$400 million illegal scheme
9/20/2011 7:05:29 PM
that much may very well be true.[Edited on September 20, 2011 at 7:06 PM. Reason : ]
9/20/2011 7:06:37 PM
I dont understand what you are asking. Before the gov was involved, the operators were paying themselves with money that was supposed to be the players' accounts. This means anyone who cashed out would by definition be paid from the deposits of other people which is what a ponzi scheme is.
9/20/2011 7:08:52 PM
Wait til moron learns how banks operate."SHIT! Our entire fucking financial system is a ponzi scheme!"
9/20/2011 7:10:04 PM
Back in my day, Ponzi schemes ran into the 10s of billions.
9/20/2011 7:12:46 PM
^ and weeeee LIKED IT!
9/20/2011 7:14:56 PM
^this
9/20/2011 7:23:22 PM
When all the owners and operators are the ones doing the embezzling, it's a ponzi scheme. All they had to do was keep the site open and hope that not everyone tried to withdraw their money. It doesn't look lime they ever were able to make their payments. Banks differ from this ponzi scheme because banks allow anyone to dip into the action (not a ponzi) rather than just a select few to dip in (full tilts owners).
9/20/2011 7:23:33 PM
9/20/2011 7:31:24 PM
^^madoff permitted anyone to cash out... he tried to keep their money obviously... but there were people who gave him money, got outrageous returns, and pulled their money out. hows that different from a bank?sure, banks are required to keep cash assets on hand equal to the funds in all checking accounts. so they have backing, but savings accounts, not so much. they loan that money, invest that money, etc. The only difference is they actually invest money and turn profits (theoretically), and share modest interest returns. when everyone tries to pull all their money out at once, financial institutions can collapse if they're owed more than they can pay out... hmm...
9/20/2011 7:33:12 PM
^ the way that is different from Madoff is that he made no real attempt to invest the money. banks ostensibly do, whether it's by investing in stocks or loaning out deposits for interest-bearing loans. Madoff just spent the money and when someone requested to cash out, if ever, he just paid them with some new investors' deposits.
9/20/2011 7:35:25 PM
that was the point i was trying to make. moron seemed to think banks werent because they let people take money out.[Edited on September 20, 2011 at 7:41 PM. Reason : where as the only real difference is true investment backing]
9/20/2011 7:40:07 PM
It's a ponzi scheme because client accounts weren't solvent and there didn't appear to be an intention of solvency despite fraudulent statements otherwise. This was clearly broader than embezzlement. The business was operated with the sole intent of new payments to keep the scheme afloat.
9/20/2011 7:42:45 PM
You're digging your heels in nicely.
9/20/2011 7:47:13 PM
HaI think that's just reality backing me up actually. Not surprised you don't know what that feels like.
9/20/2011 7:57:15 PM
I love aaron,The feds say its a ponzi schemeThe majority of us say it's a ponzi schemebut aaron INSISTS it's embezzling... but not a ponzi
9/20/2011 9:52:25 PM
ultimately it's just fraud, the mechanism is irrelevant.i have to side with aaron for just this one time.[Edited on September 20, 2011 at 9:55 PM. Reason : it does pain me though.]
9/20/2011 9:55:42 PM
^
9/20/2011 9:57:57 PM
Okay... fred, puck, and aaron are saying full tilt is not a doing ponzi scheme? Am I getting this right?
9/20/2011 10:03:28 PM
9/20/2011 10:20:39 PM
There was no investment portion to it. It was here is my money, I understand you are going to rake a portion to fund the site, but i'm going to let you hold it for me instead of cashing out every hand... but they siphoned funds they were permitted to hold. Nobody is expecting any returns on that money, unless they did something to go and win more.They siphoned corporate assets that were earmarked as being player funds. [Edited on September 20, 2011 at 10:33 PM. Reason : .]
9/20/2011 10:29:38 PM
9/20/2011 10:44:38 PM
9/20/2011 10:50:07 PM
9/20/2011 11:07:03 PM
9/20/2011 11:15:25 PM
feds. competent. does. not. compute.
9/20/2011 11:23:53 PM
competent enough to know what a ponzi scheme is.
9/20/2011 11:26:16 PM
Of course the Feds know what a ponzi scheme is. They are running the biggest ponzi scheme of all time.
