Ethics board weighs in on Ackley dispute

New London – A dispute between a city councilor and the police chief continues to roil, with a mayoral candidate issuing a statement that calls for “transparent government,” and the head of the Board of Ethics suggesting his committee get involved.

City Councilor Rob Pero, who is the Republican candidate for mayor, issued a statement over the weekend asking city officials to focus their energies on reforms rather than the accusations of unethical behavior that Police Chief Margaret Ackley has leveled against Councilor Michael Buscetto III. Buscetto is the party-endorsed Democratic mayoral candidate. He faces a party primary Sept. 13.

“The city of New London finds itself in the midst of a crisis … Unfortunately, this conflict has resulted in a taxpayer funded private investigation that will continue to provide more uncertainty and strain on the City,” Pero said, referring to a city council directive to the law director to find a private investigator to look into the accusations the chief made last week.

“I think we should focus our energies on moving the city along,” Pero said Monday. “And not get bogged down into the whole debate.”

“Investigations suck the life and energy out of a community,” he continued. “There are a lot of issues the community needs to address and stay focused on.”

At the forefront, he said, is how the city will spend $9 million in bond money, whether to build a new high school and the coming vote on the potential sale of a portion of Riverside Park.

Buscetto responded that he, too, is looking out for taxpayers and said a retirement agreement Ackley made with City Manager Denise Rose will end up costing the city additional money. The agreement was signed in April. The council learned about it earlier this month.

http://liarcatchers.com/corporate_investigations.html 

“Councilor Pero has mentioned conflict in city government resulting in unnecessary use of taxpayer monies. However, I see this as a straightforward issue,” Buscetto said in a prepared statement. “This is not and should not be a campaign issue. It’s about doing the job that we were elected to do – looking out for our taxpayers.”

Meanwhile, K. Robert Lewis, chairman of the city’s ethics board, sent a memo to city councilors suggesting the chief has an ethics complaint that should be addressed by his committee.

“I want to opine that the council cannot investigate itself, even through the office of the Law Director,” Lewis wrote. “It is for the seven members of the Board of Ethics to follow the (prescribed) procedure, hire an investigator as necessary and conduct hearings if Probable Cause is found.”

A Board of Ethics meeting has been scheduled for Friday at a time and place to be announced, Lewis said Monday.

“What we will talk about is whether this is in our purview or if this not in our purview,” he said.

He asked how the council, which includes three mayoral candidates, can order an investigation into allegations made against one candidate and then have all three candidates vote on what is found. Besides Buscetto and Pero, Councilor Martin Olsen, who is the ceremonial mayor this year, is running as a petitioning candidate.

“It gives the appearance that the council is investigating themselves,” he said. “The Board of Ethics has no one involved.”

While no complaint has been filed with the board, Lewis said the board can initiate alleged ethics violations if five of its seven members vote to do so.

“I know it was out of abundance of concern they did what they did,” Lewis said, referring to the council’s vote to investigate the complaints. “My point is, this is what this body (Board of Ethics) exists for.”

Last week Ackley announced she wants to retire and accused Buscetto of interfering with her department. She also threatened to file a lawsuit, alleging that Buscetto has harassed her and created a hostile work environment.

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Jenny Farmer Umphress received the most votes in the run for Yuma Municipal Court judge

Jenny Farmer Umphress received the most votes in the run for Yuma Municipal Court judge with 1,861 ballots cast, or 32.8 percent of the vote, as of 9 p.m. Tuesday, according to unofficial results.

Jerrold Warner received the second-highest number of votes with 1,847 or 32.6 percent as of 9 p.m.

Deann Sandry received the fewest votes with 1,637 or 28.9 percent as of 9 p.m.
Current Judge Nancy Davis is not seeking re-election.

The preliminary results reflect all six polling places and more than 5,000 early ballots, the city reported. The initial results do not include 1,639 late early, 34 provisional or conditional ballots.

http://liarcatchers.com/due_diligence.html 

According to the city of Yuma, the top two finishers will move on to the general election on Nov. 8. The Municipal Court judge candidate with the least amount of votes will be eliminated as a result of the final tally of primary election ballots.

For the latest tallies, log on to City of Yuma website.

Umphress is a courthouse security officer who has worked for the court system for nearly 18 years. She served at the Yuma County Attorney’s Office for two years as a legal secretary.

Before that she worked for four years at the Colorado Springs County Attorney’s office and was a detention officer at the Yuma County jail.

A private investigator, Warner has been a police officer, investigator, judge and college professor in criminal law.

Sandry is a veteran prosecutor with 20 years of experience. She currently serves at the Yuma County Attorney’s Office and has tried well over 100 trials in her career.

The Yuma Municipal Court presides over a limited jurisdiction and handles misdemeanor criminal cases (including domestic violence cases), traffic violations and all criminal and civil matters related to city ordinances.

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New clue in Sharon West missing case

A massive search in finding Sharon West lead to finding a new possible new clue.

The Jefferson County Sheriff’s Office confirms they have found a cell phone in near the Seabreeze Youth Club Soccer field in the Fannett area, it’s not confirmed if it belongs to Sharon West.

