KEY POINTS
  • A California man was arrested on federal securities fraud charges after making more than $9 million by manipulating penny-stock prices and targeting retail investors, according to prosecutors and the SEC.
  • Charlie Abujudeh and his associates used deceptive promotional campaigns and aggressive sales tactics to falsely inflate stock prices and unload shares for profit, according to criminal and civil complaints.
  • The man's alleged market manipulation tactics highlight how stocks traded on the over-the-counter market and their investors are vulnerable to fraud schemes. 
The headquarters of the US Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC).

A California man was arrested on federal securities fraud charges after making more than $9 million by manipulating penny-stock prices and targeting retail investors, according to prosecutors and the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission.

Charlie Abujudeh, 48, and his associates used deceptive promotional campaigns and "high-pressure sales tactics" from August 2019 to at least September 2020 to falsely inflate stock prices and unload shares for profit, according to a civil complaint filed Thursday by the SEC in Brooklyn federal court.