By ED RUNYAN
WARREN
About 200 Canadian investors filed a federal lawsuit against Warren businessman Kevin L. Harris Sr., accusing him, his brother Keelan M. Harris and a Toronto, Ontario, woman of running a $22 million Ponzi scheme in 2007 and 2008.
The Toronto-area investors uncovered a variety of information while researching their lawsuit, including a two-page biography Harris had distributed.
In it, Harris is described as a journeyman with the local electrician’s union since 1991 who also had operated a Parkman Road car repair shop. It also said Harris, 45, had begun a career in real estate and business development in 2000 and had joined with a Canadian woman, Karen Starr, in 2005 to form a company that trades foreign currency, known as Forex trading.
It didn’t mention anything about professional training in investments or a college education.
The 1983 Warren G. Harding High School graduate also didn’t mention that he had spent a short time in prison for his role in a 1995 Warren arson and that he had been sued or charged criminally in Warren more than 55 times since 1994.
Also not mentioned in the biography for his brother, Keelan Harris, 34, Kevin’s associate, was that Keelan had also spent time in court and prison.
Keelan had been sued at least 13 times and faced misdemeanor and felony criminal charges in Warren and Youngstown six times, including state and federal prison sentences of more than three years after he broke into the Champion License Bureau in 2003 and took equipment used to make driver’s licenses.
Dominic Ventura, one of the Toronto investors, said it’s too bad he didn’t know more about the Harris brothers when he began to invest in their company, Complete Developments LLC of Parkman Road, in late 2007.
“I wasn’t aware of any of that [criminal and civil complaints],” Ventura said. “We thought they were spotless.”
Ventura said he and his fellow investors were approached by a Toronto marketing company that invited them to invest money in Complete Development’s Forex trading program with the promise of returns on their investment of between 7 percent and 12 percent per month, while 80 percent of their investment would always be protected.
“We thought [the marketing company] had done their due diligence,” Ventura said, adding he and most of the other investors had no dealings with the Harris brothers, only the marketing company.
Most of the investors were skeptical at first, so they started out slowly. But after several months of receiving payments of the type promised, Ventura started to believe it was for real, so he invested additional amounts. He declined to say how much he invested, though three lawsuits filed by the investors in Trumbull County Common Pleas Court said each had invested about $50,000.
Two other investors who sued Complete Development in Trumbull County in December 2008, Paul Daye and Kevin Johnson, invested $134,000.
Judge John M. Stuard of common pleas court entered a judgment against Complete Development in that case in February 2010. Their local attorney, Daniel Keating, said all his clients can do now is wait to see whether there is any money to recover.
“All of us got caught up in the excitement of it,” Ventura said, explaining why the investors were willing to turn over thousands to Harris, who was president of the company. “I got 10 percent for seven months, and I thought it was a great thing.”
One of the ways Complete Development impressed its investors was to invite them in late 2007 to Complete Development’s offices, the former IBEW union hall, 2430 Parkman Road N.W., across from the Trumbull Plaza, to hear a presentation.
“That had a lot to do with legitimizing it,” Ventura said of the trip, attended by about 30 investors.
About eight months after he began to invest, however — in July 2008 — Ventura and many fellow investors realized there was a problem.
The payments stopped, and letters from Complete Development throughout the fall asked the investors to be patient.
“We have had some very impatient members create problems that have the potential to cause us to lose a whole lot more than just our bank accounts,” an e-mail from CDL said Sept. 12, 2008.
One of the investors, Pastor Rodwell Anderson of Grace Mount Zion Apostolic Church in Milton, Ontario, wrote an e-mail to the company Oct. 1, 2008, in which he noted that he had driven from Toronto to Warren on Sept. 18, 2008, to meet with a company representative about his investments but was told no one was available to talk.
“As you are aware, a part of the amount [invested] is for the church, and the rest is a personal loan that I am paying interest on,” Anderson said in the e-mail, part of the lawsuit he filed in Trumbull County in January 2010, seeking return of his $50,000 investment.
