U.S. issues detention order for alleged B.C. Ponzi schemer Greg Martel - Action News
Home WebMail Tuesday, November 26, 2024, 05:10 AM | Calgary | -16.5°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
British Columbia

U.S. issues detention order for alleged B.C. Ponzi schemer Greg Martel

A detention order issued in California calls for Martel to be taken immediately into custody by the U.S. Marshals Service, assuming he can be located in the country.

New details about Martel's run-in with a private detective and Thai authorities revealed in U.S. court

A young bearded man in a light suit and an open-necked white shirt sits on the edge of a white couch in a tastefully decorated apartment, looking directly into the camera with a neutral expression.
Victoria mortgage broker Greg Martel is now the subject of a detention order in the United States. (Greg Martel/Facebook)

A bankruptcy judge in California has issued a detention order calling for alleged Ponzi artistGreg Martel to be taken immediately into custody by the U.S. Marshals Service, assuming he can be located in the country.

At the same time, new details have come to light about a run-in Martel had with a private investigator and authorities in Thailand in August.

Martel is the disgraced Victoria mortgage broker who owes $226 million to approximately 1,200 investors after the collapse of a financial schemethat promisedclients incredible rates of return as high as 100 per cent on an annualized basis, in some cases.

Court-appointed receiver PricewaterhouseCoopers(PwC) has been charged with finding where the money went and recovering any assets for the benefit of jilted investors.Martel's whereabouts remain uncertain.

According to new documents filed in the U.S., Martel continues tofloutcourt orders, most recently through interactions with aCaliforniainvestor named Daniel Castellini, towhom he owes$2 million.

Castellini is alleged to have hired a private investigator, who found Martel in Thailand and then arranged for Thai authorities to detain himon an expired tourist visa, according to a declaration fromNeil Bunker, PwC senior vice president.

Martel ordered to leave Thailand

Bunker goes on to say that Castellini and Martel then "cut a deal" that saw Martel transfera Las Vegas mansion, two Teslas and a "substantial" amount of cash to Castellini, breachingcourtorders prohibiting him from disposing of assets.

The deed for the Las Vegas property was allegedly notarized "by audio-visual communication," on Aug. 29, 2023.Bunker said Martel was released from Thai custodythe next day and ordered to leave the country, which he did.

A man smiles at the camera from the driver's seat of a luxurious white car.
Greg Martel owes investors $226 million, but his whereabouts are uncertain and he continues to flout court orders. (Facebook/Greg Martel)

Bunker's declaration goes on to state thatCastellini then contacted a Canadian investor who is paying for PwC's asset recovery efforts in the U.S. The purpose of the conversation was to advisethe Canadian that the Las Vegas property was no longer in play because it hadalready been transferred to him.

So far, only $300,000 of the missing $226 million has been recovered. Martel has not been charged criminally in either country, but is under criminal investigation by the B.C. Securities Commission.

Martel and his company Shop Your Own Mortgage (SYOM)wereput into receivership on May 4, an action that pulled together more than a dozen lawsuits that had been filed by individual investors claiming they were owed money.

SYOM was supposedly in the business of pooling investor money to provide short-term bridge loans to real estate developers, but so far investigators have foundno evidence that any loans were ever made.

"The absence of records here points to the concept that [SYOM]was a Ponzi scheme orchestrated by Martel," said Bunker in the declaration.

Martel has not cooperated with PwCin the receivership process, despite numerous court orders compelling him to.

A hearing has been scheduled in U.S. Bankruptcy Court in California on Oct. 24 forPwC's applicationto have the Canadian court proceedingsrecognized south of the border.

The detention ordered issued on Sept. 29 saysU.S. authorities agreeto recognize and enforce a contempt order issued in B.C. Supreme Court last month that seeksMartel'sarrest in Canada.