Brian Kitts and Shannon Kitts, charged in Ponzi scheme that cost investors millions
An "unrepentant" fraudster who fled to Canada before he could be sentenced in Utah has been charged alongside his wife in a multimillion-dollar Ponzi scheme involving several Calgary-based companies.
Following what RCMP describe as an "extensive"
investigation, Brian Kitts, 65, and Shannon Kitts, 55, from Summerland, B.C.,
are now charged with fraud over $5,000, theft over $5,000 and money laundering.
The alleged crimes, which RCMP say resulted in the loss of
millions of dollars for various investors, took place between February 2014 and
September 2016, and involved several companies including Vesta Capcorp Inc. and
Vesta Equity Partners.
The pair will appear in court in Calgary next month.
'A brazen scofflaw'
In 2019, the Alberta Securities Commission (ASC) issued
sanctions against Brian Kitts and Vesta Capcorp Inc. The ASC's 15-page decision
offers details of Kitts' history of defrauding investors.
At some point before 2014, Kitts was facing securities and
criminal charges in the U.S. and failed to appear before the Utah Securities
Commission, according to the ASC decision.
In 2018, a Utah judge handed down a sentence of at least
four years in an American prison but, by that time, Kitts had already taken
off.
"Rather than accept responsibility for his conduct,
Kitts absconded and embarked on a new fraud in Canada and elsewhere in the
United States," reads the ASC's 2019 decision.
"The continuation and escalation of Kitts' fraudulent
activity in Alberta, while a fugitive from the criminal proceedings he was
facing in Utah, is a significant aggravating factor. His behaviour is
indicative of a brazen scofflaw with a callous disregard for the victims he
duped."
'An unrepentant recidivist'
According to the 2019 press release issued by ASC, about 38
investors lost more than $5 million.
The ASC found Kitts knew the investment opportunities
presented to his investors were "fictitious," and that he used funds
for unauthorized purposes, including for his own, and his wife's benefit.
Vesta raised money from investors through the issuance of
short-term promissory notes which committed to repaying principal and profit
sharing at a 20 per cent monthly rate of return.
The panel labelled Kitts' misconduct as
"egregious" and found he "planned to defraud innocent investors
from the outset."
He was called "an unrepentant recidivist" in the
decision.
In the more recent criminal investigation, RCMP worked with
the ASC and FBI among others.
"Unfortunately, the victims sustained substantial
losses as a result of their investment within the Ponzi scheme they believed to
be legitimate," said Insp. Charlene O'Neill, with RCMP's integrated market
enforcement team.
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