O.C. man sentenced for conning elderly couple out of millions - Los Angeles Times

An Orange County man was sentenced to prison Monday for defrauding an elderly couple out of $ 5.5 million, authorities said.

U.S. District Judge Andrew Guilford ordered John Arthur Walthall, 56, of La Habra to serve 168 months in federal prison and pay $ 2,479,000 in restitution to the victims, who are in their 80s.

A federal jury in Santa Ana convicted Walthall in December of four counts of wire fraud and one count of failure to appear in court.

In 2007, Walthall convinced an Orange County couple -- ages 83 and 80 at the time -- to invest $ 5.5 million in his company called Advanced Recycling General Partnership. He claimed he would use the funds to extract gold from abandoned mines.

Instead, prosecutors showed during the four-week trial, Walthall spent the victims' money to pay alimony to his ex-wife, film school tuition for his son, personal debts, and to buy multiple cars and a hyperbaric oxygen chamber.

"Fraud schemes that victimize older residents are nothing short of elder abuse," said U.S. Atty. André Birotte Jr. "While elder abuse is often committed by family members or caregivers, this case reminds us that the elderly can also be targeted by outside scam artists, whose actions can bring significant financial and emotional harm."

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Massive Evidence Of Vote Phony In Nevada: Infowars Nightly News

Advisory aimed at Internet Cafe owners characterizes mundane behavior as "suspicious activity" Paul Joseph Watson www.infowars.com www.prisonplanet.tv Tuesday, February 7, 2012 An FBI advisory aimed at Internet Cafe owners instructs businesses to report people who regularly use cash to pay for their coffee as potential terrorists. The flyer, issued under the FBI's Communities Against Terrorism (CAT) program, lists examples of "suspicious activity" and then encourages businesses to gather information about individuals and report them to the authorities. "Each flyer is designed for a particular kind of business," writes Linda Lewis, a former policy analyst and planner for the US government. "For example, this list was prepared for owners of internet cafes. Unquestionably, someone planning a terrorist attack has engaged in one or more of the "suspicious" activities on that list. But so, too, have most of the estimated 289 million computer users in this country." Indeed, the flyer aimed at Internet Cafe owners characterizes customers who "always pay cash" as potential terrorists. Of course, the vast majority of people who visit Internet Cafes use cash to pay their bill. Who uses a credit card to buy a dollar cup of coffee? A lot of smaller establishments don't even accept credit cards for amounts less than dollars. Other examples of suspicious behavior include using a "residential based Internet provider" such as AOL or Comcast, the use of "anonymizers, portals, or ...

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Poster Do spirits return? Houdini says no - and proves it 3 shows in one : magic, illusions, escapes, fraud mediums

  • Poster Reprint
  • Printed at 17 x 24 in.
  • 1909
Originally used to attract the public to performances and performers, the posters available through this online assemblage of performing arts posters illustrate the wide range of popular, live entertainment in America from the late nineteenth to the early twentieth century. Includes minstrel posters. Poster Do spirits return? Houdini says no - and proves it 3 shows in one : magic, illusions, escapes, fraud mediums. Reprint is 17 in. x 24 in. on archival quality photo paper.

List Price: $ 11.99 Price: $ 11.99



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