EFTA00811809.pdf
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Case 1:18-cv-07580-JPO Document 11 Filed 08/22/18 Page 1 of 1
AO 440 (Rev. 06112) Summons in a Civil Action
UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT
for the
Southern District of NeWlYork
MARVIN GERBER AND KALMA KOENIG, on behalf
of themselves and all others similarly situated,
Piaintiff(s)
V. Civil Action No. 18-7580
rHE FINANCIAL TRUST COMPANY, XYZ CORPORATION,
ABC, INC.. and JEFFREY E. EPSTEIN
Defendant(s)
SUMMONS IN A CIVIL ACTION
To: (Defendant's name andaddress) Jeffrey E. Epstein
9 East 71st Street
New York, New York 10021
A lawsuit has been filed against you.
Within 21 days after service of this summons on you (not counting the day you received it) — or 60 days if you
are the United States or a United States agency, or an officer or employee of the United States described in Fed. R. Civ.
P. 12 (aX2) or (3)— you must serve on the plaintiff an answer to the attached complaint or a motion under Rule 12 of
the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure. The answer or motion must be served on the plaintiff or plaintiff's attorney,
whose name and address are: HACH ROSE SCHIRRIPA & CHEVERIE LLP
112 Madison Avenue, 10th Floor
New York. New York 10018
If you fail to respond, judgment by default will be entered against you for the relief demanded in the complaint.
You also must file your answer or motion with the court.
CLERK OF COURT
Date: 08/22/2018 /s/ D. Howie
Signature ofClerk or Deputy Clerk
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UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT
SOUTHERN DISTRICT OF NEW YORK
MARVIN GERBER AND KALMA KOENIG, on
behalf of themselves and all others similarly Case No.
situated,
Plaintiffs,
v. INITIAL COMPLAINT
THE FINANCIAL TRUST COMPANY, XYZ
CORPORATION, ABC, INC., and JEFFREY E.
EPSTEIN, ECF CASE
Defendants.
Marvin Gerber and Kalma Koenig (collectively "Plaintiffs"), on behalf of themselves and
all others similarly situated, by their attorneys, Hach Rose Schirripa & Cheverie, LLP ("HRSC"),
bring this Complaint against the Defendants, The Financial Trust Company ("TFTC"), Jeffrey E.
Epstein ("Epstein"),' XYZ Corp., and ABC, Inc., as follows:
INTRODUCTION
I. This is an action to recover damages on behalf of Plaintiffs and members of the
proposed class, defined below (the "Class"), who are Noteholders and Bondholders of Towers
Financial Corporation ("TFC") for harm suffered as a result of Defendants' conspiring and
participation in a massive Ponzi scheme perpetrated by Defendant Jeffrey Epstein, an uncharged
co-conspirator of Steven Hoffenberg ("Hoffenberg"). Epstein used The Financial Trust Company,
XYZ Corp., and ABC, Inc. to conceal his ill-gotten gains, obtained from his participation in a
Defendant Epstein is sued herein in his individual capacity as well as in his capacity as President
and Chief Executive Officer of The Financial Trust Company.
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fraudulent Ponzi scheme, from banks, financial institutions, and current
investors.
2. While Hoffenberg was convicted as a result of his role in this Ponzi scheme,
Epstein
has remained an uncharged co-conspirator.2 All the while, Epstein knowingly
and intentionally
utilized funds he fraudulently diverted and obtained from this massive Pont
scheme for his own
personal use to support a lavish lifestyle. All of Epstein's acts and omissions,
as alleged herein,
were in contravention to duties owed to TFC, Plaintiffs and the Class and in violation
of the law.
3. Defendants have acquired consistent and unlawful profits at the expense of Plaintiffs
and the Class by creating and operating a fraudulent Ponzi scheme, as described herein, and without
disclosing their fraudulent activities. Noteholders and Bondholders, such as Plaintiffs and
the
Class, have remained unaware of these deceptive practices until the recent affidavit of Non-Party
Affiant Hoffenberg.3
4. On information and belief, Defendants' deceptive practices date back to the mid-
1980s, affect similarly-situated customers throughout the nation, and may have yielded hundreds
of millions of dollars in unlawful profits to Defendants. Defendants' activities were the subject of
a criminal investigation which led to the conviction of Non-Party Affiant Hoffenberg in the late
1990s and several related civil lawsuits within this judicial District.
