Elevate your local knowledge
Sign up for the iNFOnews newsletter today!
[byline]
VANCOUVER – Securities regulators in British Columbia have fined a former notary public $33 million and banned her permanently from the province’s capital markets for what they say was a multimillion-dollar fraud scheme.
Regulators say Rashida Samji ran what amounted to a Ponzi scheme between 2003 and January 2012 in which she raised a total of at least $100 million from 200 or more investors.
Samji allegedly told investors their money would be held in trust and used only to secure letters of comfort for the financing of a British Columbia winery. Investors were to earn fees for securing the letters of credit.
“None of this was true,” said a statement issued by the British Columbia Securities Commission.
“Samji perpetrated a fraud each time she traded securities to an investor” and breached securities laws “many times in her dealings with hundreds of clients,” a BCSC panel said in announcing its sanctions.
“The magnitude and duration of the fraudulent investment scheme and the number of investors affected justify a significant penalty.”
In addition to the $33-million fine and capital markets ban, the panel ordered Samji to pay to the regulator more than $10.8 million — the difference between the money deposited by investors under the fraud and the money paid out to them.
Want to share your thoughts, add context, or connect with others in your community?
You must be logged in to post a comment.