Melissa Caddick’s victims receive first payout

Ponzi scheme Melissa Caddick financial advice

11 August 2023
| By Laura Dew |
image
image
expand image

The victims of an alleged Ponzi scheme run by conwoman, Melissa Caddick, have received their first payout.

An initial distribution of $3 million was paid to 55 investors by receivers Jones Partners. 

Jones Partners was appointed in December 2020 as receivers of Caddick’s property and liquidators of her company, Maliver.

Part of the distribution came from the sale of her home in Sydney’s Eastern Suburbs which sold for $9.8 million earlier this year, and further proceeds are expected from the potential sale of a second Sydney property which will be listed next month.

Principal, Bruce Gleeson, said: “In many Ponzi schemes, it is not unusual for investors to receive no return, so we are pleased to be able to make this distribution and anticipate further significant distributions in the future.

“We have also recently taken possession of the Edgecliff penthouse and are presently preparing it for sale.

“The Edgecliff penthouse in the Eastpoint Tower, Edgecliff, is in a prime location and the sale of it will importantly enable us to make further significant distributions to investors.”

Caddick was alleged to have fraudulently stolen between $20–30 million from investors under the guise of working as a financial adviser, which she spent on designer clothes, jewellery and holidays.

But in November 2020, her Sydney home was raided by ASIC and Caddick went missing. 

A foot then washed up on a beach on the NSW South Coast in February 2021, which was understood to belong to Caddick. A NSW coroner ruled she had died.

In November 2021, the Federal Court ruled Caddick carried on a financial services business without holding an Australian financial services licence (AFSL).

In a judgment by Justice Brigitte Markovic, she said: “In my opinion, the evidence establishes Maliver was a vehicle through which Caddick operated and was able to perpetrate a fraud on investors. That is, it was a sham or facade adopted to conceal the reality and was used by Caddick for that purpose.

“The reality was that actions of Maliver were carried out at the behest of Caddick and it was Caddick who took all the necessary steps, provided the purported advice and ran the scheme.”

Read more about:

AUTHOR

Submitted by Sean on Sat, 2023-08-12 06:11

This woman was NOT an advisor- she was a common conwoman- so why would an industry magazine devote space to update her saga. It’s bad enough that the MSM often misrepresents her as an advisor - but understandable when we give her airtime- IMHO.

Recommended for you

sub-bgsidebar subscription

Never miss the latest news and developments in wealth management industry

MARKET INSIGHTS

GG

So shareholders lose a dividend plus have seen the erosion of value. Qantas decides to clawback remuneration from Alan ...

2 weeks 2 days ago
Denise Baker

This is why I left my last position. There was no interest in giving the client quality time, it was all about bumping ...

2 weeks 3 days ago
gonski

So the Hayne Royal Commission has left us with this. What a sad day for the financial planning industry. Clearly most ...

2 weeks 4 days ago

The decision whether to proceed with a $100 million settlement for members of the buyer of last resort class action against AMP has been decided in the Federal Court....

2 days 21 hours ago

A former Brisbane financial adviser has been found guilty of 28 counts of fraud where his clients lost $5.9 million....

2 weeks 2 days ago

A Melbourne financial advice firm has been put into liquidation by the Federal Court, and an appeal against its AFSL cancellation has been dismissed....

3 weeks 4 days ago

TOP PERFORMING FUNDS

ACS FIXED INT - AUSTRALIA/GLOBAL BOND