Current:Home > ScamsA courtroom of relief: FBI recovers funds for victims of scammed banker -Nova Finance Academy
A courtroom of relief: FBI recovers funds for victims of scammed banker
View
Date:2025-04-19 14:12:31
WICHITA, KANSAS (AP) — Sobs of relief broke out in a federal courtroom in Kansas on Monday as dozens of people whose life savings had been embezzled by a bank CEO learned that federal law enforcement had recovered their money.
“I just can’t describe the weight lifted off of us,” said Bart Camilli, 70, who with his wife Cleo had just learned they’d recover close to $450,000 — money Bart began saving at 18 when he bought his first individual retirement account. “It’s life-changing.”
In August, former Kansas bank CEO Shan Hanes was sentenced to 24 years after stealing $47 million from customer accounts and wiring the money to cryptocurrency accounts run by scammers. Prosecutors said Hanes also stole $40,000 from his church, $10,000 from an investment club and $60,000 from his daughter’s college fund and lost $1.1 million of his own in the scheme. Deposits were “jettisoned into the ether,” said prosecutor Aaron Smith.
Hanes’ Heartland Tri-State Bank, drained of cash, was shut down by federal regulators and sold to another financial institution. Customers’ savings and checking accounts amounting to $47.1 million were insured by the Federal Deposit Insurance Corp., which paid off their losses.
But there were still 30 shareholders of the community-owned rural bank Hanes helped found — including his close family friends and neighbors — who thought they lost $8.3 million in investments: well-planned retirements were upended, funds for long-term eldercare gone, education funds and bequests for children and grandchildren zeroed out.
On Monday the shareholders stood to cheer federal Judge John W. Broomes in Wichita after he told them, one at a time, that they’d be paid back in full. The FBI recovered the funds from a cryptocurrency account held by Tether Ltd. in the Cayman Islands.
During an earlier sentencing hearing, these victims had called Hanes a “deceitful cheat and a liar,” and “pure evil.”
Margaret Grice came to court Monday figuring she’d get $1,000 back. Instead, she learned she’d be recovering almost $250,000, her entire 401(k).
“I’m just really thrilled,” she said. “I can breathe.”
Prosecutors said Hanes, who was the CEO of Heartland Tri-State Bank in Elkhart, Kansas, lost the money in a scam referred to as “pig butchering,” or the way pigs are fattened before slaughter. In the scam, a third party gains a victims’ trust and, over time, convinces them to invest all of their money into cryptocurrency, which immediately disappears. U.S. and U.N. officials say these schemes are proliferating, with scammers largely in Southeast Asia increasingly taking advantage of Americans.
Hanes started buying what he thought was $5,000 in cryptocurrency in late 2022, communicating with someone who had reached out on WhatsApp, according to court records. A few months later he transferred over his church and investment club funds. Records show the scam accelerated in the summer of 2023, when Hanes wired $47.1 million out of customer accounts in 11 wire transfers over just eight weeks. Each transfer, he thought, was necessary to end the investment and cash out, court records said. He watched, on a fake website, as the money appeared to grow to more than $200 million.
“He was to take some of the money, and the rest of the money was supposed to go back to the bank,” his attorney John Stang explained. “Now it’s fiction, it didn’t exist. We all know that now ... It failed big time.”
Hanes, who was not in court Monday, apologized at an earlier sentencing hearing.
“From the deepest depth of my soul, I had no intention of ever causing the harm that I did,” he said. ”I’ll forever struggle to understand how I was duped and how what I thought was just getting the money back was making it worse.”
Prosecutors said Hanes wasn’t just the victim of a scam, he crossed a line when he began taking customers’ money and violating banking regulations. He pleaded guilty to embezzlement by a bank officer in May.
His prominent standing in his hometown of 2,000 made it easier for him to get away with it, a Federal Reserve System investigation found; he had been on the school board, volunteered as a swim meet official, and served on the Kansas Bankers Association.
He also was a banking leader beyond his rural community. In recent years, he testified to Congressional committees about the importance of local banks in farming communities, and he served as a director for the American Bankers Association, which represents almost all banking assets in the U.S.
On Monday, prosecutors said the FDIC wanted to be paid back for the insurance claims it reimbursed to bank customers. But Judge Broomes said the economic circumstances of shareholders “who became insolvent because of a fraud scheme” justified paying them back first, before the FDIC recovers anything.
Hanes, 53, may be in his late 70s when he is released and is unlikely to be able to pay the FDIC the $47.1 million still owed.
In a court filing, Hanes and his attorney tried to explain what had happened.
“Mr. Hanes made some very bad choices after being caught up in an extremely well-run cryptocurrency scam,” they said. “He was the pig that was butchered.”
veryGood! (4786)
Related
- Senate begins final push to expand Social Security benefits for millions of people
- Jennifer Lopez appears 'Unstoppable' in glam press tour looks: See the photos
- 30 quotes about stress and anxiety to help bring calm
- The surprising way I’m surviving election day? Puppies. Lots of puppies.
- Paris Hilton, Nicole Richie return for an 'Encore,' reminisce about 'The Simple Life'
- Amazon workers in Alabama will have third labor union vote after judge finds illegal influence
- Judge blocks Pentagon chief’s voiding of plea deals for Khalid Sheikh Mohammed, others in 9/11 case
- AI DataMind: The Leap in Integrating Quantitative Trading with Artificial Intelligence
- Appeals court scraps Nasdaq boardroom diversity rules in latest DEI setback
- Southern California wildfire moving 'dangerously fast' as flames destroy homes
Ranking
- Gen. Mark Milley's security detail and security clearance revoked, Pentagon says
- Jon Stewart finds bright side, Fox News calls Trump a 'phoenix': TV reacts to election
- Slightly more American apply for unemployment benefits last week, but layoffs remain at low levels
- Halle Bailey Deletes Social Media Account After Calling Out DDG Over Son Halo
- Rams vs. 49ers highlights: LA wins rainy defensive struggle in key divisional game
- Lock in a mortgage rate after the Fed cuts? This might be your last chance
- Barstool Sports’ Dave Portnoy Slams Zach Bryan in Diss Track After Brianna LaPaglia Split
- USDA sets rule prohibiting processing fees on school lunches for low-income families
Recommendation
Tom Holland's New Venture Revealed
Why Survivor Host Jeff Probst Is Willing to Risk “Parasites” by Eating Contestants’ Food
Florida’s iconic Key deer face an uncertain future as seas rise
Look out, MLB: Dodgers appear to have big plans after moving Mookie Betts back to infield
B.A. Parker is learning the banjo
Chris Evans’ Rugged New Look Will Have You Assembling
Democrat Laura Gillen wins US House seat on Long Island, unseating GOP incumbent
NFL MVP odds: Ravens' Lamar Jackson, Derrick Henry among favorites before Week 10