KEY POINTS
  • The court ordered Woodbridge Group to pay $892 million in disgorgement and its former owner and CEO Robert H. Shapiro to pay a $100 million civil penalty and give back more than $20 million in ill-gotten gains and interest.
  • Woodbridge was supposed to invest in real estate developers, but instead the SEC says it was a Ponzi scheme.
  • The scheme, which collapsed in 2017, affected 8.400 retail investors, many of them seniors.
The U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission in Washington, D.C.

A federal court in Florida ordered a real estate investing firm and its former owner to pay $1 billion for operating a Ponzi scheme that targeted thousands of retail investors, many of them seniors.

The court ordered Woodbridge Group of Companies to pay $892 million in disgorgement and its former owner and CEO Robert H. Shapiro to pay a $100 million civil penalty and give back more than $20 million in ill-gotten gains and interest.