ohio company owned by Durham.
  • October 2009. The Indianapolis Business Journal breaks a story that Durham has treated Fair Finance as his personal bank, using it to fund a range of personal and business-related investments. Investors who purchased investment certificates sold by Fair Finance are now owed more than $200 million.
  • November 24, 2009. The FBI executes search warrants on two of Durham’s businesses – Obsidian Enterprises and Fair Finance. Boxes of documents and banking-related materials are collected and taken away by federal agents.
  • November 25, 2009. Ohio securities regulators announce that Fair Finance will no longer be able to sell additional investment certificates to investors until it provides sufficient information that the company has the financial ability to pay them back.
  • November 26, 2009. Republican candidate for Marion County Sheriff Tim Motsinger withdraws from the campaign amid the FBI investigation into Durham’s businesses. Durham previously served as the campaign finance chairman for Motsinger, as well as a large financial contributor.
  • November 2009. Connections between Durham and Marion County Prosecutor Carl Brizzi come to light. Brizzi, a close friend of Durham, had previously agreed to serve on the board of director of Fair Finance and then changed his mind following news that Fair Finance was under investigation.
  • November 28, 2009. The federal government files court papers alleging that Durham committed wire fraud and seeks forfeiture of various properties owned by Durham. Among the assets sought: Durham’s 30,000-square-foot mansion and his 2008 Bugatti sports car. The complaint states that Durham and various associates told prospective investors who purchased Fair Finance investment certificates that the money would go toward investments in low-risk consumer loans. Instead, the court papers allege that the money was used to carry out a Ponzi scheme, with money from new investors used to pay prior investors.
  • November 30, 2009. The asset-seizure lawsuit is mysteriously rescinded by the federal government.
  • November 30, 2009. Fair Finance’s headquarters in Akron and eight satellite offices in Ohio fail to reopen.
  • December 1, 2009. CLST Holdings, a Dallas-based firm where Durham serves as chairman, reveals that the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) is investigating financial dealings between it and Fair Finance.
  • December 4, 2009. Maddox Hargett & Caruso and David P. Meyer & Associates file the first class action lawsuit on behalf of investors against Durham and Fair Finance co-owner James Cochran, alleging that the two men, as well as other executives of Fair Finance, pulled tens of millions of dollars out of the company for their personal use.
  • December 10, 2009. Businessman James F. Scott files a lawsuit against Durham, accusing him and other defendants of manipulating a Sept. 3 auction involving one of Durham’s prized automobiles: a 1930 Duesenberg.
  • December 11, 2009. A press release from Fair Finance says it plans to resume regular billing and collection efforts with regard to its loan receivables business. It does not say if or when it will be able to do the same concerning sales and redemption of its investment certificates.
  • December 16, 2009. The Indianapolis Star and the Akron Beacon Journal file a motion to unseal search warrant documents tied to the federal investigation of Durham and Fair Finance.
  • December 22, 2009. A second lawsuit is filed on behalf of 36 Wooster, Ohio, investors against Durham and Fair Finance. According to the lawsuit, the investors are owed amounts ranging from $2,000 to $500,000. 
  • December 23, 2009. Reports surface that Durham’s Obsidian Enterprises will vacate its offices on the 48th floor of the Chase Tower in downtown Indianapolis. According to a story in the Indianapolis Business Journal, Obsidian, which subleases the space from JPMorgan Chase, hasn’t paid rent for “a couple of months.”

Tim Durham Caught In Ponzi Scheme Probe

Tim Durham’s name used to be associated with a lavish lifestyle that entailed a 30,000-square-foot mansion and an eclectic collection of exotic and classic cars. Now, it’s a Ponzi scheme being linked to the flamboyant businessman.

Durham is the subject of a federal investigation for running an alleged Ponzi scheme through his company, Fair Finance, which advertised and sold supposedly safe, but high-yielding, investment certificates to Ohio investors, many of whom were elderly. Money from the investors was then filtered to other companies that Durham owns or controls, according to court documents. 

Last month, the FBI raided Durham’s businesses, Fair Finance and Obsidian Enterprises. On the same day, Nov. 24, that the raids occurred, the U.S. attorney’s office in Indianapolis filed court documents accusing Durham and at least some of his companies of defrauding investors out of hundreds of millions of dollars. 

To date, no criminal charges have been filed against Durham. However, Durham did just recently hire James Voyles, a top Indianapolis criminal defense attorney.

On Dec. 4, Maddox Hargett & Caruso P.C. and David P. Meyer & Associates filed a lawsuit against Durham on behalf of an Akron couple who invested in Fair Finance. The lawsuit, which is seeking class action status, contends that Durham and James Cochran, co-owner of Fair Finance, used the company “as their own personal bank.”

