loader from loading.io

The $6M Hedge Fund Transfer That Helped Send Me to Prison

White Collar Advice

Release Date: 06/08/2025

He Forged My Signature at UBS. I Sought Cover. I Never Thought About Prison. show art He Forged My Signature at UBS. I Sought Cover. I Never Thought About Prison.

White Collar Advice

When Denial Ends and the Paper Trail Starts On June 16, 2002, I took a client’s money knowing deep down it would end badly. By December 15, 2004, it did. A forged letter—on UBS letterhead—claimed investors would be made whole if the hedge fund collapsed, with my name signed at the bottom. Only, I never signed it. My branch manager had me write my signature eight times. It didn’t match. That’s when the truth started unraveling and the investigation began. In white collar crime, everyone suddenly “knows nothing.” But the evidence—emails, letters, signatures—tells the real...

info_outline
I Didn’t Report The Lie. I Covered It Up. I Deserved Federal Prison. show art I Didn’t Report The Lie. I Covered It Up. I Deserved Federal Prison.

White Collar Advice

Covering Yourself Doesn’t Erase Complicity At a meeting, an elderly investor believed he had $3 million. The truth? Less than $1 million remained—and the rest had been gone for years. That moment forced a decision. Instead of reporting the hedge fund manager’s fraud, the brokers created a disclosure form to shield themselves. The commissions—$100K to $200K per month—kept coming. UBS compliance signed off. But protecting yourself on paper doesn’t undo your silence. It just documents your complicity. Inaction, when you know the truth, is a choice—and prosecutors will treat it that...

info_outline
Merrill Lynch Built a System That Used Young Brokers—And Called It Mentorship show art Merrill Lynch Built a System That Used Young Brokers—And Called It Mentorship

White Collar Advice

In 1997, I was a new broker at Merrill Lynch with $10–15 million raised, but management pressured me to join a team. I watched how that model worked: junior brokers gave up their books and ended up doing all the work while senior partners took the credit—and the commissions. They stopped prospecting, stopped growing, and eventually got pushed out. I saw a system that rewarded the wrong things and punished effort. I made a vow then: I wouldn't play that game. Join our every Tuesday at 11AM Pacific / 2PM Eastern to start making smarter decisions under pressure.

info_outline
$6M Disappeared. I Said Nothing. Years Later, I Went to Federal Prison show art $6M Disappeared. I Said Nothing. Years Later, I Went to Federal Prison

White Collar Advice

When Commissions Blind You to Consequences In this story, $6 million was lost due to reckless trading. The broker wasn’t managing the money—just executing the trades—but the commissions kept flowing: $100K to $200K per month. Compliance knew. So did the broker. Then came another $6 million, raised under false pretenses. That’s when denial turned into criminal conduct. Even without speaking to investors or managing funds, continued involvement became complicity. Ignoring red flags because you’re getting paid doesn’t shield you from prosecution—it buries you in it. Join our every...

info_outline
How I Went from UBS Executive to Federal Prisoner show art How I Went from UBS Executive to Federal Prisoner

White Collar Advice

When the FBI knocked on my door in 2005, I thought I could manage the situation. I was wrong. In this episode of The Presumption of Innocence, I sit down with defense attorney Matt Adams to unpack the moment everything changed—how I hired a lawyer, ignored his advice, lied to federal agents, and turned what might have been a civil case into an 18-month federal prison sentence. We talk about what really happens during a government investigation, why cooperation is meaningless without credibility, and how my co-defendant used my mistakes to earn a better outcome. I also share how I rebuilt my...

info_outline
The $6M Hedge Fund Transfer That Helped Send Me to Prison show art The $6M Hedge Fund Transfer That Helped Send Me to Prison

White Collar Advice

When You Know It’s Wrong—But Do It Anyway On June 16, 2002, I took a $6 million hedge fund transfer from a manager I knew had a shady history. I knew it would go bad—and I took the money anyway. Why? Because I needed to hit my numbers. That’s how many white-collar crimes start: not with some grand plan, but with a moment of pressure and a willingness to ignore the red flags. I had grown up with opportunity, yet I still crossed the line. It cost me everything. Join our every Tuesday at 11AM Pacific / 2PM Eastern. Don’t make the same mistake.

info_outline
An Unexpected Lesson I Learned In Federal Prison show art An Unexpected Lesson I Learned In Federal Prison

White Collar Advice

What I Learned About Status in Federal Prison When I arrived in federal prison, I thought people would judge me based on my white collar conviction or my 18-month sentence. I was wrong. No one cared about my crime or background—what mattered was how I behaved. I learned fast: don’t brag, don’t complain, and don’t act like you’re better than anyone else. A felony levels everything. Whether you did 18 months or seven years, the system resets you. One guy at my camp mocked another for whining about his short sentence—and it got ugly. That taught me: humility goes a long way inside....

info_outline
The Glitch I Found at Bear Stearns That Helped Send Me to Federal Prison show art The Glitch I Found at Bear Stearns That Helped Send Me to Federal Prison

White Collar Advice

How Ego and Entitlement Led Me to Federal Prison I thought I deserved a raise. I was bringing in big commissions and figured I’d earned more. When my senior partner laughed me off, I didn’t just get mad—I got even. I found a loophole in Bear Stearns’ accounting system and used it to steal what I thought I was “owed.” That decision—rooted in entitlement—started a slow slide: I ignored my clients, stopped taking care of myself, and justified every step. It ended with me standing for count in federal prison. Real consequence: Rationalizing unfairness is often the first step toward...

info_outline
You Can Act Like An Arrogant Fool in Federal Prison Camp—Just Own the Consequences show art You Can Act Like An Arrogant Fool in Federal Prison Camp—Just Own the Consequences

White Collar Advice

Entitlement Will Keep You in Federal Prison Longer In federal prison camps, you can act entitled—but it will cost you. One white-collar defendant mocked the drug program on a recorded call. Another inmate tipped off staff. Result? He was kicked out and lost a year off his sentence. Programs like RDAP and home confinement under the new BOP directive reward preparation and follow-through—not arrogance. Staff already view white-collar defendants as manipulative. Don’t prove them right. Build a record that shows real change, not gamesmanship. Join our every Tuesday at 11AM Pacific / 2PM...

info_outline
Federal Prison Track Promises vs. Halfway House Reality—They Threw Me Out show art Federal Prison Track Promises vs. Halfway House Reality—They Threw Me Out

White Collar Advice

Following Through After Prison: Why June 3rd Still Matters In prison, it’s easy to talk about rebuilding your life. Following through? That’s the hard part. On June 3rd, 2009—fresh out on a four-hour halfway house pass—I suited up, grabbed 20 copies of Lessons From Prison, and walked into downtown L.A. law offices, pitching my book cold. Most people ignored me. One threw me out. But one lawyer, Mark Werksman, shook my hand—and years later, he’s still handing that book to his clients. That day wasn’t glamorous, but it was real. If you're serious about making amends, don’t just...

info_outline
 
More Episodes

When You Know It’s Wrong—But Do It Anyway

On June 16, 2002, I took a $6 million hedge fund transfer from a manager I knew had a shady history. I knew it would go bad—and I took the money anyway. Why? Because I needed to hit my numbers. That’s how many white-collar crimes start: not with some grand plan, but with a moment of pressure and a willingness to ignore the red flags. I had grown up with opportunity, yet I still crossed the line. It cost me everything.

Join our weekly webinar every Tuesday at 11AM Pacific / 2PM Eastern. Don’t make the same mistake.