Investigators say this was the last known location of Sharon according to cell phone records.

http://liarcatchers.com/missing_persons_investigations.html 

Sharon’s mother, Sandra West, hired private investigator Chuck Foreman out of Austin to help dig deeper in finding where Sharon is.

The search started Tuesday evening at 6:30.

Among those in the search was Sharon’s grandmother, Thelma West. She says she’s full of emotions because she doesn’t know where Sharon could be.

“You’re scared, you’re upset, you wonder if you’ll ever see her again.”

Sharon’s great aunt, Alma Manuel, was also in on the search.

“She just need a chance to continue to live or she just needs a chance to a peaceful ending,” Manuel says.

Private investigator Chuck Foreman has been working on this case for a couple of days and organized this massive search, lead by Labelle-Fannett V.F.D. Chief Charles Sonnier.

Chief Sonnier says the community won’t let up until that one clue leads to Sharon.

“We’re here for the family and we’re not going to sleep or rest until we find her,” Sonnier says

 

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SEC Stops Hedge Fund Manager Fire Sale

The Securities and Exchange Commission got a emergency court order against a North Carolina hedge fund manager caught selling off parts of his multi-million dollar home despite a freeze on his assets.

Lawyers for the SEC said they acted after a private investigator caught Stan Kowalewski, a financial advisor from Greensboro, gutting the house of “fixtures, light fixtures, doors, kitchen cabinets and other items” that would take more than $200,000 to fix and replace, according to Greensboro’s local newspaper News & Record.

http://liarcatchers.com/employee_investigations.html 

SEC officials also said neighbors told them that they saw Kowalewski selling off some items from his home during “estate sales” this month. The SEC sued Kowalewski, the former CEO of SJK Investment Management, in January, saying he fraudulently diverted about $16 million of investor money, of which $8.4 million either was paid improperly to him or spent wrongly for his benefit.

The agency froze Kowalewski’s assets including the house, which could be sold to recoup some of the losses, the News & Record reported.

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Private eye helped clear Sevens star

It took a private detective and months of legal wrangling but a rugby sevens star now has the chance of dodging a criminal conviction.

Declan O’Donnell, 20 who also plays for Waikato was yesterday offered diversion when he appeared in Hamilton District Court on two charges of common assault.

If O’Donnell completes the agreed conditions by November, the charges will be withdrawn and no conviction will be recorded.

The rugby star was previously declined diversion due to the seriousness of an injuring with intent charge, which arose after a brawl between him and two bouncers at Hamilton’s Outback Inn on January 21.

http://liarcatchers.com/civil_investigations.html 

However, that charge was reduced to common assault last week, making him eligible for the scheme.

His laywer Roger Laybourn said evidence obtained from a private investigator, and CCTV footage from an adjoining bar, helped convince the police to reduce his charge.

O’Donnell’s rugby contract won’t allow him to speak to the media directly about the case, but Waikato Rugby Union chief executive Graham Bowen told the Waikato Times it was a relief.

“He made a mistake and he’s aware of it,” Mr Bowen said.

“Now he can get on with his career and we are very supportive of helping make the right decision in the future. He is a very good young athlete and this is just a small hiccup which I think he’s learnt from.”

Sam McDonnell, the pub’s head of security, has since been charged with injuring O’Donnell’s brother with intent. It’s understood he is defending the charge.

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Edward Younghoon Shin Accused of Murdering Christopher Ryan Smith for Full Control of Sales Lead Generation Company They Co-Founded

In May 2010, Edward Younghoon Shin pleaded guilty in Riverside Superior Court to stealing sales leads as well as colleague Christopher Ryan Smith from LG Technologies, a company that generated sales leads before they formed a new concern, 800xchange.

Today, 33-year-old Irvine father of two Shin is being arraigned on charges of murdering Smith in their San Juan Capistrano offices to avoid paying $1 million he owed to buy Smith out of 800xchange.

And you thought the taxi cab business was cutthroat!

Orange County Sheriff’s Department investigators arrested Shin around 11 a.m. Sunday as he was sitting aboard a plane at Los Angeles International Airport bound for Canada. Currently being held without bail, he is charged with one felony count of special circumstances murder for financial gain and faces a sentence of life in state prison without the possibility of parole if convicted.

Smith
​Smith, also 33, had been in business with Shin at 800xchange for about two years before they had a falling out. A year ago, they reached a deal where Shin would pay $1 million for Smith’s half of the company. Orange County Sheriff’s homicide investigators say Shin killed Smith instead on June 4, 2010, and disposed of the body. Shin is also accused of going to great lengths to cover-up the crime, including painting over the spot in their San Juan Capistrano office where Smith was murdered to cover up blood stains. Shin is also alleged to have used a phony email account to delude Smith’s family into thinking he was on an extended vacation.

The lies ran out of steam, and Smith’s family in Laguna Beach hired a private investigator to find him. The city police department launched a missing persons investigation this past April. When “a significant amount of blood evidence” was found in San Juan Capistrano, Laguna Beach Police asked the Sheriff’s Department to take over the investigation, according to the sheriff’s department.

