Court orders Florida Ponzi duo to pay $1.8 million penalty

Court orders Florida Ponzi duo to pay $1.8 million penalty
Neil Burkholz and Frank Bianco are also required to disgorge more than $860,000
MAY 12, 2020

A U.S. court in South Florida has entered final judgments against Ponzi scheme operators Neil Burkholz and Frank Bianco, ordering each to pay a $920,825 civil penalty.

Burkholz, of Boca Raton, Fla., also was ordered to disgorge $429,580, which includes prejudgment interest. Bianco, of Pembroke Pines, Fla., was ordered to pay $443,997 in disgorgement and prejudgment interest.

The Securities and Exchange Commission previously charged the two with conducting an alleged $6 million Ponzi scheme that defrauded at least 55 investors. The scheme involved falsely representing that a proprietary options trading strategies was highly profitable. In reality, Burkholz and Bianco invested less than half of the investor funds, and those investments resulted in near-total losses. The two took the remaining funds for personal use.

In November 2019, the SEC filed an emergency action and obtained a temporary restraining order and asset freeze against Burkholz and Bianco and their two companies, Palm Management and Shore Management. This past February, the court ordered over $1.2 million in disgorgement and prejudgment interest against those companies.

Latest News

Y Charts acquires Informa's Zephyr to bolster SMA analytics for advisors
Y Charts acquires Informa's Zephyr to bolster SMA analytics for advisors

The acquisition pairs Zephyr's 21,000-product separately managed account database with Y Charts' newly launched AI agent assistant for investment research.

Advisor moves: Raymond James, Ameriprise, and Janney announce additions in Florida
Advisor moves: Raymond James, Ameriprise, and Janney announce additions in Florida

The war for talent continues in the Sunshine State with as Truist and RayJay teams managing a collective $1 billion in client assets defect to other firms.

Retirement’s new magic number? Workers say they’ll need $1.2 million
Retirement’s new magic number? Workers say they’ll need $1.2 million

Americans now estimate they need $1.2 million to retire comfortably, but rising costs and debt are making that goal increasingly difficult to reach.

Can mega RIAs go public? Integration may decide it, veteran leaders say
Can mega RIAs go public? Integration may decide it, veteran leaders say

Crewe Advisors' Ryan Halliday and Accelerated Wealth Partners' Eric Amar suggest mega RIA's readiness to integrate — not just scale — will determine whether an IPO exit actually works.

IPOs pay off for Morgan Stanley and its advisors
IPOs pay off for Morgan Stanley and its advisors

Morgan Stanley was co-lead underwriter for SPCX, reportedly generating $100 million in investment banking fees.

SPONSORED Direct indexing webinar targets tax-loss harvesting amid market swings

Northern Trust’s Ken Lassner shows advisors how to convert volatility into after-tax portfolio gains

SPONSORED Who builds the income when the pension disappears?

Dan Biagini of American Equity says the steady decline of pensions, longer lifespans and a reset in interest rates are rewriting how advisors build retirement income