The US Commodity Futures Trading Commission (CFTC) has received a court recommendation for the penalties to be imposed on Peter Szatmari, a .
In the court document for “finds and recommends” signed by the judges of the US District Court of Hawaii, Szatmari can be ordered to pay $6,258,250 in restitution with an off-set of $1,899,837 paid by his business partner David Sechovicz under the settlement.
This is the same amount lost by the victims who fell for the binary schemes promoted by them.
In addition to that, Szatmari is also ordered to disgorge $1,899,836 with and an additional civil penalty of $5,699,508.
“This amount represents three times Defendant’s gain of $1,899,836.00,” the court document noted. “Plaintiff requests the maximum civil monetary penalty because of the serious nature of Defendant’s misconduct, as well as Defendant’s refusal to participate in these proceedings.”
The fake promotions
The brought the case against Szatmari and his partner in October 2019, alleging that they “created and disseminated millions of fraudulent solicitations to convince recipients to open and accounts on websites operated by unregistered, off-exchange brokers.”
According to the original complaint, Szatmari and Sechovicz approached the victims via emails, websites, professional videos, advertisements, and social media and convinced them to open binary options trading account, and in many cases even to use automated trading software.
The duo promised significant profits to the traders if they use the trading software.
The complaint also detailed that to back their claims, the alleged fraudsters used fake testimony of actors claiming to be making profits by using the advertised software and also showed fake bank and trading accounts.
As per the regulator, Szatmari and his partner received $3.8 million for promoting this software as a flat fee for around 25,000 account openings.
For all the allegations and five charges against the defendant, the court found them to be sufficiently pled, and thus “the sufficiency of the Complaint weighs in favor of default judgment.”
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