That probe produced allegations that Shin produced documents containing a false signature from Smith signing over his rights to the business. Smith’s car was discovered at some point in San Jose. His body has not been recovered. However, the investigation is ongoing, and anyone with information is urged to contact Supervising District Attorney Investigator Randy Litwin at 714.347.8492 or the OCSD Homicide Unit at 714.647.7048.

http://liarcatchers.com/wrongful_death.html 

​It’s easier to find Shin’s business bio online than Steven Jobs’. He claims to have “co-founded The 800 Exchange in order to provide clients with highly effective and inexpensive radio advertising. Working with clients in many diverse industries, Edward Shin and his colleagues at The 800 Exchange generate thousands of leads each day. Since its inception, The 800 Exchange has grown more than 1,000 percent, in part due to the expert leadership of Edward Shin.”

It continues that before founding 800xchange, he worked at Cambridge Funding, LLC, Merrill Lynch, and Morgan Stanley. He was publisher of Legends Sports Magazine, a “small boutique sports collectors magazine focused on highlighting careers of past legends and up and coming legendary athletes,” from October 2005 until selling the Hall of Fame Publishing Co. in February 2008.
He graduated from El Toro High School and then attended UC San Diego, where he studied political science and music performance. Shin’s MySpace page, which hadn’t been active for about three years, indicated he was married with two young children, a boy and a girl. In fact, the title of the page is not his name but Sophia & Adam’s Daddy.

He lists his occupation as “Media Monster” and favorite television show as Entourage, noting “I have my own Drama and Turtle but no E, I guess b/c that’s me.”

The lawsuit filed in Riverside accused Shin of fraud, stealing and diverting of leads. LeadCritic.com called it “the largest lead generation scandal in history.” Not only did LG Technologies name Shin and Smith as defendants, but the company also went after Shin’s wife, Karen Shin, as well as Iris Sunwoo of competitor LeadPoint Inc. and Marc Diana of Breakwater Ventures and Breakwater Ventures II.

Courtesy of Orange County District Attorney’s Office
Edward Younghoon Shin’s latest booking photo.
​Edward Shin was hired as vice president of Business Development at LG Technologies and then forming competitor LeadPoint, which would secretly receive sales leads diverted from LG and sell them back to LG clients. Shin hired Smith at LG and got him hired at LeadPoint, so his future 800xchange partner was working for one company and its competitor at the same time. According to the complaint, Shin paid Smith $13,000 to $14,000 per month at LeadPoint.

Shin originally pleaded not guilty to embezzlement, claiming he did nothing wrong and there was no conflict of interest, but then he suddenly changed his plea to guilty. He was ordered to pay back LG Technologies for everything he stole and serve three years probation. Charges against the other defendants, including Smith, were later dropped after an undisclosed settlement was reached.

Of course, it’s a huge leap from lead-generation theft to murder. But if Shin’s planning a defense based on this all being a misunderstanding, he drew the wrong prosecutor. Veteran Homicide Unit Senior Deputy District Attorney Matt Murphy never loses a case.

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Feds accuse former local basketball coach of ‘looting’ luxury home

The Securities and Exchange Commission launched an emergency effort Monday to stop former Greensboro financial adviser Stan Kowalewski from “looting” his exclusive home, urging a federal judge to hold him in contempt a second time.

Lawyers for the watchdog agency said they acted after a private investigator documented the apparent gutting of the $1.7 million house’s exterior lighting network and other apparent irregularities.

Officials learned of the situation late last week when several of Kowalewski’s Summerfield neighbors told them he held a series of weekend “estate sales” this month at which kitchen cabinets and other built-in items were sold.

“Kowalewski’s conduct is egregious,” SEC lawyer Alex Rue said in requesting an emergency hearing. “His contempt of this court’s freeze order this second time is demonstrated by the looting of the house of fixtures, light fixtures, doors, kitchen cabinets and other items, the full extent of which is yet to be determined. … There is no predicting what further damage he may cause.”
A report from the builder of the lakeside house said that if Kowalewski sold all its granite countertops and associated cabinets, it could cost more than $167,000 to replace, plus a potential $44,100 for interior doors and hardware, plumbing and lighting fixtures, according to documents filed Monday in the U.S. District Court for Northern Georgia.

Within hours, U.S. District Judge Timothy C. Batten set a hearing on the petition for Wednesday afternoon in Atlanta.

Kowalewski did not return a phone call Monday. His lawyer, Thomas Todd Jr. of Atlanta, did not respond to an email.

http://liarcatchers.com/fraud_investigation.html 

The SEC sued Kowalewski in January, saying he misused millions of dollars belonging to clients. The agency first sought a contempt citation several months ago against the financial adviser and well-known coach of high school basketball, after he violated a freeze on his assets by tapping $200,000 in supposedly frozen money.

To settle that first contempt charge, Kowalewski agreed to repay the frozen $200,000 at a rate of $2,500 a month, starting Aug. 1.