5. Plaintiffs and other Class members could not reasonably have detected Defendants'
deceptive, unlawful and unfair practices. While Plaintiffs and the Class realized the depth and
breadth of the Pont scheme following Hoffenberg's conviction and the several related civil
lawsuits, Defendants' involvement was purposefully concealed and not revealed until Hoffenberg's
2 In United States of America v. Steven Hoffenberg, 94 Cr. 213 (RWS), 95 Cr. 321 (RWS), 1997
U.S. Dist. LEXIS 2394 (S.D.N.Y. Mar. 4, 1997), Judge Robert Sweet issued a Sentencing Opinion
("Sentencing Opinion") which lays bare the fraudulent conduct that resulted in Hoffenberg's
conviction and which was imputed to Hoffenberg's co-conspirators. See Exhibit A.
3 See Exhibit B which is an affidavit from Hoffenberg detailing Defendants' deceptive practices.
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recent affidavit.
6. Plaintiffs bring this action as a class action on behalf of all similarly
affected
Noteholders and Bondholders of TFC to recover the hundreds of millions of dollars
in investments
misappropriated for improper and personal uses.
JURISDICTION AND VENUE
7. This Court has jurisdiction over this case pursuant to 28 U.S.C. §1331. In addition,
the sum or value of the claims in this case, exclusive of interest and costs, exceeds
$5,000,000 and
Plaintiffs and other Class members are citizens of a state different than the Defendants. Therefore,
this Court has jurisdiction over the remaining causes of action pursuant to 28 U.S.C. §1332(d).
8. At all relevant times, the claims arose in this District. Defendants conducted and
continue to conduct business based in this District. As such, the unlawful and fraudulent conduct
alleged herein originated in and arose out of this District. Furthermore, Defendants reside and/or
maintain a principal place of business in this District. Venue in the Southern District of New York
is therefore proper pursuant to 28 U.S.C. §1391(a).
PARTIES
9. Plaintiff Marvin Gerber ("Gerber") is a resident of Wantagh, New York. Plaintiff
Gerber was an investor and/or noteholder in TFC, a dissolved Nevada corporation which had its
principal place of business in New York, New York.
10. Plaintiff Kalma Koenig ("Koenig") is a resident of San Mateo, California. Plaintiff
Koenig was an investor and/or noteholder in TFC, a dissolved Nevada corporation which had its
principal place of business in New York, New York.
11. Defendant Jeffrey Epstein is an uncharged co-conspirator in connection with the
fraudulent Pont schemes described herein. Defendant Epstein resides at 9 East 71st Street, New
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York, New York 10021.
12. Defendant The Financial Trust Company ("TFTC") is a hedge fund formed
under
the laws of St. Thomas in the U.S. Virgin Islands in 1996. Defendant TFTC
was created,
incorporated, owned, and managed, directly or indirectly, by Epstein, or entities
controlled by
Epstein. Upon information and belief, TFTC was created by and/or received monies,
securities or
proceeds which were obtained and/or raised pursuant to the fraudulent conduct described herein
and without disclosure of the fraudulent nature. Defendant TFTC has misappropriated or converted
such monies, securities and proceeds.
13. Defendants XYZ Corp. ("XYZ") and ABC, Inc. ("ABC") are fictitious names.
Plaintiffs reserve the right to amend this Complaint as a result of pleading fictitious parties.
Defendants XYZ and ABC are believed to be specific companies engaged in the businesses of
financial services and real estate, or subsidiaries thereof, including, but not limited to, holding
companies, trust companies and hedge funds, which have been created, owned, or managed, directly
or indirectly, by Epstein, or entities controlled by Epstein, during the period beginning from his
relationship with TFC to the present. Upon information and belief, such entities were created by
and/or received monies, securities or proceeds which were obtained and/or raised pursuant to the
fraudulent conduct described herein and without disclosure of their fraudulent nature. Defendants
XYZ and ABC are entities which have misappropriated or converted such monies, securities and
proceeds but are not, as of yet, known by Plaintiffs at the time of the filing of this Complaint.
14. Defendants XYZ Corp., ABC, Inc., and The Financial Trust Company, shall
hereinafter be collectively referred to as the "Defendant Entities."