“A lot of people are just scared to death that they have lost their entire life savings,” said David Meyer of David P. Meyer & Associates in a Dec. 21 article in the Wall Street Journal.

A second lawsuit was filed against Durham on Dec. 21 on behalf of 36 Wooster, Ohio, investors who say Durham owes them $2.2 million. Many of the plaintiffs in that lawsuit are believed to be members of the Amish community. 

Following the FBI’s raids of Nov. 24, the nine offices of Fair Finance have remained closed. The company owes approximately $200 million to Ohio investors who purchased the investment certificates, which do not have a government guarantee. 

In an interview with the Wall Street Journal, Durham, 47, said he was “shocked” by the raids on his businesses and that the allegations against him were “untrue.”

Lawsuits Multiply For Tim Durham, Fair Finance

Tim Durham’s holiday season is getting filled with presents of lawsuits and investigations over allegations that his company, Fair Finance, was running a Ponzi scheme, using money raised from selling investment certificates to pay off earlier investors. Adding to the growing list of legal actions against Durham is a Dec. 10 fraud lawsuit filed by Virginia businessman James F. Scott, who accuses Durham and other defendants of manipulating a Sept. 3 auction involving one of Durham’s notorious automobiles: a 1930 Duesenberg that was first built for publishing tycoon William Randolph Hearst.

Also named as defendants in the lawsuit: Missouri collector car dealer Mark Hyman; Donald D. Lyons, of Dowagiac, Mich.; Kruse International; and the Auburn Cord Duesenberg Museum.

Specifically, Scott’s lawsuit alleges that Durham and others who had a financial interest in the sale of the Duesenberg drove up the price during the bidding process and then split the profits. Scott eventually won the bid for $2.9 million. The other bidder was Hyman, who attended the auction with Durham.

The vehicle itself was put up for consignment by a group of sellers – Durham, Hyman, Lyons and the Lyons Family Trust.

Scott, who participated in the auction by telephone, contends he had no knowledge that the sellers reserved the right to bid or that they were in fact offering bids on the vehicle. That meant that the price of the car was artificially inflated by those who had a financial interest in getting more money for the car, according to court documents.

After Scott transferred more than $3.1 million to the museum’s bank, the money was divided up and distributed to Hyman, Lyons and the museum, with Durham’s knowledge.

To top it off, Scott has yet to receive the title for the 1930 Duesenberg vehicle, according to lawsuit.

On Dec. 23, there was yet another twist to the Durham saga. An IBJ article reports that another company owned by Durham, Obsidian Enterprises, is planning to vacate its offices on the 48th floor of the Chase Tower in downtown Indianapolis. According to the story, Obsidian leases the space from JPMorgan Chase & Co. and hasn’t paid rent for “a couple of months.”

Like Fair Finance in Akron, Ohio, Obsidian Enterprises has been closed since Nov. 24 when federal agents conducted simultaneous raids on the two businesses.

Meanwhile, investors who are owed some $200 million sit and wait for answers.

Fair Finance Faces Another Investor Lawsuit

For the second time this month, Fair Finance and owner Tim Durham face a lawsuit filed on behalf of disgruntled investors. The most recent legal action involves a group of Wayne County residents, including Amish investors, who are suing Akron-based Fair Finance over allegations the company owes them nearly $2.2 million.

The first lawsuit against Fair Finance, Durham and other executives was filed Dec. 4 by the law firms of Maddox Hargett & Caruso P.C. and David P. Meyer & Associates, LPA. That lawsuit, which accuses Fair Finance’s owners of bilking investors out of millions of dollars by using company assets for their own enrichment, is seeking class action status.

As reported Dec. 22 by the Akron Beacon Journal, the latest lawsuit against Fair Finance was filed yesterday in Wayne County Common Pleas Court. Twenty members of the group behind the lawsuit created a limited liability company named Fair Recovery to protect their privacy. Twenty other plaintiffs, including two trusts, also are named.

Offices of Fair Finance have remained closed following a Nov. 24 FBI raid on the finance company and another business owned by Durham, Obsidian Enterprises.

Previous court records allege that federal investigators suspect Fair Finance of operating as a Ponzi scheme, using money from new purchasers of investment certificates to pay off earlier investors. Today, more than $200 million is outstanding.