Batten froze Kowalewski’s assets shortly after the SEC filed its suit. The agency says that during 2009 and 2010, Kowalewski fraudulently diverted about $16 million of investor money, of which $8.4 million either was paid improperly to him or spent wrongly for his benefit.

The freeze aims to stop further losses while a court-appointed receiver recovers as much of the money as possible. Frozen assets include the house, which could be sold to recoup some of the loss.

The case emerged in Georgia because the SEC’s regional office is there, as are several of Kowalewski’s larger clients.

In this latest incident, the SEC wants an order that Kowalewski return his house to normal condition, replacing any fixtures, doors, lights and other material he removed. If Kowalewski can’t or won’t, Batten should impose a penalty stiff enough to get his attention, said Rue and his colleague, Paul Kim.

Authorities learned the house on Henson Farm Road was in jeopardy last week after discovering Kowalewski canceled his insurance policy on it, then moved his family to Pawleys Island, S.C., without telling court officials.

They began probing further after fielding complaints from his neighbors.

Kowalewski knew better than to dismantle his house for cash, Rue and Kim said in a memorandum accompanying the contempt petition.

“He knew that he was removing valuable parts of the house that he knew was part of his frozen assets,” they said. “Kowalewski should be made to replace the property and restore the damage he has caused by his defiance of the court’s freeze order.”

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Private investigator to begin search for teen missing in Fannett area

Today marks one month since the disappearance of now-15-year-old Sharon West, who was last seen at a family friend’s house in Fannett at about 2 a.m. July 30.
According to sheriff’s deputies, the 14-year-old had been living with family friends for about three months while her mother looked for work in the Irving area. The family said she was awake and at the house when they’d gone to bed around 2 a.m.

http://liarcatchers.com/missing_persons_investigations.html
Later that morning, a friend said Sharon had sent a text message at about 5:20 a.m., saying she was at a soccer field a couple of miles from the house. Investigators learned earlier this month that she’d called another friend that same morning around 6 a.m., also saying she was at the field, which deputies say is a common meet-up spot for locals.
That’s the last time anyone has reported hearing from her.
Last week, Sharon’s parents began working with Chuck Foreman, a private investigator based out of Austin who is taking the case free of charge.
Foreman said a landowner with property adjacent to the soccer fields had given him permission to search a 10-acre, heavily wooded area that he does not believe has been searched. He invites the public to join him on the ground search at 6:30 p.m. tonight.
Read the full story in Tuesday’s print edition of the Enterprise.
How you can help:
– Report any possible sightings or information to Beaumont Crime Stoppers by calling (409) 833-TIPS, visiting www.BeaumontCrimeStoppers.com or texting BMT and a message to CRIMES (274637).
Remember, Sharon is 5 feet, 6 inches tall and about 115 pounds, with a mole below her left eye and deep red hair that is purple underneath.
– Join private investigator Chuck Foreman at 6:30 p.m. Tuesday at the Seabreeze Youth Club Soccer Fields on FM 365 near Gaulding Road. Foreman will be searching a heavily wooded 10-acre private property with permission from the landowner. Bring water.

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Posted in Private detective, Private Investigator Lexington | Tagged | Comments Off on Private investigator to begin search for teen missing in Fannett area

Complaints mount against gray-market broker WTF Wholesale

A rising number of veterinarians who engaged in the controversial practice of diverting dog and cat flea-prevention products maintain that they have been cheated by a Florida-based broker of pet products, W.T.F. Wholesale Suppliers Corp.

Mike Mittelman, a private investigator hired by some of the parties to try to recoup their money from WTF, says he has been contacted separately by more than 100 diverters, almost all veterinarians, who contend that they are owed thousands of dollars in unpaid merchandise. He said the product that most supplied to WTF is Frontline Plus, a popular topical non-prescription treatment used to prevent flea and tick infestations in dogs and cats.

“There’s an ever-growing group that grows by about two victims a week,” Mittelman told the VIN News Service. The amount each claims to be owed varies, but most are in the realm of $25,000 to $35,000, he said.

At least four veterinarians filed lawsuits recently against WTF in the Circuit Court of Volusia County, Fla.; Mittelman said he expects many more to do so in coming days.

After lawsuits surfaced, WTF officials stopped operating under that name, disconnecting telephone numbers posted on the company website. They informed their suppliers that the business is continuing under the name True Lines Distributing Co. Reached at True Lines last Tuesday, company representative Kay Carpenter would not respond to allegations against WTF.

“We’re no longer WTF,” Carpenter said. “There is no more WTF Wholesale.”

Carpenter said she would pass along a message from the VIN News Service seeking information on WTF’s operations and standing, but the call was not returned.

However, the lawyer representing WTF against the veterinarians’ legal claims, Kelly Parsons Kwiatek, responded by email that WTF closed its operation at 1620 S. Clyde Morris Blvd. in Daytona Beach on Aug. 19 due to a combination of circumstances.

