Settling Defendants Named
in "Project Field of Schemes" Sweep Agree to Monetary Judgments in Excess of $11 Million to Settle FTC Charges;
Also Banned from
Telemarketing Activities
Ten individuals named as defendants in a Federal Trade Commission law enforcement action filed in July 1997
as part of "Project Field of Schemes" have agreed to pay monetary judgments ranging from $76,811 to $11.178 million to settle
charges. The FTC had alleged that 27 individual and corporate defendants misrepresented the profit potential, risks, past
performance, and viability of the four Internet-related businesses they marketed: Home Net; Enternet Communications; Connectkom
Group; and Intellicom Group. The main settling defendants are: Timothy D. Grayson; Brent Morris; Eugene Evangelist; Mark Ericson;
Paul Perelman; Mark Nachamkin, also known as Mark Nash; David Z. Diamand; Marc D. Levine, Ira Itskowitz; and Erica Llanos.
The defendants, with the exception of Diamand, are banned from any type of telemarketing activities in the future. Diamand
is banned from involvement in any investment sales whatsoever. All ten defendants are required to pay monetary judgments.
As part of Project Field of Schemes -- a joint federal-state sweep targeting investment scams -- the FTC had
filed charges in federal district court against Intellicom Services, Inc., doing business as Intellicom Group; Connectkom
Services, Inc., Enternet 2000, Inc.; World Net Development Group., Inc. Riviera Consulting, Inc.; Granite Consulting, Inc.;
Brookside Management, Inc.; Mediatech, Inc.; American Long Distance Corp.; Networld Consulting, Inc.; Perspective Consulting,
Inc.; All Administrative Services, Inc.; Prostaff Administrators, Inc.; Support Staff Administrators, Inc.; Frontline Consulting,
Inc.; Marc D. Levine, Ira Itskowitz;
Mark Ericson; Paul Perelman, d/b/a Connectkom Group; Mark V. Nachamkin, a/k/a Mark Nash, d/b/a Enternet Communications;
James A. Q. Slaton, d/b/a Home Net Partners; Timothy D. Grayson; David Z. Diamand; Eugene Evangelist; Kent Bollenbach; Brent
Morris; Erica Llanos; and five relief defendants: Dixon Capital Corporation; Greg Harrington; Chad Harrington; T.L. Laidlaw;
and James Leonard.
According to the FTC's complaint, the defendants were part of a group of telemarketers and promoters that pitched
high tech investment schemes, offering at least eight different investment offerings. The defendants pitched investments in
a company that purportedly would operate live, on-line shopping programs on the Internet (Home Net Partners) and three companies
that were supposed to serve as Internet service providers that would offer Internet access to consumers in Chicago, Detroit,
Indianapolis, Seattle and New York ( Enternet, Connectkom and Intellicom). The defendants would often "reload" initial investors
before the consumers could discover that their first investment had failed.
According to the FTC, defendants Marc Levine and Ira Itskowitz were the kingpins who developed and managed the
marketing of these investment offerings. They violated the FTC Act and the Telemarketing Sales Rule by providing the means
and instrumentalities used by the telemarketers to commit the fraud and by providing other substantial assistance and support
to the telemarketers. Defendants Nachamkin, Perelman, and Ericson served as presidents for the offerings, and Morris, Grayson,
Evangelist and Diamand sold all four offerings. Erica Llanos, the scheme's administrator, knowingly provided substantial assistance
and support to the telemarketers who engaged in the fraud and knowingly participated in the scheme to defraud consumers.
Specifically, the FTC's complaint charged that the defendants misrepresented:
- the profit potential and risks of the investments they sold;
- that the businesses in which consumers were investing were "turn-key"
operations ready to commence profitable operations; and
- that previous ventures defendants marketed had made profits for investors.
The individual settlements announced today, which have been approved by the court, resolve the FTC's charges
against these defendants. According to the FTC, it is unlikely that the full amounts of the judgments will be collected against
most of the defendants. (The case against the other remaining defendants is still pending.)
The settlements with Marc Levine and Ira Itskowitz require them to collectively pay approximately $11 million
for consumer redress. The settlements also ban them from any involvement in telemarketing activites and from providing substantial
assistance or support to other telemarketers.
The individual settlement against David Diamand permanently bans him from any involvement in the sale of investment
opportunities, franchises or business opportunitites. In addition, Diamand is prohibited from falsely representing the experiences
of previous purchasers of any product or service; the value, characteristics or nature of any product or service; and any
fact material to a person's decision to purchase any product or service. Diamand's settlement also requires him to pay a judgment
of $521,549.
The settlements with the other seven individual defendants ban them from telemarketing activities in the future.
In addition, they are all prohibited from, among other things, misrepresenting:
- the likely profits to be generated through any investment opportunity;
- that any investment opportunity is a "turn-key" business, or a business
that will be ready to commence profitable operations shortly after the offering is made;
- the risk, liquidity, market value, resale value or expected income associated
with any investment opportunity; and
- any fact material to a person's decision to purchase an interest or otherwise
invest in any investment opportunity.
In addition, the individual defendants are required to pay the following judgments to be used for consumer redress:
Ericson $834,147; Nachamkin $4,550,426; Perelman $1,305,598; Evangelist $1,556,000; Grayson $1,825,800; and Morris $2,258,000.
Defendant Erica Llanos is required to pay $76,811 as disgorgement.
The FTC also announced a settlement with relief defendant James M. Leonard, an attorney who provided legal services
to the defendants. The FTC alleged that Leonard had received funds and other property derived from payments consumers made
to the defendants. The settlement requires that he return money in his possession that he received from the defendants. The
settlement also contains a provision that holds him liable for the full amount of any transfers he made or received from the
main defendants if he failed to disclose such transfers to the Commission.
Finally, all of the settlements contain various reporting provisions that would assist the FTC in monitoring
the defendants' compliance.
The Commission vote to authorize staff to file the individual judgments was 4-0. The Los Angeles Regional Office
handled the investigation. The seven Stipulated Final Judgments and Orders against defendants Diamand; Ericson; Nachamkin;
Perelman; Evangelist; Grayson; and Morris were filed in the U.S. District Court, Central District of California, in Los Angeles,
on December 22, 1998, and approved by the court on December 28, 1998. The settlements with the other four defendants were
filed on December 31, 1998 and were approved by the court on January 6, 1999.