15. Non-Party Affiant Steven Hoffenberg ("Hoffenberg") was the Chief Executive
Officer of TFC from 1975 through April 1993 and was a co-conspirator of Defendant Epstein in
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the massive Ponzi scheme described herein.
16. On March 4, 1997, Hoffenberg was convicted by Judge Sweet of
the Southern
District of New York for his role in a massive fraud conducted through TFC and
associated entities
and perpetrated by him and his, until now, unnamed co-conspirators (the "TFC
Ponzi Scheme").
See United States of America v. Steven Hoffenberg, 94 Cr. 213 (RWS), 95 Cr.
321 (RWS), 1997
U.S. Dist. LEXIS 2394 (S.D.N.Y. Mar. 4, 1997). Hoffenberg was convicted of conspiracy
to violate
securities laws by fraudulently selling securities in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 371, mail and wire
fraud
in violation of 18 U.S.C. §§ 1341 and 1342, conspiracy to obstruct justice in violation of 18 U.S.C.
§ 371, and tax evasion in violation of 26 U.S.C. § 7201.°
17. The TFC Ponzi Scheme was implemented through a host of illegal and fraudulent
conduct which resulted in hundreds of million dollars in losses to over 200,000 investors who,
directly or indirectly, purchased securities sold by TFC in the late 1980s through the mid-1990s.
From the late 1980s and through the mid-1990s, the Noteholders and Bondholders of TFC (i.e.,
Plaintiffs and the Class) invested in these securities based on false memoranda, financial statements
and supporting documents which promised profitable investments and high returns.
18. Defendant Epstein and the Defendant Entities fraudulently obtained investor funds
by playing key roles in the fraudulent schemes described herein, without disclosing the true nature
of their activities, such that the Defendants were unjustly enriched, and therefore, may not in good
conscience retain the continued beneficial interests of their ill-gotten gains.
STATEMENT OF FACTS
° Hoffenberg was sentenced to (i) twenty (20) years of imprisonment, followed by three (3) years
of supervised release, (ii) a fine of one million ($1,000,000) dollars, and (iii) restitution owed in
the amount of 5475,157,340 plus interest, which, with over 20 years of accrued interest, now totals
approximately one billion ($1,000,000,000) dollars, which represents the losses as determined by
the Bankruptcy Court of the victims of his Ponzi scheme.
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19. From 1975 through April 1993, Hoffenberg served as Chief Executive Officer
of
TFC, a corporation which provided a wide array of financial services and assistance
to its clients.
Specifically, TFC was in the business of purchasing large volumes of outstanding receivables,
and
then collecting on them.
20. TFC also owned and operated subsidiaries including Towers Credit Corporation,
which purchased and purportedly collected on commercial accounts receivables; Towers Collection
Services, Inc., which collected past-due accounts receivable for third parties on a contingency basis;
and Towers Healthcare Receivables Funding Corporations I, II, III, IV and V (collectively the
"THRFC Bond Funds"), which issued hundreds of millions of dollars in bonds and engaged in
factoring healthcare receivables.
21. Hoffenberg and Epstein joined forces in the mid-1980s. Prior to that, Epstein had
been running International Assets Group Inc., a consulting company, out of his apartment in New
York City.
22. In or around 1987, Hoffenberg and TFC hired Epstein as an associate and expert
consultant. This "consulting" engagement entailed Epstein assisting Hoffenberg full-time in all
matters of business operations and management of TFC, as well as working with Hoffenberg to
raise capital for TFC from investors.
23. Defendant Epstein, through entities including TFC and the Defendant Entities,
raised over five hundred million dollars ($500,000,000) from investors in the course of carrying out
the TFC Ponzi Scheme.
24. The Ponzi scheme perpetrated by Hoffenberg and Epstein through TFC was an
intricate fraud which depended on Epstein and Hoffenberg's maintaining capital inflow to cover
off losses incurred by existing investors.
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25. For example, in 1987, TFC acquired a controlling interest in
United Diversified
Corporation ("UDC"), which conducted business through two
Illinois insurance company
subsidiaries, Associated Life Insurance Co. ("Associated") and United
Fired Insurance Co.
("United Fire").
26. Epstein was the architect of the plan to secure the approval from Illinois state
regulators for TFC's acquisition of the insurance companies. Indeed, approval was
obtained
because Epstein represented to regulators that TFC would contribute three
million dollars
($3,000,000) to the surplus of United Fire — two million dollars ($2,000,000) immediately and an
additional one million dollars ($1,000,000) at a later date.