“While WTF saw great success as an early adopter of the veterinarian-grade flea treatment, 2011 marked an unprecedented year in the history of the organization,” she wrote. “Same-store sales seeing considerable loss of sales due to extended drought conditions, the overall poor state of the economy as a whole thereby diminishing consumer spending, and the introduction of generic equivalents (of flea products) in mass retailers led to the current situation.”

Asked why, if business conditions are poor, company officials are able to continue the operation under a different name, Parsons Kwiatek said, “I have never heard of True Lines Distributing Corp.”

In response to questions about unpaid debts to suppliers and whether the lack of payment is part of a calculated scheme to defraud, Parsons Kwiatek said:

“WTF adamantly denies that it deliberately lured veterinarians into a relationship of trust with the company, paying upfront initially and then delaying or ceasing payments over time. However, the policies, procedures and practices at the shipping, receiving, purchasing and accounting levels have, upon occasion, created a non-payment issue with a few vendors who sent product to WTF outside of its typical model. At this time, WTF is in the process of marshalling its assets and determining its liabilities so that as many vendor issues can be resolved as smoothly as possible.”

Clandestine operations revealed

The claims against WTF have opened a window into the secretive realm of pet-product diversion, a practice that may be legal, depending on the product involved, but is nonetheless considered unethical in veterinary circles. Where diverted products are not prescription drugs — Frontline brand products are classified by federal regulators as a pesticide — rules controlling the sale and distribution of pharmaceuticals appear not to apply.

But the veterinary community frowns upon diversion because it violates an understanding between most manufacturers and veterinarians that distribution should be limited to veterinarians dispensing directly to pet owners to ensure the products’ safe and effective use. Moreover, parasiticides represent a major, if dwindling, source of revenue for veterinary hospitals, one that practitioners have come to rely on for decades.

With the exception of Bayer Animal Health, major players in veterinary pharmaceuticals — Merial, Novartis, Pfizer and Elanco, for example — have policies of selling their products only to licensed, practicing veterinarians.

Despite that, a variety of pet parasiticides are readily available directly to consumers through online vendors such as PetMed Express and Amazon.com and from retail chains including Costco, Walmart and Target.

Veterinary pharmaceutical companies, suspected by many veterinarians to be complicit in the so-called gray market, usually point the finger back at practitioners, saying it is they who are diverting product to retail outlets.

Based on his research, Mittelman said, he believes a large number of veterinarians are involved in diverting, and that pharmaceutical companies, if not openly facilitating such activity, are knowingly letting it happen.

“I don’t know if there’s a lot of hypocrisy or what, but I’m telling you, there are a lot of vets who do this … ” Mittelman said. “I’m not talking a couple hundred vets. I’m talking thousands.”

As for the pharmaceutical companies, Mittelman said he was told by one veterinarian that the veterinarian’s account representative and the representative’s boss would call periodically “begging the vet to move large volumes of the non-prescription product that they need to get rid of. Obviously,” Mittelman said, “they have to know the vet is diverting this large volume of product.”

He speculated that taking big orders probably personally benefits account representatives as much as diverters. Comparing the situation to the market for mortgages in the United States before the housing sector imploded, Mittelman noted that loan officers, “weren’t checking references or anything because they were getting commissions.” He suspects the same of pharmaceutical company account representatives but added, “Maybe some account reps have more integrity than others; who knows?”

Dr. Zack Mills, head of U.S. companion animal sales for Merial, maker of Frontline, told the VIN News Service that he became aware of the WTF issue about six months ago when some of Merial’s veterinarian customers reported having trouble with their bills because they had not been paid for product they resold to WTF.

While Merial does not condone or support diversion, Mills said, the company is giving to those who explain their situation extended time to settle their bills.

“Our interest is in settling these matters amicably, not in turning their accounts over to collection agencies,” Mills said. “That said, our sales policy has not changed. We continue to sell only to practicing veterinarians and we will not sell to identified diverters. These accounts have violated our sales policy and have probably lost the ability to purchase Frontline in the future.”

Profession condemns diversion

Publicly admitting involvement with WTF is difficult for the typical veterinarian because diversion is regarded by the profession as a shameful secret. Mittelman said that of the 100 or so diverters who have contacted him, about 75 did so anonymously. They wanted him to know that they, too, had bad experiences with WTF but would not divulge their names and opted not to pursue payment. “They are willing to walk away from their losses … because they fear being shunned by their peers,” Mittelman said.

Of the remainder — 25 veterinarians and one drug sales representative who obtained product for WTF through veterinarian clients — Mittelman said most are hurting financially and cannot afford to walk away.

One may soon declare bankruptcy; another is on the verge of divorce. A couple of them say they may lose their practices due to the unpaid debt, Mittelman said. Hearing their stories has given the former law-enforcement officer an appreciation for the financially tenuous state of many veterinarians — a professional group that he previously had assumed was well-to-do.

“A lot had gigantic loans to pay back from college and on top of that, rent, electricity, plus the veterinary practice they owe a lot for,” Mittelman said. “And here comes a company like WTF saying, ‘Hey, if you buy flea and tick product and send it to us, we’ll pay you anywhere from 3 percent to 10 percent above what you paid. This vet, who may have hundreds of thousands of dollars in loans, sees an opportunity to make a few bucks diverting flea and tick product. You think, ‘What’s the big deal?’ ”

But as one veterinarian who wrote about her experience with WTF in a message board of the online community Veterinary Information Network (VIN) found, diversion is a big deal among her colleagues.