Newspapers File Motion In Tim Durham, Fair Finance Case

Two newspapers have filed a motion to unseal federal search warrants connected to FBI raids of businesses owned by Timothy S. Durham. The Indianapolis Star and the Akron Beacon Journal filed their motions on Dec. 18, stating that the public has a right to know what federal investigators were seeking in the Nov. 24 raids.

The newspapers’ motion says: “The overriding public interest in recovering millions of dollars in investments for thousands of investors, as well as the overriding public interest in the integrity of the political system in which one influential person may have destroyed thousands of retirement dreams, require that all documents issued in connection with Fair Finance and Timothy S. Durham be public.”

In a previous court filing, federal authorities alleged that Fair Finance, purchased in 2002 by Indianapolis businessman Timothy S. Durham, was being operated as a Ponzi scheme.

Fair Finance: Latest Update On Tim Durham’s Ohio Business

Fair Finance has yet to reopen its doors for business. The only signs of life at the company’s Akron headquarters: Several more signs behind the building have been recently marked with the words, UnFair Finance.

Last week, a news release issued by lawyers for Fair Finance said the company hoped to restart its accounts receivables billing and collection business on Dec. 14 but did not know when it would reopen. The company also gave no indication of when or if it would be able to resume selling and redeeming investment certificates for investors.

Federal investigators have suspected that Fair Finance, bought by Indianapolis businessman Timothy S. Durham in 2002, was being operated as a Ponzi scheme. According to court documents, Ohio investors might have as much as $200 million in outstanding investment certificates with Fair Finance.

Meanwhile, the Akron Beacon Journal is reporting that at least one Fair Finance investor has been asked by federal officials to complete a questionnaire as part of an ongoing investigation into the company. According to the paper, the investor’s money with Fair Finance was part of an inheritance. When she went to retrieve a check from the company in late November for her relative’s $17,000, she was greeted by closed offices.

The investor said the money was supposed to go toward helping her bury a relative. Because she couldn’t get her money from Fair Finance, she had to come up with a down payment for her relative’s funeral and still owes $4,000.

On Nov. 24, the FBI raided the Akron, Ohio, headquarters of Fair Finance and another business owned by Tim Durham, Obsidian Enterprises in downtown Indianapolis.

The Carl Brizzi, Tim Durham Connection

Fair Finance, the Ohio company owned by Tim Durham and the focus of allegations by federal authorities of operating as a possible Ponzi scheme, has new and troubling revelations. This time, they involve Marion County Prosecutor Carl Brizzi, who’s been at the center of the Durham controversy for his financial ties to the Indianapolis businessman and his role as a board member of Fair Finance. 

According to a Dec. 12 article by the Indianapolis Star, the Durham/Brizzi connection may run much deeper than Brizzi has previously let on. The article reports that Brizzi also invested in Red Rock Picture Holdings, a Los Angeles movie production business that loaned millions of dollars to another company Durham manages, National Lampoon. 

The article says it’s unclear whether Brizzi still holds shares in Red Rock. If he does, however, it would clearly refute a previous statement the prosecutor made when he said he had no financial dealings related to Durham other than those already reported.

Adding further intrigue to the story is how Brizzi actually came to invest in Red Rock in the first place. It is a little known company, and few, if any, analysts apparently follow the stock.

According the Indy Star article, Red Rock has loaned at least $1 million to Daniel Laikin, who served as National Lampoon’s CEO until last year when he was forced to resign amid allegations of stock manipulation. Laikin ultimately pleaded guilty to one felony count of conspiracy. 

Brizzi also owns stock in yet another business controlled by Tim Durham – Dallas-based CLST Holdings. In early December, the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) subpoenaed CLST for its financial records.

Fair Finance Press Release Creates More Questions For Investors

A press release from Fair Finance on the state of its affairs leaves many unanswered questions, not the least of which is when and if investors will be able to redeem their investment certificates. Fair Finance, which is owned by Indianapolis businessman Tim Durham, has been closed since Nov. 24, after the FBI seized banking documents and other records at Fair’s headquarters in Akron, Ohio. Another Durham-owned business, Indianapolis-based Obsidian Enterprises, was raided by FBI agents that same day. 

The U.S. Attorney’s Office in Indianapolis filed court papers last month alleging that Fair Finance (also known as Fair Financial) had been operating a Ponzi scheme, using money from the sale of new investment certificates to pay off earlier investors.

In the press release issued on behalf of Fair Finance by Akron attorney Ron Kaffen, no definitive word is given on when investors – all Ohio residents and the individuals who loaned Fair Finance more than $200 million by purchasing the company’s investment certificates – can collect on what they’re owed. Instead, the release says: 

“Fair has still not determined when or if it will be able to resume regular business with regard to the sale and redemption of its investment certificates. Fair also intends to establish a help line in the near future to answer investor related questions. We regret that we have not been able to provide more information regarding these recent developments. Fair intends to provide as much information as is available during the coming days and weeks. We appreciate everyone’s patience as we work through these issues.” 

