CFTC charges Integra Capital Management with USD3m Ponzi scheme | 
       
      Date:  Monday, October 4, 2010
      Author: Emily Perryman, HedgeWeek    
    
 The US Commodity Futures Trading Commission has obtained an 
emergency federal court order freezing the assets of defendants Rodney W. 
Whitney, Nicholas T. Cox and Integra Capital Management of North Carolina.
 The order, entered on 29 September by Judge Thomas D. Schroeder of the US 
District Court for the Middle District of North Carolina, also prohibits 
defendants from destroying books and records and grants CFTC staff access to 
such documents. The court scheduled a hearing for 15 October on the CFTC’s motion for a 
preliminary injunction. The order stems from a CFTC enforcement action charging the defendants with 
fraud and misappropriation in connection with operating a commodity pool Ponzi 
scheme involving both commodity futures and off-exchange foreign currency 
transactions. The CFTC’s complaint alleges that, from at least September 2006 to August 
2009, Whitney, Cox and Integra Capital fraudulently solicited and accepted at 
least USD3m from at least 16 customers to invest in a commodity pool and 
solicited at least five customers to trade off-exchange forex contracts. Whitney and Cox falsely represented to these customers that Integra Capital 
consistently earned three to five per cent monthly returns and sustained 
virtually no losses in its futures and forex trading, according to the 
complaint. Whitney also allegedly distributed false account statements and false 
1099 tax forms to Integra Capital’s customers, showing that their investments 
were profitable. Instead, the defendants’ trading accounts consistently lost 
money, according to the complaint. Furthermore, the complaint charges that Whitney and Cox misappropriated 
customer funds to pay personal expenses, including dining, entertainment, travel 
and real estate purchases. In its continuing litigation, the CFTC seeks preliminary and permanent 
injunctions against the defendants, a return of ill-gotten gains, restitution to 
defrauded customers and civil monetary penalties.