27. Thereafter, in or around November 1987, Hoffenberg and Epstein used Associated
and United bonds as collateral in securities brokerage accounts, controlled by Epstein, in a failed
take-over attempt of Pan American Airways, Inc. ("Pan Am"). When the take-over failed, largely
due to the bombing of Pan Am Flight 103 over Lockerbie, Scotland, United Fire and Associated
suffered devastating trading losses, resulting in attendant losses for investors in TFC.
28. Epstein and Hoffenberg diverted investor funds to hide those catastrophic losses,
while at the same time lining their own pockets with millions of dollars of investment capital to
keep up with their lavish lifestyles.
29. Notably, between November 1987 and July 1988, checks were issued by TFC from
UDC and United Fire's accounts for a number of improper expenditures, including the payment of
investment consultant fees for TFC consultants, including Epstein.
30. Between December 1987 and June 1998, Hoffenberg and Epstein again used
Associated and United Fire bonds as collateral in securities brokerage accounts, controlled by
Epstein, to purchase and sell stock and options in a number of high risk investments, including one
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in Emery Air Freight ("Emery"). Similar to the situation with Pan
Am, TFC's attempted take-over
of Emery was a dismal failure, resulting in massive trading losses to
TFC.
31. In the wake of these losses to TFC, Epstein manipulated the price of Emery stock
to
minimize the losses when the share price began to fall. In order to do so,
Epstein opened and
maintained a number of brokerage accounts to execute false trades in order to artificially
inflate the
price of Emery stock — while the company was in reality useless. Because Epstein did
not have a
license to trade, Epstein traded, purchased and sold stocks, bonds and other securities
by what he
referred to as "making the orders" through licensed broken.
32. As the puppet master of Emery stock fraud, Epstein was making sizeable profits off
his trading on insider information. According to Hoffenberg's sworn affidavit, annexed hereto,
Epstein misappropriated the proceeds for not only his personal use, but also to start his own
company, Defendant TFTC.
33. United Fire and Associated lost over one million dollars ($1,000,000) on the
purchase of Emery securities, due to the fact that the stock was purchased with funds borrowed by
using insurance company bonds as collateral.
34. Defendant Epstein and Hoffenberg concealed their unsavory activities through many
deceptive actions, including but not limited to, routing all securities trades confirmations from
brokerage firms to TFC, rather than to the insurance companies' offices; causing false entries to be
made on the records of the insurance companies; failing to provide supporting documentation for
expenditures; providing false information or withholding accurate information in annual and
quarterly reports regarding the location and use of bonds; capital contributions made to the
insurance companies; creating false documents; and closing out securities positions without regard
to the profitability of the transactions.
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35. By the late 1980s, TFC became insolvent as a result of the massive
losses it had
incurred over the years. According to Hoffenberg, Epstein then devised a new
fraudulent scheme
to raise capital for TFC — namely, by selling Promissory Notes.
36. From January 1988 through March 1992, TFC sold the Promissory Notes in private
placements by means of six (6) separate private placement offering memoranda
(the "TFC
Promissory Notes"). Defendant Epstein and TFC, represented to investors that the TFC Promissory
Notes were collateralized by accounts receivable owned by TFC.
37. The six private placement offerings resulted in the sale of approximately two
hundred seventy two million dollars ($272,000,000) in TFC Promissory Notes throughout the
United States.
38. Epstein fraudulently induced investors to purchase the TFC Promissory Notes by
assisting in the preparation and the distribution of financial statements which used falsified income
and asset figures to deceitfully conceal TFC's true financial condition. The falsified income and
asset figures were a key component of continuing Defendant Epstein's Ponzi scheme. Since TFC
had taken such heavy losses on a series of failed investments, the company was deep in the red. In
order to sell investors on the idea of future profits from investment in the TFC Promissory Notes,
it was necessary to show investors that TFC was profitable.
39. As set forth in the accompanying Affidavit of Hoffenberg, annexed hereto, Epstein
participated, directly and indirectly, in arranging to have a certified public accountant falsely verify
that the financial statements reflected TFC's financial condition.