When the veterinarian posted queries on June 21 and August 8 looking for others who had sold Frontline Plus to WTF and not been paid, she elicited a storm of responses, many poking fun at her predicament or expressing scorn.

One of the gentler jibes was this from Dr. Katie Thompson, a Florida clinic owner: “As my momma says, you lie down with dogs, you get up with fleas.”

http://liarcatchers.com/fraud_investigation.html 

Dr. Shelley Lenz, a practice owner in North Dakota, suggested that the diverting veterinarian was as much a crook as the company she accused. “Hopefully you’ve learned there is no honor code among thieves,” she wrote. “You are one of them…”

The criticism cut deeply. Although the veterinarian used her full name when she posted her experience on the members-only VIN discussion board, she asked not to be identified in this article for fear of retaliation by fellow veterinarians and the potential impact her involvement could have on finding work in the future.

In an interview, she said the view that she had stolen from other veterinarians by helping to make Frontline Plus available through retail channels resonated with her. “I never thought about it that way (before),” she said.

The veterinarian, who has practiced for more than 20 years and currently serves as a relief doctor in Illinois, said she always understood that diversion was considered unethical. However, she’s known veterinarians who have successfully engaged in the activity for years. When she walked into a PetSmart store one day to buy dog food and saw a large display of Frontline Plus in the entrance, she figured refraining from diversion was pointless.

About the same time, she was having trouble paying bills because she had undergone surgery for breast cancer and was unable to work for several months. She had received solicitations regularly, once or twice a year, from companies inviting her to sell them flea-prevention products. When the next letter came, she accepted.

She started out small, ordering $5,000 worth of Frontline Plus. Since she doesn’t own a clinic, the product came to her house. WTF supplied her with shipping labels, she said, so she could send the product to the company. She did not ask to be paid before shipping the product, which she now realizes was a stupid mistake. However, the company would wire payment into her bank account within 21 days so she didn’t worry.

Within two years, the veterinarian said, she sent five shipments of product with a total value of nearly $90,000, for which she earned $2,700, or 3 percent. Payment on the fifth shipment took nearly 60 days, which caused the veterinarian to consider ending the deal with WTF. But the veterinarian said her contact, Kay Carpenter, persuaded her to make another $25,000 order by pointing out that Merial had a promotion offering discounted pricing, so the veterinarian could earn more money than usual. That shipment went out in August 2010.

With the last shipment, the veterinarian said, payment never came. Carpenter “was full of excuses,” the veterinarian recounted. “She said they had issues with cash flow. They had ordered a lot of product from vendors and were having trouble getting their receipts sorted out.”

When the veterinarian received an overdue notice from Merial, she explained her situation to an account representative at the company. After some negotiation, Merial agreed not to send her to collections if she would make payments of $100 to $500 per month.

Meanwhile, the veterinarian said, she continued to call and email Carpenter every week. “I would call, I would beg, I would plead,” she said. “She would say, ‘Yes, it’s coming. Yes, it’s coming.’ ” The veterinarian tried to reach other people at WTF, as well, but always was routed back to Carpenter.

In time, she couldn’t reach Carpenter on the telephone either, she said, and her emails to the woman began bouncing.

The veterinarian acknowledges erring in diverting but disagrees with the critics who say she — and others in the same situation — deserve what’s happened. “None of us should have to be responsible for this level of debt because the product was stolen from us,” she said. “It is our responsibility that we ordered it from Merial. Nobody is contesting that. But the fact that it was stolen, we didn’t do that. We just got (caught) in the con.”

The American Veterinary Medical Association (AVMA)’s Principles of Veterinary Medical Ethics identifies as an unethical act the diversion of “ethical products.” Such products are defined as those “for which the manufacturer has voluntarily limited the sale to veterinarians as a marketing decision.” AVMA members who fail to comply with the ethics principles may be disciplined, according to spokeswoman Sharon Curtis Granskog. Discipline may include censure, suspension, probation and/or expulsion.

But from a legal standpoint, the veterinarian in Illinois who diverted has not violated state codes, according to Susan Hofer, a spokeswoman for the Illinois Department of Financial and Professional Regulation, which oversees licensing of veterinarians and distribution of drugs, among other things.

Diversion of a pesticide product such as Frontline “is not expressly against the law in Illinois,” Hofer said. Noting that the state veterinary practice act requires that a licensee “be a person of good moral character,” she added, “I suppose somebody could make the case that reselling product is not showing good moral character.”

Practitioners file suit

In Circuit Court in Volusia County, at least four veterinarians in four states filed claims recently against WTF Wholesale.

Dr. Cynthia Maravich of Ohio filed suit on June 7 asserting that WTF owes her $26,455.20 for an order of Frontline Plus shipped to the company in July 2010. The complaint states that Maravich made her first purchase for WTF in September 2006 and continued to place orders for the company about every three months thereafter. Maravich declined to be interviewed by the VIN News Service.

