ABSTRACT

In the space of three years, from 2009 to 2012 Bernie Madoff, Tom Petters and R. Allen Stanford were all convicted for running multi-billion dollar Ponzi schemes. These three schemes alone have had the largest financial take in U.S. history. But what role does the economy and legislation play in the occurrences of Ponzi schemes?  What is the nature of Ponzi schemes and what are their tools and mechanisms? What can we know about Ponzi perpetrators?

Unraveling the answers to these questions (and many more), Marie Springer provides the first representative portrait of Ponzi schemes, their perpetrators, and their victims. Adopting a multidisciplinary approach, she begins by presenting an overview of different types of Ponzi schemes. She later explores perpetrators and victims of Ponzi schemes followed by a close examination of economic trends, regulatory changes, and the financial relationship with Ponzi schemes. Other key features include:

• A non-technical overview of both offender based and offense-based approaches of studying this form of fraud.

• Examples of Ponzi schemes and Ponzi schemers.

• A wealth of descriptive statistics on known federal cases from the 1960s until the present to quantify this specific form of fraud.

Broadening our understanding of Ponzi schemes as a form of white-collar crime, The Politics of Ponzi Schemes provides an excellent foundation for students and practitioners of public administration, banking, as well as investors, finance and accounting, law enforcement officers, legislators and regulators.

chapter |10 pages

Introduction

Ponzi Scheme Research and Overview

part I|112 pages

The Ponzi Schemes

chapter Chapter 1|6 pages

Ponzi Schemes and White-collar Crime

chapter Chapter 2|28 pages

Typological Categories of Ponzi Schemes

chapter Chapter 3|20 pages

The Tools of Carrying out the Ponzi Schemes

chapter Chapter 4|44 pages

Ways, Manner, and Means Used to Carry Out the Schemes

chapter Chapter 5|13 pages

The Money

part II|85 pages

The Perpetrators and Victims

chapter Chapter 6|14 pages

Trust, Persuasion, Gullibility, and Greed

chapter Chapter 7|43 pages

The Ponzi Perpetrators

chapter Chapter 8|18 pages

The Victims

chapter Chapter 9|9 pages

Sentencing and Sanctions

part III|93 pages

Laws, Economics, and History

chapter Chapter 10|24 pages

Economic Theory and Financial Trends

chapter Chapter 11|24 pages

Laws, Regulation and Legislative History

chapter Chapter 12|23 pages

Significant and Unique Ponzi Schemes in History

chapter |21 pages

Conclusion