40. Ultimately, only a small fraction of the proceeds from the sale of the TFC
Promissory Notes were used for the purpose stated in the offering documents. The proceeds from
the sales of the TFC Promissory Notes were used to pay TFC's operating expenses, including
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personal expenses of the conspirators, and to pay interest on the TFC Promissory
Notes which were
not properly collateralized.
41. Defendant Epstein, directly and indirectly, represented to investors that the
face
value of the collateral exceeded the face value of the TFC Promissory Notes.
Instead, the collateral
was a fiction backed by falsified receivables which did not exist.
42. In or about July 1990, Epstein, through TFC and in furtherance of the Ponzi scheme,
made additional efforts to raise capital and expand TFC by offering and selling additional
debt
instruments in the form of bonds to investors ("TFC Bonds").
43. Moreover, Defendant Epstein, directly and indirectly, created, or caused to have
created, TFC subsidiaries, the THRFC Bond Funds, which were a series of corporate entities that
issued the TFC Bonds. The TFC Bonds were sold pursuant to five (5) separate private placement
memoranda which indicated that the proceeds from the sales of the TFC Bonds would be used by
the THRFC Bond Funds, in whole or in part, to purchase healthcare receivables from TFC and that
the healthcare receivables purchased from TFC would collateralize the TFC Bonds.
44. Defendant Epstein and Hoffenberg deliberately misrepresented how investor funds
would be used and subsequently misused the proceeds from the sale of the TFC Bonds.
45. In preparation for acquiring healthcare receivables, TFC would provide a total figure
for the amount of receivables it planned to acquire; in response, a percentage of the value of the
receivables was released to TFC in cash. This cash was supposed to be used to make the first
payment on the receivables. When more money was needed to operate TFC, Hoffenberg and
Epstein provided inflated figures for the receivables to accommodate TFC's cash needs. Thus, 50%
of the value of falsified receivables was released to TFC who used the cash to pay TFC's operating
expenses.
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46. Despite the intended and stated purpose in the offering documents, Epstein diverted
the funds and funneled a substantial amount of the proceeds of the sale of the
TFC Bonds to pay
TFC's operating expenses.
47. To cover up the fraud, Defendant Epstein directed collateral to be moved from one
THRFC Bond Fund to another and falsified collateral records in the periodic reports
to investors
and SEC filings. Further, Epstein and Hoffenberg created phony receivables, then included
those
items in reports designed to misrepresent the true financial picture of the THRFC Bond Funds.
Despite Defendant Epstein's central role in this now widespread, massive Ponzi scheme, his actions
were taken on behalf of TFC — Hoffenberg's company for which Epstein only "consulted".
48. Between July 1990 and May 1992, TFC sold approximately two hundred ten million
($210,000,000) dollars in TFC Bonds. Like the TFC Promissory Notes, the financial statements
provided to potential investors used falsified income and asset figures to conceal TFC's true
financial condition.
49. In February 1993, following a lengthy investigation, the Securities and Exchange
Commission ("SEC") filed suit against Hoffenberg, TFC, and other TFC officials for, among other
things, securities fraud through the circulation of false and misleading financial statements to
investors regarding TFC's financial condition.
50. In or around March 1993, TFC filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection, and the
Noteholders and Bondholders filed claims with the Bankruptcy Court to support their loss claims.$
51. On April 19, 1994, and as a result of the SEC investigation, Hoffenberg was indicted
in the Northern District of Illinois on various fraud charges.
s See In re Towers Financial Corporation, et. al. Case No. 93-B41558 (PBA) (S.D.NY. Dec. 8,
1994).
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52. The very next day, on April 20, 1994, Hoffenberg was indicted in the
Southern
District of New York on numerous charges resulting from the SEC investigatio
n and lawsuit,
including mail fraud, securities fraud in connection with the sale of the TFC Promissory
Notes and
TFC Bonds, unlawful conspiracy and obstruction of justice. The indictment pending in
the Northern
District of Illinois was transferred to the Southern District of New York in April
1995.
53. In the course of the trial, Prosecutors in this District offered Hoffenberg a reduced
sentence in exchange for information about his co-conspirators in the TFC Ponzi Scheme — namely
Defendant Epstein's role. However, Hoffenberg did not disclose any details about Defendant
Epstein's involvement, let alone orchestration, of the fraudulent scheme. It was only in May 2016
that Hoffenberg provided the first insight to the public and authorities regarding Defendant
Epstein's role.'
