On Febuary 12, 2006 Kirk Wright was ordered to pay nearly $20 million as part of a default judgment by the U.S. District Court in Atlanta. This would be great news if Kirk Wright had this kind of money in his accounts. Wright fraudulently provided investors with reports claiming his International Management Associates funds had over $180 million in assets. But when he was finally busted, there was less than $500,000 accounted for.
Here's an I wrote last year in the Sports Business Journal on personal finance and professional athletes.
Pro athletes must use caution to avoid financial runaround
By Marc Isenberg
Published August 28, 2006: Page 13
When the infamous Willie Sutton was asked why he robbed banks, he said, “Because that’s where the money is.” If Sutton were alive today, perhaps he’d target professional athletes. Instead of his risk-taker’s bravado, he could steal millions from unsuspecting pro athletes with simple razzle-dazzle and lies.
While professional athletes are among the most financially fortunate members of society, they are also among the most vulnerable. Young, financially inexperienced and often surrounded by yes-men, professional athletes are magnets for scam artists.
Kirk Wright, founder of hedge fund International Management Associates, is the latest to be accused of defrauding current and former pro athletes. From 1998 to 2005, which The Wall Street Journal points out included the worst bear market since the Great Depression, Wright reported average annual returns of more than 27 percent. The returns apparently were fabricated. The Securities and Exchange Commission estimates that Wright, who was arrested by FBI agents in Miami on May 17 and faces 21 counts of federal mail fraud and three counts of securities fraud, bilked investors out of at least $115 million. <Read full article in PDF file>
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