Crime & Safety
Monmouth Beach Man Indicted On Securities Fraud Charges
A Monmouth Beach man was charged with running a $40-million securities fraud scheme through the private finance firm he owns.
MONMOUTH BEACH, NJ — A Monmouth Beach man was arrested last month and charged with running a $40-million securities fraud scheme through the private finance firm he owns, said U.S. Attorneys in this press release.
Monmouth Beach is a small, wealthy beachfront town in Monmouth County.
The man was a principal at Alpha Plus Recovery, a claim aggregator firm located in Old Bridge. A claim aggregator firm is a company that submits claims on behalf of its clients in exchange for settlement funds to harmed investors.
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Joseph Cammarata, 47, of Monmouth Beach was arrested alongside Erik Cohen, 40, of Manalapan and David Punturieri, 41, of Staten Island, who also worked at Alpha Plus Recovery. All have been indicted on charges of conspiracy to commit multiple counts of securities fraud.
Federal prosecutors say that from 2014 to this year, the three men stole $40 million by running complicated financial schemes and manipulations.
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“These defendants manipulated complicated financial transactions for years in order to steal roughly $40 million,” said Acting U.S. Attorney Jennifer Arbittier Williams. “Cammarata, Cohen and Punturieri committed fraud on top of fraud, filing claims on behalf of clients that didn’t actually exist and doctoring false financial documents to support those fraudulent claims. Their alleged scheme has now been uncovered and they will have to answer for their conduct.”
Each man is facing a maximum possible sentence of 20 years in prison.
Federal prosecutors say they used Alpha Plus Recovery to make false claims to the proceeds of securities fraud class-action and SEC enforcement action settlements. They falsely claimed that corporate clients of Alpha Plus Recovery had purchased shares of securities that were the subject of the lawsuits and enforcement actions.
In reality, the clients, which were fake entities actually controlled by the three men, had not purchased the securities.
To substantiate the false claims, the men created fraudulent brokerage and other financial documents, and then transferred the money into accounts they controlled.
The IRS and FBI investigated this case.
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