54. As a result of Hoffenberg's refusal to implicate Defendant Epstein, Epstein was
never indicted for his role in the TFC Ponzi Scheme. Epstein was never charged with any crime in
connection with the TFC Ponzi Scheme. Rather, Epstein has been permitted to use the ill-gotten
gains and misappropriated investor funds from his role in the TFC Ponzi Scheme to start and grow
Defendant TFTC.
55. On April 20, 1995, Hoffenberg pled guilty to conspiracy to violate the securities
laws by fraudulently selling securities, in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 371; mail fraud, in violation of
18 U.S.C. § 1341; conspiracy to obstruct justice, in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 371; and tax evasion,
in violation of 26 U.S.C. § 7201. Hoffenberg also pled guilty to one count of the indictment
transferred from the Northern District of Illinois.
6 In May 2016, Hoffenberg through his attorneys, filed a Complaint in this District, docket number
1:16-cv-03989, alleging similar causes of action against Epstein and the Defendant Entities, seeking
relief on behalf of himself and as a constructive trustee of the Noteholders and Bondholders of TFC.
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56. In or around April 1996, the Bankruptcy Court determined that the
claims of the
TFC Noteholders and Bondholders, in the total amount of $475,157,3
40, were valid and actionable.
57. On March 7, 1997, for his role in the TFC Ponzi Scheme, Hoffenberg was sentenced
to twenty years' in prison, a term of supervised release, as well as a one million
dollar ($1,000,000)
fine, approximately four hundred seventy-five million dollars ($475,000,0
00) in restitution, and
court surcharges.
58. The Sentencing Opinion sets forth fraudulent wrongful acts which were committed
by Hoffenberg "and his co-conspirators." The Affidavit ofHoffenberg, annexed hereto, snakes
abundantly clear that Defendant Epstein and the Defendant Entities were Hoffenberg's co-
conspirators.
59. As per the Sentencing Opinion, Hoffenberg and his co-conspirators(i) used certain
of the Associated and United's bonds as collateral in securities brokerage accounts in order to
purchase stock of Pan Am and Emery; (ii) created false documents and filed false pleadings in
related legal proceedings brought by state insurance regulators, closed out securities positions
without regard to the profitability of the transactions, committed and suborned perjury, and
concealed their fraudulent activities in connection with state insurance regulators' investigations;
(iii) devised plans to sell Bonds and Promissory Notes and fraudulently induced the purchase of
such Bonds and Promissory Notes in connection with the TFC Ponzi Scheme; (iv) in addition to
creating fraudulent financial statements, arranged to have a certified public accountant falsely
certify that the financial statements accurately reflected TFC's financial condition; (v) although the
Promissory Notes were not properly collateralized, represented to investors that the face value of
the collateral exceeded the face value of the Promissory Notes; (vi) deliberately misrepresented
how investor funds would be used, and misused the proceeds from the sale of the Bonds; (vii) used
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substantial amounts of the proceeds from the sales of the securities to
meet TFC's operating
expenses; (viii) created phony receivables to misrepresent the true financial ability
to repay Bonds;
and (ix) agreed from the outset of the SEC's investigation to take whatever
steps they deemed
necessary to obstruct that investigation and conceal their criminal activities.
