Crime & Safety

$28M Ponzi Scheme Involvement Means Up To 45 Years In Prison For Bowie Man

A Bowie man faces up to 45 years in prison for his involvement in a $28M Ponzi scheme that affected more than 1,200 victims.

PRINCE GEORGE'S COUNTY, MD — A 63-year-old Bowie man has been convicted by a federal jury on charges of conspiracy, wire fraud and securities fraud in connection with a $28 million Ponzi scheme involving 1st Million, the front for a wealth management and financial literacy company.

Arley Ray Johnson was convicted after a 10-day trial. Johnson faces a maximum sentence of 20 years in federal prison for a wire fraud conspiracy and for each count of wire fraud; a maximum of five years in federal prison for a securities fraud conspiracy; and a maximum of 20 years in federal prison for each count of securities fraud. His sentencing has been scheduled for Jan. 5, 2023.

According to the evidence presented at his trial, Johnson conspired with his co-defendants, Dennis Mbongeni Jali and John Erasmus Frimpong, to defraud investors through several related entities including The Smart Partners LLC, which did business as “1st Million Dollars” or “1st Million.” Johnson served as the chief operating officer for 1st Million, which was headquartered in Largo.

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According to trial evidence, 1st Million presented itself as a wealth management and financial literacy company, with its core business offering being a 12-month guaranteed investment contract. These investment contracts, entitled “Corporate Guarantees,” represented that the client’s principal would be invested in foreign currency or cryptocurrency and guaranteed individuals who invested money with 1st Million monthly returns ranging from 6 to 35 percent of the initial investment.

At the end of the investment period, the contract promised that the investor would receive the return of all of the principal invested. In reality, the evidence at trial showed, 1st Million did not invest victims’ funds as promised and, instead, misappropriated the funds for themselves and used the funds to keep the scheme afloat, including using funds from new investors to repay existing investors, trial evidence noted.

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In addition to misrepresenting that victim funds would be used to invest, Johnson and his co-defendants also falsely stated that investors’ principal would be held in a trust account protected from any financial instability of 1st Million or market volatility, according to court documents. Victim funds were not placed in a trust account or otherwise guaranteed. Johnson and his co-defendants also falsely claimed that 1st Million was financially healthy and earning astronomical profits, but 1st Million’s accounts, some of which were controlled by Johnson, were frequently overdrawn and 1st Million had substantial cash flow problems, all of which Johnson and his co-conspirators concealed from investors, the trial disclosed.

As detailed in the trial evidence, Johnson and his co-defendants recruited victims to invest in 1st Million by holding promotional events at upscale hotels and event spaces, attending church-sponsored events intended to target investments from churchgoers, and representing themselves as religious men more interested in the financial freedom of others than personal financial gain. Johnson and his co-defendants presented themselves as “pastors,” and told prospective investors that 1st Million’s work was in furtherance of God’s mission as it helped churches and their members achieve personal wealth and financial freedom. Johnson and his co-defendants also hired “agents” of 1st Million to organize recruiting events to attract more investors, in exchange for a higher return on the agents’ investments.

By spring 2019, 1st Million’s accounts were often overdrawn by hundreds of thousands of dollars, and some of the checks 1st Million sent to pay investors monthly returns were returned by the bank due to insufficient funds, court evidence revealed. Johnson and Frimpong continued to solicit funds from existing investors, as well as new investors, and did not tell any of these potential investors of 1st Million’s financial problems. The scheme collapsed in May 2019 and hundreds of 1st Million investors collectively lost millions of dollars.

Over the course of the conspiracy, Johnson and his co-defendants persuaded or attempted to persuade more than 1,200 victims from across the United States to provide them with wire transfers, checks and cash totaling more than $28 million from numerous victims. The evidence proved that although the victims were promised tremendous returns on their investments, Johnson and his co-conspirators did not invest any of the money, instead using it to fund their own lifestyles and to perpetuate the fraud scheme.

Frimpong, 42, of Upper Marlboro previously pleaded guilty to a wire fraud conspiracy, conspiracy to commit securities fraud and to securities fraud. His sentencing has been scheduled for Feb. 10, 2023. Jali fled the United States in May 2019, but has since been arrested in South Africa.

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