The Complete Development office building, which Kevin Harris purchased from the IBEW on land contract in December 2006 for $295,000, is empty today.
The IBEW filed suit against Kevin Harris in April this year, seeking to foreclose on the property because Harris quit making payments.
On June 3, 2009, 213 customers of Complete Development, mostly from the Toronto area plus about six Americans from outside Ohio, filed a lawsuit in federal court in Youngstown, accusing the Harris brothers and a female business partner from Toronto, Karen Starr, of taking $22 million from them in a Ponzi scheme — a fraud in which individuals use money from new investors to pay “fake” profits to earlier investors.
New York City lawyer Harry Wise III, who filed the suit, said Complete Development took in $42 million from investors between early 2007 and September 2008 and paid out $29 million.
By looking at Complete Development’s bank accounts during the discovery process of the lawsuit, it became clear Complete Development invested only about $1 million of the $42 million in Forex, and that was done through a private account in the name of Kevin Harris and Karen Starr, not from a business account, Wise said.
“They apparently never conducted any trading,” Wise said.
In January 2010, federal Magistrate Judge George J. Limbert dismissed the lawsuit, saying it was not specific enough in describing “the circumstances surrounding the alleged fraud.”
Wise appealed the decision and said if he’s not successful on appeal, he’ll likely file the case in Trumbull County Common Pleas Court.
Wise will attempt to recover any money still left. Bank records indicate Complete Development officials wired $3 million to $4 million to foreign bank accounts and sent $2.4 million to a company in Atlanta, Wise said.
Bank records also list some of the following expenses paid out from CDL and 13 business accounts from Jan. 1, 2007, and Aug. 31, 2009: Jewelry purchased at European Jewelers, Ontario, $7,454; Harrod of London (a luxury gift store), $2,563; payments to Complete Development’s marketing company, $931,601; payments to Karen Starr, $313,778; and payments to Keelan Harris, $23,000.
Atty. Gil Rucker of Warren, who represented the Harris brothers, Starr and Complete Development, said Judge Limbert’s decision speaks for itself and declined to comment further. Rucker declined to put The Vindicator in touch with the Harris brothers by telephone.
A call asking to talk to Kevin and Keelan Harris at a Parkman Road auto repair shop Kevin Harris once owned was not returned.
Ventura forwarded The Vindicator a copy of an e-mail from the Youngstown office of the FBI stating that Ventura’s name had been referred to the agency as a “possible victim of a federal crime” in relation to Kevin Harris and Complete Development and adds: “We appreciate your assistance and cooperation while we are investigating this case.”
An FBI spokesman in Cleveland said he could not, however, comment on whether the FBI is conducting such an investigation.
The Better Business Bureau gives Complete Development LLC an “F” rating, its worst.
Comments
HMMNN??? and so it goes~~~
"In January 2010, federal Magistrate Judge George J. Limbert dismissed the lawsuit, saying it was not specific enough in describing “the circumstances surrounding the alleged fraud.”
Ponzi schemes must be legitimate business now .
Sounds like 'joke of judge' George J Limbert would qualify for Supreme Court Justice these days.
Look out good men of Ohio, your laws are tools for the crooked, the Con & his Lawyer.
How does a fundamental system of laws, established over a great many years, established to protect the continued growth of a good society, allow two Con men, 74 attempts at the use of its tools to do the very thing it is designed to prevent, rob the mind and spirit of good men & their good will.
Look out Ohio, your system of Law has a stench of fowl in its workings.
The modus of operandi has 2 cons snag their victim, Lawyers enter to help wear them down; by delay, by intimidation, by day & by night; court rooms fill to hear the verdict and then in the 11th hour the cons and their lawyer present a settlement. 74 times and so it goes. The innocent are absolutely disadvantaged here.
As long as everyone is employed, meaning Lawyers & Judges, then beware the Con-man for your hard earned wealth is their bread and butter by legitimate lawsuit and con-man too.