60. Beginning in the early 1990's, approximately one hundred (100) lawsuits, including,
but not limited to, the cases listed below, were filed in the District Court of the Southern
District of
New York against Hoffenberg and TFC in connection with the TFC Pont Scheme:
1:89-cv-0 1689-R0 Foti v. Towers Financial Corp. filed 03/13/89 closed 01/04/90
I :92-cv-08998-SS United Air Fleet v. Hoffenberg, et al filed 12/14/92 closed 11/16/93
193-cv-00810-WK-AJP Gold, et a! v. Towers Financial, et al filed 02/10/93 closed 01/05/00
I:93-cv-00855-WK-KAR Field v. Twit Financial Corp., et! filed 02/11/93 closed 10/31/95
1:93-cv-00987-WK Ziegler v. Twrs Financial Corp., et al filed 02/19/93 closed 01/05/00
1:93-cv-0 I045-WK Ito v. Towers Financial, et al filed 02/23/93 closed 01/05/00
1:93-cv-01047-WK Batten, et al v. Towers Financial, et al filed 02/23/93 closed 01/05/00
I:93-tv-01094-WK Casey, et al v. Twrs Financial Corp., et al filed 02/25/93 closed 01/05/00
I:93-cv.0 1095-WIC Leibman, et al v. Towers Financial, et al filed 02/25/93 closed 01/05/00
I :93-cv-01155-WK Penner v. Towers Financial, et al filed 03/01193 closed 01/05/00
l:93-cv-0 1303-WK Thorn, et al v. Twrs Financial Corp., et al filed 03/04/93 closed 01/05/00
1:93-cv-01543-WK Siudmak, et al v. Towers Financial, a al filed 03/12/93 closed 01/05/00
I:93-cv-01686-WK-KAR Bank Of Cape Verde v. TFC Funding Corp., en filed 03/17/93 closed 03/10/97
k93-cv-04449-WK. Dinsmore v. Towers Financial, et al filed 06/30/93 closed 08/19/98
1:94-cv-00619-WK-KAR Davis v. Hoffenberg, et al filed 02/01/94 dosed 08/02/00
1:94-ev-00724-WK Rothman v. Hoffenberg filed 02/04/94 closed 08/02/00
1:94-cv-00725AIC General Retirement. a al v. Hoffenberg. ct al filed 02/04/94 dosed 04/30/98
1:94-cv-00814-WK Izzo, et al v. Hoffenberg, et al filed 02/08/94 closed 08/02/00
I:94-cv-02727-WK Amer. Intl. Lines, et al v. Towers Financial, et al filed 04/14/94 dosed II/30/98
1:94-cv-09344-WK-AJP Sheridan, a al v. Hoffenberg, et al filed 12/29/94 dosed 06/26/96
1:96-cv-04656-MGC Cohen, et al v. Hoffenberg, et al filed 06/21/96 closed 06/28/96
1:96.ev-05125-PKL Cohen, et al v. Hoffenberg. et al filed 07/08/96 dosed 07/15/96
1:93-cv-01080-WK-KARShawmut Bank v. Towers Financial, et al filed 02/25/93 closed 03/18/98
1:94-cv-0 I792-WK Shawmut Bank Conn. v. Reifenberg, et al filed 03/15/94 closed 08/02/00
1:90-cv-00056-U3S Sahlen & Assoc. v. Towers Financial Cor filed 01/04/90 closed 12/10/90
1:88-cv-09178-RWS Associated Dry Goods v. Towers Financial filed 1228/88 closed 03/06/91
1:93-cv-00992-WK Riviera v. Towers Financial, et al filed 02119/93 closed 01/05/00
I:93-cv-01543-WK Siudmak, et al v. Towers Financial, et al filed 03/12/93 closed 01/05/00
l:93-cv-04449-WK Dinsmore v. Towers Financial, et al filed 06/30/93 closed 08/19/98
I:91-cv-05231-UF Superstock, Inc. v. Towers Fin. Corp., et al filed 08/01/91 closed 04/28/92
I:93-cv-00961-WK Murphy, a al v. Twrs Financial Corp., et al filed 02/18/93 closed 03/24/97
1:93-ev-0 1927-WK Von Stange v. Twrs Financial Corp., et al filed 03/24/93 closed 02/21/97
61. Pursuant to Hoffenberg and the Sentencing Opinion, the victims of the TFC Ponzi
Scheme include over 200,000 individuals, who are directly or indirectly the Noteholders and
Bondholders of TFC, and are entitled to 5475,157,340, plus interest, which now totals
approximately one billion dollars (S1,000,000,000).
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62. The full extent of Defendant Epstein's involvement in the TFC Ponzi Scheme and
related frauds, which harmed Plaintiffs and the Class, could not have been discovered prior to
Hoffenberg's execution of the Affidavit annexed hereto. Hoffenberg's Affidavit, dated August 17,
2018, sets forth for the first time, under the penalty of perjury, Defendant Epstein's full involvement
in the TFC Ponzi Scheme.'
63. While Plaintiffs and the Class were aware of the illegal activities which caused them
and many others to lose hundreds of millions of dollars, Plaintiffs and the Class only knew that
Hoffenberg had "co-conspirators" who remained unnamed, uncharged, and unindicted.