Fair Finance: Doors Remain Shut To Investors On Dec. 7

Thomas Hargett, securities lawyer being interviewed by CBS affiliate, Channel 8, Indianapolis.

Fair Finance’s offices in Akron, Ohio, remain closed, leaving investors with no answers and no access to their money. One investor who has $140,000 invested with Fair Finance and its co-owner Tim Durham showed up at the company’s Market Street headquarters at 7:30 a.m. on Dec. 7, hoping to be first in line, reported the Akron Beacon Journal. By 9 a.m., he was joined by other investors – all of whom were greeted by locked doors and dark offices.

Last week, Maddox Hargett & Caruso and David P. Meyer & Associates filed a class action lawsuit on behalf of Fair Finance investors that alleges the company’s offering circulars to prospective investors contained material misrepresentations and omissions. The complaint also charges that insiders, including co-owner Durham, breached their fiduciary duty to investors and instead personally enriched themselves.

Investors, all of whom are Ohio residents, purchased investment certificates from Fair Finance that paid interest rates substantially higher than those for certificates of deposit offered by commercial banks. Unlike CDs, however, the securities sold by Fair Finance come with no government guarantee if Fair Finance is unable make good on its payments to investors.

FBI agents raided the offices of Fair Finance on Nov. 24, as well as the offices of another Durham-owned company, Indianapolis-based Obsidian Enterprises.

Fair Finance, Timothy Durham Face New Legal Problems

A newly filed class action lawsuit against Fair Finance accuses the Akron, Ohio, company of misrepresenting investments sold to thousands of Ohio investors. According to the complaint, Fair Finance co-owners Timothy Durham and James Cochran purchased Fair Finance in 2002 and proceeded to convince investors to invest tens of millions of dollars by misrepresenting critical facts about certain securities it sold. Investors are now owed more than $200 million – money that Fair Finance allegedly may not be able to repay. 

Many investors who put their faith and money into Fair Finance (also known as Fair Financial Services) are retirees and fear their life savings have now vanished. 

Fair Finance marketed and sold “investment certificates” and promised investors rates of return as high as 9%. That amount is nearly three times higher than what is offered by commercial banks for similar products. At the same time, the lawsuit alleges that Fair Finance used “a tangled web of financial transactions to conceal the withdrawal of investors’ funds for their own enrichment.”

“Nobody knew the company was basically being used as a personal ATM for the owners and their affiliated companies,” said David Meyers, co-counsel for the plaintiffs, on Dec. 4 in the Cleveland Ohio Business News. “Had they known, no one would have invested in this.” 

Maddox Hargett & Caruso P.C. and David P. Meyer & Associates filed the class action lawsuit on Dec. 4 in Summit County, Ohio. 

The FBI is conducting a separate criminal investigation into Fair Finance, as well as Obsidian Enterprises – another company co-owned by Durham and Cochran. On Nov. 24, federal investigators held simultaneous raids at Fair Finance and Obsidian, hauling away boxes of banking-related documents. Since the raid, eight Fair Financial offices in Ohio have remained closed.

Meanwhile, the state of Ohio is taking steps to keep Durham and his companies from selling more investment certificates to Ohio investors. As reported Dec. 4 by the Akron Beacon Journal, a seven-page letter dated Dec. 3 from the Ohio Division of Securities is demanding additional information and clarification from Fair Finance regarding its request to sell new investments. That request was submitted by Fair Finance on Nov. 24, just hours before FBI agents raided Fair Finance’s offices in Akron, Ohio, and another Durham-owned business, Obsidian Enterprises, in Indianapolis.

According to the letter written by Mark Heuerman, registration chief counsel for the Ohio Securities Division, to Fair Finance’s attorney, “The issuer [Fair Finance] has failed to provide investors with material information regarding the risk of the underlying portfolio and lending practices.” 

Among other risks cited in the letter:

·       “In many instances, the issuer amended loans to increase the amount available despite a deteriorating financial condition and without performing any additional due diligence.”

·       “The Chief Executive Officer, Tim Durham, appears to have unfettered discretion to amend a loan for Fair and related parties without involvement or approval by other parties, officers, directors or employees of the affected entities party to the loan.”

·       “The issuer may engage in high risk loans where substantial uncertainty exists as to the ability of the borrower to repay principal.”

 


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