Crime & Safety
Yonkers Woman Sentenced in Connection with Connecticut Ponzi Scheme
Christine Hernandez posed as a JP Morgan Chase employee to assist Michael Goldberg in the scam, according to prosecutors.

Yonkers resident Christine Hernandez, 43, was sentenced Wednesday to three years of probation for assisting a Connecticut man in a decade-long ponzi scheme that defrauded investors of tens of millions of dollars, United States Attorney Deirdre M. Daly announced.
On at least three occasions, Hernandez posed as a JP Morgan Chase employee to assist Michael Goldberg in the scam by confirming “to investors Goldberg’s relationship with Chase so that those investors would continue to place money” with him.
Goldberg’s scheme took in more than $100 million from investors, and paid some back with funds received from new investors. When his scheme was revealed, Goldberg had defrauded investors out of more than $30 million.
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According to prosecutors:
The vast majority of Goldberg’s fraud involved his solicitation of individuals and organizations to invest money in the purchase of distressed assets from Chase. Goldberg falsely represented to potential investors in these “Chase asset deals” that Chase had granted him a contractual right to purchase foreclosed and seized business assets from a Chase Foreclosure Manifest, which he would then resell in prearranged transactions to large, well-known corporations. Goldberg represented that his purchase and resale of these foreclosed assets would enable him to pay investors a return on capital of up to 20 percent in a short period of time, typically 90 days. In addition, Goldberg represented that Chase would refund the purchase price of any asset that could not be resold, and that therefore there was no risk to the investor that any principal investment would be lost. In fact, Goldberg had no relationship with either Chase or with the supposed purchasers of the distressed assets, and the “Chase asset deals” did not exist.
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In 2008 and 2009, Hernandez assisted Goldberg in concealing aspects of his scheme by posing as a Chase employee on three occasions at a bank branch in New York City, and also on at least one conference call.
Hernandez also participated in investor phone calls under her own name and claimed to be a Chase contractor checking inventory that would be available to Goldberg’s supposed corporate “customers.”
Hernandez was unaware that the Chase asset deals did not exist, but believed that she was helping to prevent investors from going directly to Chase, thereby cutting Goldberg out of the purported asset deals.
On March 23, 2015, Hernandez waived her right to indictment and pleaded guilty to one count of misprision of a felony.
In September of 2010, Goldberg pleaded guilty to three counts of wire fraud and was later sentenced to 120 months in prison and was ordered to pay restitution in the amount of $31,023,035.40.
This matter was investigated by the Federal Bureau of Investigation and was prosecuted by Assistant U.S. Attorney David E. Novick.
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