64. Defendant Epstein continues to control the Defendant Entities which wrongfully
received money fraudulently acquired from the Noteholders and Bondholders through the TFC
Ponzi Scheme and the profits earned from monies misappropriated by Epstein and transferred as
capital to the Defendant Entities including, but not limited to, Defendant TFTC.
65. Defendant Epstein, individually, and by and through the Defendant Entities,
continuously engaged in the fraudulent activities by concealing his fraudulent Ponzi schemes from
banks, financial institutions and current investors of his margin account syndication.
66. Defendant Epstein continues to deny his involvement in the TFC Ponzi Scheme and
continues to wrongfully possess the funds to which Plaintiffs and the Class are entitled as victims
of the TFC Ponzi Scheme.
CLASS ACTION ALLEGATIONS
67. This action is brought and may properly be maintained as a class action pursuant to
Rules 23(a) and 23(b)(3) of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure. This action is brought pursuant
Hoffenberg's 2016 Complaint contained no statements sworn under penalties of perjury and was
ultimately withdrawn with prejudice by then-Plaintiff Hoffenberg. See Steven J Hoffenberg v.
Jay E, Epstein, et al., Case No. 16-03989 (RJS) (S.D.N.Y May 27, 2016).
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Case 1:18-cv-07580-JPO Document 7 Filed 08/21/18 Page
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to 23(b)(3) of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure for money damages.
68. This suit is a class action brought on behalf of a Class consisting of
and defined as
all investors, Noteholders, and/or Bondholders of TFC who, directly or indirectly,
purchased the
TFC Bonds and TFC Promissory Notes sold by TFC between 1987 and 1993.
69. Excluded from the Class are Defendants, any entity in which any Defendant has
a
controlling interest, and the officers, directors, legal representatives, heirs, successors,
subsidiaries
and/or assigns of any such individual or entity.
70. The members of the Class are so numerous that joinder of all members individually,
in one action or otherwise, is impracticable. Plaintiffs believe that there are hundreds (if not
thousands) of proposed Class members.
71. There are numerous questions of law and fact common to Plaintiffs and the Class,
including:
A. whether Defendants, with intent to derive the use, enjoyment and profits
rightfully belonging to the Plaintiffs and the Class, created a Ponzi scheme and
concealed their actual intentions of convening the assets of Plaintiffs and the
Class for their own personal use, upon which Plaintiffs and the Class reasonably
relied to their detriment;
B. whether Plaintiffs and the Class suffered monetary damages as a result of the
Defendants' deceptive, unlawful and unfair actions and, if so, the proper measure
of those damages; and
C. whether the Defendants owed certain duties to TFC, the Plaintiffs and the Class,
including, but not limited to, the duty to exercise the highest degree of honesty,
care, good faith and loyalty in handling the securities of TFC.
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17 of 26
72. Plaintiffs' claims are typical of the claims of the members of the Class, and
it is a
member of the Class described herein.
73. Plaintiffs are willing and prepared to serve the proposed Class in a representati
ve
capacity with all of the obligations and duties material thereto. Plaintiffs will fairly
and adequately
protect the interests of the Class and has no interests adverse to, or which conflict
with, the interests
of other members of the Class.
74. Plaintiffs' interests are co-extensive with and not antagonistic to those of the absent
Class members. Plaintiffs will undertake to represent and protect the interests of absent Class
members.
75. Plaintiffs have engaged the services of the undersigned counsel. Counsel is
experienced in complex class action litigation, will adequately prosecute this action, and will assert
and protect the rights of, and otherwise represent, Plaintiffs and absent Class members.
76. The questions of law and fact common to the Class, as summarized above,
predominate over any questions affecting only individual members, in satisfaction of Rule 23(6)(3),
and each such common question warrants class certification under Rule 23(c)(4).
77. A class action is superior to other available methods for the adjudication of this
controversy. Individualized litigation increases the delay and expense to all parties and the court
system given the complex legal and factual issues of the case, and judicial determination of the
common legal and factual issues essential to this case would be far more fair, efficient, and
economical as a class action maintained in this forum than in piecemeal individual determinations.
78. Plaintiffs know of no difficulty that will be encountered in the management of this
litigation that would preclude its maintenance as a class action. Compared to individualized actions,
the class action device presents far fewer management difficulties, and provides the benefits of
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Case 1:18-cv-07580-JPO Docume
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