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Financial Fraud Law

Business ‘Coaching’ Marketers Settle FTC Charges

 Most of the defendants in a massive business “coaching” scheme that allegedly took more than $100 million from consumers have agreed to settle Federal Trade Commission charges that they misrepresented the earning potential of the coaching program they sold, misrepresented their goods and services, and failed to fully disclose and honor their refund policy, in violation of federal law.  The settlements ban the defendants from marketing and selling business coaching programs and require them to give up assets including two homes and eight cars.
 
According to an FTC complaint filed in February 2011 against 40 defendants, including 22 interrelated companies, Ivy Capital Inc. and its co-defendants claimed their program would help consumers develop their own Internet businesses.  The FTC asserted that most consumers paid between $2,000 and $20,000 for the program and related products and services but got very little in return and found it difficult to get their money back if they canceled.  The court halted the defendants’ businesses and froze their assets pending trial.
 
In addition to banning the defendants from selling business coaching programs, the settlement orders permanently prohibit the defendants from misrepresenting material facts about products and services and misrepresenting or failing to fully disclose any refund policy.  The settlement orders also prohibit them from requiring consumers to keep refunds confidential and from requiring that consumers not publicly disparage the defendants in order to obtain refunds.  The defendants also are barred from violating the Telemarketing Sales Rule and from selling or otherwise benefitting from customers’ personal information.
 
The settlement orders imposed a $130 million judgment against corporate defendants Ivy Capital, Inc., Ivy Capital LLC, Fortune Learning System LLC, Vianet Inc., 3 Day MBA LLC, Global Finance Group LLC, Virtual Profit LLC, ICI Development Inc., Logic Solutions LLC, Oxford Debt Holdings LLC, Revsynergy LLC,  Sell It Vizions LLC, Zyzac Commerce Solutions, Inc., Fortune Learning, LLC, and The Shipper, LLC, doing business as Wholesalematch.com.  The FTC said that the judgment will be suspended when these defendants have surrendered all of their assets.  The full judgment will become due immediately if they are found to have misrepresented their financial condition.
 
The settlement orders against individual defendants Kyle G. KirschbaumJohn H. HarrisonSteven E. Lyman,Christopher M. ZeligSteven J. Sonnenberg, and James G. Hanchett also imposed a $130 million judgment.  The FTC said that the judgment will be suspended when these defendants surrender certain assets.  The full judgment will become due immediately if they are found to have misrepresented their financial condition.
 
The settlement order against Joshua F. Wickman and Enrich Wealth Group LLC (EWG) imposed a $46 million judgment that will be suspended when they have surrendered $68,884 from Wickman’s bank account and EWG’s assets.  The FTC said that the full judgments will become due immediately if they are found to have misrepresented their financial condition.
 
The settlement orders  also imposed judgments against relief defendants who, the FTC alleged, profited from the scheme but did not participate in it:  Cherrytree Holdings, LLC (more than $674,000), S&T Time, LLC (more than $801,000),Virtucon, LLC (more than $113,000), Curva, LLC (more than $679,000), Kierston Kirschbaum (more than $681,000), Melyna Harrison (more than $812,000), and Tracy Lyman (more than $572,000).  According to the FTC, the judgments will be suspended when they surrender certain assets.  The full judgments will become due immediately if the relief defendants are found to have misrepresented their financial condition.
 
Under the settlement orders, Kyle and Kierston Kirschbaum and their personal LLC, Cherrytree Holdings, will surrender to the FTC personal bank accounts with a total value of exceeding $213,000, a residential property with equity of approximately $100,000, a 2006 BMW 750Li sedan, and a 2007 Cadillac Escalade.  Steve and Tracy Lyman and their personal LLC, S&T Time, will surrender personal bank accounts with a total value of more than $143,000, a residential property with equity of about $174,000, a 2009 Mercedes CIS sedan, and a 2009 Cadillac Escalade.  John and Melyna Harrison and their personal LLC, Virtucon, will surrender personal bank accounts with a total value exceeding $24,000, a 2007 Infiniti G35, a 2007 Land Rover Range Rover Sport, and a 2008 Chevrolet van.  Hanchett will surrender a 2007 Cadillac Escalade.
 
The FTC said that litigation continues against the two remaining defendants, Benjamin Hoskins and Dream Financial, and three relief defendants, Leanne Hoskins, Oxford Financial LLC, and Mowab, Inc. Five other defendants defaulted.
 
 
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