Friday, September 23, 2011

Full Tilt Poker Site Defends Business, Not a Ponzi Scheme

Poker Site Defends Business, Not a Ponzi Scheme
By SUSANNA KIM 
Sept. 22, 2011 
abcnews

The operators of online gambling site Full Tilt 
Poker, charged with running a $440 million 
Ponzi scheme by federal authorities, say what 
happened to them was simply 
mismanagement, not a scam.



"Banks fail for not having sufficient revenue to 
cover customer deposits all the time. No one 
refers to such failures as Ponzi schemes. And 
there was no Ponzi scheme here," said Jeff 
Ifrah, an attorney for Full Tilt Poker. 

"Players were not investing in any company-
run investment vehicle. Players were never 
promised any type of high rate return. Players 
just wanted to play poker and the company 
offered that service," he said. Ifrah explained 
that in late 2010, the company suddenly 
found itself unable to meet the player 
withdrawal demand. 

Full Tilt was shut down in April by federal 
authorities. "Full Tilt was not a legitimate 
poker company, but a global Ponzi scheme,"  
Preet Bharara, the U.S. Attorney for the 
Southern District of New York, said in a 
statement Wednesday.

The site told players their gambling accounts 
were secure and available for withdrawal at 
any time when in fact, "Full Tilt Poker did not 
maintain funds sufficient to repay all players," 
Bharara said. The operation allegedly used 
player funds to pay board members and other 
 owners more than $440 million since April 
2007.

The complaint named board members 
Raymond Bitar, Howard Lederer, Christopher 
Ferguson and Rafael Furst as defendants. 

"Full Tilt insiders lined their own pockets with 
funds picked from the pockets of their most 
loyal customers while blithely lying to both 
players and the public alike about the safety 
and security of the money deposited with the 
company," according to the DOJ statement.

Ifrah said the individuals added to the civil 
complaint will "certainly have comments on 
the allegations against them." If they received 
distributions at a time when the company was 
underwater, the individuals will need to 
defend whether the distributions are subject 
to seizure as the amended complaint alleges. 

On April 15, 2011, the Justice Department 
 
Poker Site Defends Business, Not a Ponzi Scheme
 filed a complaint for money laundering, fraud, 
and violating the 2006 Unlawful Internet 
Gambling Enforcement Act against 11 
individuals who ran PokerStars, Full Tilt Poker 
and Absolute Poker.

"But even if the government can prove that 
case and forfeit such distributions, such a 
case simply does not amount to a 'global 
Ponzi scheme' as the US Attorney stated in his 
press release," Ifrah told ABC News. "The 
inflammatory description by NY's lead federal 
prosecutor has nothing to do with the 
allegations in the amended complaint and the 
timing of these comments is most 
unfortunate."

Ifrah conceded that Full Tilt may have been 
mismanaged, and the company "may have 
made poor decisions." 

The Justice Department's shutdown of online 
poker sites has affected millions of poker 
players and the poker industry.

In June, Phil Ivey, one of the world's best poker 
players, announced he was suing his sponsor, 
Full Tilt, in June for $150 million and 
boycotted this year's World Series of Poker 
(WSOP).

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