Our crowning moment has the Judge even dismiss a Ponzi, the most devistating type of crime of the day, where hundreds & hundreds of good people are robbed by two of the most blatant ex-cons breathing. The evidence is clear but ignored instead focus is drawn to procedural technicality or something as if that is the main purpose of the system of Law. How can the fighting spirit of these people continue while a Judge so easily decides to dismiss their case.
Look out Society, your system of laws are tools for the crook & his lawyer.
“We thought [the marketing company] had done their due diligence,” Ventura said, adding he and most of the other investors had no dealings with the Harris brothers, only the marketing company.
Hmm well I would be interested in knowing more about this marketing company and just how much they knew!
payments to Keelan Harris, $23,000
Besides someone explain how can you have a $22 million suit against someone for receiving $23,000 over the course of about 1.5 years?
Just maybe that's why it got dismissed!
Just because a person made mistakes in their past...that makes them automatically guilty...right?
The head of this MARKETING COMPANY who received $931,601 is also the person heading the suit.
Hmmm.... Interesting. Is it that these are the amounts that one was able to extract directly for Keelan Harris (which were wired funds) from the bank records..... There were a lot of amounts there that were transferred without a name beside it to other accounts based on the court documents. Is it possible that Keelan got a lot more... Why did Keelan and Kevin plead the Fifth Amendment if there was nothing to hide? How do you know that it was over 1.5 years that was being extracted and not for less than one year from one bank account?.....
I smell a rat..... Why have Keelan and Kevin not provided information requested at the Discovery Stage? Not one iota of information was provided by the defendants for the case.
"Just because a person made mistakes in the past.... makes them automatically guilty ... right?" Let's hope that they have mended their ways. What do you know about this case? Do you know what damage has been done to families by this fraud? Was it worth damaging people's lives for as was said $23,000 for 1.5 years? There were a lot of transfers to Dubai, an Atlanta company, Panama for a UCAN company, Global Asset Management, withdrawals at ATMs , payments for gas, debit card transactions, travel so it definitely was not just $23,000. This is cruel!!!
The major issue here is what have the Harris brothers done with more than 200 persons money??
Justice and truth must prevail.....
What do you know?..... CrazyRight, you must have intimate knowledge of the case to state that the MARKETING COMPANY head is heading the lawsuit? Did the marketing company tell the brothers to defraud people? Did not the head of that company invest personally in the Ponzi scheme? Do you think that he would have done so if he knew? Come out of the closet..... Are you Keelan or Kevin? I cannot begin to tell you what horror these men have brought to people's lives.
I would like to know more. I smell a rat!!!!
@Reds - Possibly because the con was/is bigger than just 2 men from Ohio.
@VOICE2 - Would you like to know more?
Google these two words: Fall Guy
@CrazyRight - Looks like you were right about the person heading the suit. Or at least the CFTC agrees with you. Patrick Cole has been charged in a suit by the CFTC.
See what the CFTC has to say about Patrick Cole right here:
http://www.cftc.gov/PressRoom/PressRe...
@censoredship - Hey big boy...are you following me?(wink)
@censoredship - Im just a seeker of facts every thing I say is based upon court records. Can you at least say the same about your accusations? Probably not.
Read the whole CTFC Filing...it too can be found online...
Defendant Complete Developments LLC is a North Carolina limited liability company that was incorporated in July 2006 by Kevin Harris and another individual. In October 2006, CDL was also incorporated in Delaware as a limited liability company
But the Vindy posts:
March 2004: Convicted in Youngstown federal court of identity theft and credit card fraud, sentenced to 33 months in federal prison, three years’ probation, ordered to pay $156,848 restitution, released from prison in November 2006.
Please do the math...CDL was already a company before the convict was released...eh?
@censoredhip; Facts :) see what you can find out by looking up facts? I am not going to say any level of Kim's involvement in the the Start Up of CDL...but I will say the Alphabet boys aren't stupid and a person should be charged depending on their level of involvement and knowledge of a crime along with their cooperation!
Let's just say...they will follow the money...
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