On Aug. 23, Maravich voluntarily dismissed the suit with prejudice, precluding herself from filing another suit with the same claim. WTF attorney Parsons Kwiatek said the claim was settled. She declined to disclose the settlement terms.

Royer Veterinary Services in Indiana filed a complaint on July 18 claiming that WTF owes the clinic $22,995.60 plus interest for Frontline Plus products delivered in September. Clinic owner Dr. Scott Royer did not respond to a telephone message left with a clinic staff member by the VIN News Service.

Dr. John McQuown, a retired veterinarian in California, filed suit on July 25, seeking to recover from WTF payment of $32,022.90 for product he said he supplied to the company in August 2010. McQuown did not respond to a telephone message left with his wife by the VIN News Service.

Dr. David Kulhavy, a relief and emergency veterinarian in Texas, filed suit Aug. 16 in pursuit of $25,148 he said WTF owes him for product he supplied to the company in August 2010.

Parsons Kwiatek said she has been in contact with lawyers for Roger, McQuown and Kulhavy and that WTF “hopes to resolve all accounting matters in the near future.”

In an interview, Kulhavy said he began diverting Frontline Plus to WTF in 2006, two years into his career. As a recent veterinary school graduate trying to get established in the profession, the extra income was attractive.

“I don’t know if they target new vets or what … but right then, it was like, ‘Great. This is a huge bonus,’ ” Kulhavy said.

At the outset, Kulhavy recounted, the deal went like this: “They start off with a small order of, like, $10,000 and they pay you 10 percent, kind of a teaser rate. The rate kind of went down a bit — it fell in line with the economy slowing down — so I was like, ‘Whatever.’ ” Even at 5 or 6 percent, Kulhavy said, “It was very, very, very easy money to make so … I’m not going to walk away from it.”

Two other conditions changed over time, as well. The company began requesting larger orders, and paying for them more slowly, Kulhavy said. Initially, he was paid before shipping. Later, he said, payment came after delivery, and at continuously longer intervals. Kulhavy said he had six months interest-free in which to settle his account with Merial, so the time lag wasn’t a great concern at first.

When by January he hadn’t been paid for $42,000 in product shipped last August, Kulhavy said he contacted Carpenter, who told him that an accounting error led some veterinarians to be paid twice while others went unpaid. Kulhavy said he didn’t believe it, and as the due date on his Merial bill approached, he contacted a lawyer.

WTF eventually paid a portion of what he was due, Kulhavy said, leaving a balance of slightly more than $25,000. At this point, Kulhavy said, he’s working off his Merial bill with monthly payments.

Kulhavy doesn’t apologize for reselling a non-prescription product. Of colleagues who criticize the activity, Kulhavy said: “My theory is that those are all practice owners, and they’re mad because other vets are making money off the product. … I don’t see why anyone has a concern or care because it’s a non-prescription product. It’s not illegal. … It’s no different from a convenience store ordering a bunch of Tylenol and putting it on the shelf. The only reason it’s sold exclusively to vets is because that’s what the drug companies choose to do.”

As in Illinois, veterinarians in Texas are not prohibited by law from reselling pesticide products such as Frontline, according to state officials. Nicole Oria, executive director of the Texas State Board of Veterinary Medical Examiners, said the board has disciplined a practitioner in the past for reselling antibiotics. But Frontline Plus, regulated by the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency as a pesticide, falls into a different category.

In addition to Frontline Plus, the private investigator Mittelman said that a few of the veterinarians he works for sold to WTF the flea product Capstar. Like Frontline, Capstar does not require a prescription, but unlike Frontline, Capstar is regulated by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration as a drug. As such, diversion of Capstar may be illegal, at least in some states.

WTF previously accused of deceit

WTF is not the only company that solicits veterinarians to resell flea and tick products for pets. Mittelman said one of his clients diverts for multiple brokers and reportedly has had difficulty only with WTF.

Records at the Florida Department of State Division of Corporations show that WTF has been in business since at least 2001, originally under the name W.T.F. Wholesale Inc., then, beginning in April 2003, under the name W.T.F. Wholesale Suppliers Corp.

Todd Stefaniak is listed as the registered agent and officer for W.T.F. Wholesale Inc. He also is listed as the officer of W.T.F. Wholesale Suppliers Corp. Stefaniak could not be reached for comment. Palmetto Charter Services Inc. is listed as the registered agent for W.T.F. Wholesale Suppliers Corp. An entry for Palmetto Charter on manta.com, an online directory for small businesses, lists John P. Ferguson, attorney, as Palmetto’s contact. A telephone message left for Ferguson with a staff member at his law office went unanswered.

In paperwork sent to one veterinarian, WTF Wholesale describes itself as “a sales and distribution firm providing retail outlets hard-to-find veterinary products.” It goes on: “Our customer base of thousands consist (sic) primarily of retail pet stores, groomers and farm & feed stores in the Central Florida area. The WTF Wholesale corporate offices and primary distribution center is located near Daytona Beach, Florida.”