9/20/2011 11:28:45 PM
competent enough that they let madoff run one for 20 years or some bullshit like that.[Edited on September 20, 2011 at 11:29 PM. Reason : ^ok true. I WILL GIVE YOU THAT]
9/20/2011 11:29:08 PM
a lot of mma nobodies/new people will need new sponsors now
9/20/2011 11:37:16 PM
9/20/2011 11:57:23 PM
It was a ponzi scheme. They depended on new funds to pay cash outs.PonziAlso you are incorrect about their being no investment. They paid interest on player account balances.Ponzi [Edited on September 21, 2011 at 8:54 AM. Reason : a]
9/21/2011 8:50:09 AM
I FUCKING TOLD YOU ONLINE POKER WAS RIGGED
9/21/2011 8:56:38 AM
9/21/2011 9:29:57 AM
^ that's simply not true. Tons of players left their funds on fulltilt because of the interest. They traded online money back and forth all the time. Someone gives you $20k in cash and you ship them the virtual chips.
9/21/2011 11:19:12 AM
9/21/2011 11:20:32 AM
Furthermore you're not looking at it in the right context.The 19 owners of tiltware (Phil ivey is one if them) were being paid ownership "profits" every month. They were being paid profits because they were INVESTORS.It turns out not all of what the owners were receiving was profits. It was actually the deposits of players were being told their funds were maintained in secure accounts , maintained separately from fulltilt operational funds.That is a Ponzi.
9/21/2011 12:20:12 PM
is there evidence to suggest the owners were conspiring to take these deposits with no intention of having sufficient cash flow to cover those player deposits, or were they merely greedy and were so used to taking in large profit distributions on a regular basis and were also incompetent enough to stop doing so when their cash flow started drying up (allegedly on account of the online poker ban making it difficult/impossible to process transactions in the way that they were previous doing)if they knew exactly what they were doing, then i would call it a ponzi schemeif they were just greedy and had poor business practices, then i would just call it fraud or embezzlementif they were #2 but were also victims of changing regulatory environments, well i would say that in addition to committing fraud, they were also stupid for continuing to operate in a way that would ruin their business and ultimately put themselves in a position that it would appear to be fraud[Edited on September 21, 2011 at 12:44 PM. Reason : .]
9/21/2011 12:40:13 PM
I don't believe the 19 software owners knew it was a Ponzi so they just kept collecting their profits.The four in the know were the owners of fulltilt Howard lederer, Rafe furst, Chris Jesus Ferguson, and the CEO.They contunued taking profits even as it collapsed with lederer remarking in one meeting that a $6 million run on their bank (players cashing out) would ruin them.They got as much money out and wired to their personal offshore accounts as they could before it went bust.It's well known that the old school pros like Ferguson and lederer are no longer profitable poker players in today's poker landscape. This was their way of staying rich and relevant in the poker world they were no longer competitive players in. It was also a good way to stick it to the new generation of players who took away their livelihoods.
9/21/2011 12:51:24 PM
In one desperate attempt to keep the deposits flowing, they invested $10 million in a failing regional bank for a secret agreement that the bank would in turn process payments that they knew to be illegal (based on the 2005 Bush law). This was a pretty big scheme.
9/21/2011 12:54:17 PM
9/21/2011 12:57:53 PM
9/21/2011 1:33:18 PM
I always thought lederer and ferguson were slime balls. I hope they get their shit pushed in.
9/21/2011 1:36:48 PM
The reason you aren't recognizing that this indeed was a Ponzi scheme is that you don't understand the owners of the software are not the same people as the owners of the poker company.The owners of the software were being paid a return on their software investment.This was supposed to be coming from the profits their investment was generating for the owners of the website.Instead the phantom profits were mostly comprised of new player deposits.Once they can determine how much of the ill gotten "profits" went to these investors, you can bet there will be clawbacks.
9/21/2011 2:06:32 PM
9/21/2011 2:46:22 PM
Well you're not correct in this case and I've layed it out for you so we will just leave it at that.Again, the players were using fulltilt as a bank account and collecting interest as well.Tiltware was owned by separate ownership and duped by high returns that will now be clawed back because they weren't real.I'm not interested in arguing the mechanics beyond that, but will note that this is another win for Ron Paul and another loss for government intervention. By trying to protect people from gambling they walked them right into a $400 million scam.
9/21/2011 4:24:43 PM
Aaron, calm the fuck down.You being angry will not help you win the argument.You're wrong, accept it.
9/21/2011 4:33:34 PM
According to dictionary.com, only 1 definition says
9/21/2011 4:40:00 PM
This a semantic argument, guys. It's just not worth having.I think we're all generally on the same page. Government tries to crack down on behavior it deems unacceptable, owners try to extract as much money as possible from a venture that has been rendered non-viable by said government crack down, everyone ends up getting fucked in the end.
9/21/2011 4:42:47 PM
Well his semantic argument just got owned.The thread can now end in peace.
9/21/2011 4:44:38 PM