NY fund manager sentenced to 40 years for fraud |
Date: Monday, November 1, 2010
Author: Grant McCool, Reuters
James Nicholson, a former fund manager who admitted stealing as much as $140
million from hundreds of average investors who trusted him with their life
savings, was sentenced to 40 years in prison on Friday. The courtroom in New York was filled with scores of victims, many of whom
Nicholson, 44, personally knew, including some members of his own extended
family who were swindled in a fraud that began in 2000 and ended with
Nicholson's arrest in February 2009. Schoolteacher Stephanie Chamberlin told the court that her children's college
funds had been stolen by Nicholson and that his crimes "affected generations" of
people. She said Nicholson "had less time" as a criminal than epic swindler
Bernard Madoff, whose decades-long fraud amounted to as much as $65 billion, but
"it's the crime that matters." Nicholson, who pleaded guilty last December in U.S. District Court in
Manhattan and never made bail, sat stiffly in his seat in the courtroom
listening to statements by nine victims and the judge. "I look at you and I don't know what to make of this," U.S. District Judge
Richard Sullivan told Nicholson during the two-hour long sentencing proceeding.
Sullivan said he was "heartbroken" to read letters sent to him by Nicholson's
three young sons and hearing a statement read in court by his mother, Pat
Nicholson. James Nicholson was former president of Westgate Capital Management LLC in
New York. He pleaded guilty to securities fraud, investment adviser fraud and
wire fraud charges. Most of his investors live in the suburbs of New Jersey and
New York near Manhattan. Prosecutors have said the scheme was partly exposed when investors made
requests for redemptions from Westgate after the December 2008 disclosure of
financier Madoff's multibillion dollar Ponzi scheme. A Ponzi scheme is one in
which early investors are paid with the money of new clients. Madoff's unprecedented fraud drew a sentence of 150 years imprisonment. Around the same time, a series of frauds were prosecuted in New York,
contributing to a decline in market confidence during the financial crisis. Marc Dreier, 60, a prominent New York lawyer who defrauded hedge funds, was
sentenced to 20 years and Arthur Nadel, a 77-year-old Florida fund manager was
sentenced to 14 years in prison. Also on Friday, Nicholas Cosmo, a former Agape World president and owner from
New York's Long Island, pleaded guilty to mail fraud and wire fraud charges for
running a scheme that caused losses of more than $195 million to average
investors. Cosmo faces a possible maximum prison sentence of 40 years. The case is USA v Nicholson, U.S. District Court for the Southern District of
New York, No. 09-CR-00414. The following firms represented Nicholson: Dickstein
Shapiro; Stillman, Friedman & Shechtman; and the Law Office of Vino P. Varghese.