WTF has been accused of deceit by not only veterinarians, but others in the business of selling pet products. The Kong Company, LLC, maker of rubber chew toys for dogs, in a suit filed in August 2010, alleged that Stefaniak and WTF obtained product from Kong “under the guise that the product would be distributed as gifts to veterinarians when in fact that product was provided to Costco Wholesale Corporation for distribution throughout the United States.”

The suit cites an e-mail sent by Stefaniak to Kong in May 2010 that begins: “My company partners with approximately 5,000 veterinarians across the country. It’s these veterinary relationships that enable us to be the largest distributor of Frontline branded products in the U.S.”

The message goes on to say that Stefaniak is considering including Kong toys in a quarterly “thank you” package to its veterinarian partners.

Kong responded by selling to WTF 20,736 large Classic Kongs at the discounted price of $2.40 each, along with an equal number of large liver snacks to be inserted into the chew toys at the price of $1.75 each, according to the suit. (The retail price of a large Classic Kong is $12.99.) A few weeks after it shipped the order to Florida, the suit states, Kong discovered the products had been sold to Costco and appeared in stores in California and Texas.

“Kong products are distributed throughout the United States primarily at specialty pet stores such as PetSmart and Petco. Kong does not distribute its products through ‘warehouse’ stores such as Costco,” the suit states.

The case was dismissed without prejudice in January over jurisdiction: The suit was filed in U.S. District Court in the Central District of California, but the defendants had shipped the products to Idaho. Asked whether Kong would re-file the suit in Idaho, a company spokeswoman said Kong regards the case as closed and had no further comment.

Meanwhile, veterinarians who believe they are victims of theft by WTF are posting about WTF, True Lines Distributing, Stefaniak, Carpenter and other company officials on Internet sites such as ripoffreport.com and merchantcircle.com with warnings to avoid doing business with these parties.

Dr. Paul Pion, president and co-founder of VIN, said the difficulties veterinary colleagues report with WTF illustrate some of the risks of diverting. When some members of VIN objected to the use of their professional forum as a means for diverters to contact each other, Pion explained in a post that he hoped open discussion of the issue “might deter other colleagues considering making the same poor choice.”

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Posted in Private detective | Tagged | 2 Comments

Irvine man accused of killing business partner

SANTA ANA Instead of paying $1 million to buy out his business partner, Edward Younghoon Shin killed his associate in the offices of their advertising agency, authorities said.
Shin then took over his partner’s email, investigators said, and began responding to emails from family and friends who were becoming increasingly suspicious. Christopher Ryan Smith, 32, of Laguna Beach was reported missing to the Laguna Beach Police Department in April, but authorities believe he was killed in San Juan Capistrano in June 2010. Shin, 33, pretended to be Smith in numerous emails to family and friends, authorities said, and was able to hide Smith’s death for months by giving relatives multiple excuses for Smith’s disappearance.
Relatives harbored suspicions of Smith’s whereabouts for months, and it was in April that Smith’s father reported his son missing.
“It wasn’t the typical email his son would send,” said Lt. Jason Kravetz of the Laguna Beach Police Department. “It was different words, short, strange.”
Investigators with the Orange County Sheriff’s Department announced the arrest of Shin on Monday morning, alleging he killed Smith instead of paying $1 million to buy him out. The two men had been co-owners of an advertising agency, 800Xchange, for two years but began to have a falling out in 2010, said Assistant Sheriff Mark Billings.
http://liarcatchers.com/wrongful_death.html 

Smith wanted to leave 800Xchange and a financial settlement of $1 million was reached, Billings said. But in June 2010, investigators believe Shin instead killed Smith in the offices of their San Juan Capistrano office.
After the killing, Shin is believed to have pretended to be Smith through emails that were sent to relatives and friends who inquired about his whereabouts, said Don Voght, a homicide investigators with the Orange County Sheriff’s Department.
Investigators would not say how many emails were sent or what was said in them, but relatives who lived out of state began to grow suspicious, officials said. Relatives hired a private investigator to find Smith, and reported him missing in April.
During their investigation, detectives with the Laguna Beach Police Department interviewed several acquaintances of Smith, including Shin, Kravetz said.
Police searched the business offices of the two men and found traces of blood in the area, Billings said. Through DNA testing, authorities were able to match the blood to Smith’s DNA.
Investigators said Shin went through extensive measures to try to hide the blood in the business, including cleaning it thoroughly and repainting the walls.
Shin of Irvine was taken into custody Sunday morning at Los Angeles International Airport as he was boarding a plane headed to Canada, Voght said.
After a six-hour interview, Shin admitted to killing Smith in June 2010, Billings said.
Investigators with the Sheriff’s Department said they have been unable to find Smith’s body and would not released details as to how he was killed. Investigators said they are not sure if Shin was alone in the incident.
Anyone with information is asked to contact the Orange County Sheriff’s Department at 714-628-7170.

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Posted in Private Investigation | Tagged | Comments Off on Irvine man accused of killing business partner