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5/27/2008
Kirk Wright - Suicide!
Kirk Wright was found by authorities over Memorial Day weekend, in his cell, having hanged himself with a bedsheet.

A convicted hedge fund fraudster, recently snagged for mismanaging the money of several NFL players, Wright had been serving time in the Marietta, Georgia county jail.

We'd been following his story for several years now - macabre end to what, all along, had been a bizarre story. For more details on Kirk Wright, check out the tags below.

-- MDT

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Anonymous Anonymoussaid...
It is not just sad, but also highly suspicious.
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2/22/2007
Shady Hedge Fiend Kirk Wright to Pay $20 Million
Kirk Wright made white a name for himself. Having found his way on to the NFL Player's Union's list of recommended money managers, Wright, as my grandmother would say, fell in butter. He had it good. Only one problem...he was a total phony (well, that diploma from Harvard was real).

Between 1997 and 2006 Wright raised $185 million for his International Management Associates hedge fund management company. The money came from a pool of 500 investors, including many NFL players. Wright lived the high life on their money while giving vague assurances of amazing returns. Later he filed bogus financials to cover his tracks.

When it was clear he was busted, he took flight and played fugitive for a few weeks before coming to his current berth at an Atlanta-area detention center. Wright is awiating trial on multiple fraud counts and could face some lengthly time behind bars.

In the interim U.S. District Court Charles Pannell has levied over $20 million in fines and restitution to be paid back by Wright.

Further details via HedgeCo.

-- MDT

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8/24/2006
Kirk Wright Update - NFL Players Suing League, Background Checkers, Wright's Possessions Sold at Auction
Ahhh, Kirk Wright, America's favorite hedge fund fraudster. The Seven NFL players he swindled, including Marc Coleman, Steve Atwater, Ray Crockett, Al Smith, Blaine Bishop, Carlos Emmons and Clyde Simmons have been doing their level best to get their lost $20 million back, including suing Wright, the NFL, the players' association and anyone else who gets in their way.

The NFL players' association apparently endorsed Wright as an investment advisor through their Registered Financial Advisor Program was "started in 2002 to protect former, current and prospective NFL players from financial fraudsters and con artists" (even though he had outstanding liens against him and lacked professional liability insurance).

The latest version of the complaint has the players pursing satisfaction from two new defendants, ABC Corp. and XYZ Corp. The suit describes those entities as "John Doe" companies who are unknown to the plaintiffs, but were tasked to perform background checks for the NFL and NFL players' association.

Now wouldn't The Daily Caveat like to know which companies those would be? We do know that Kroll was tasked with tracking Wright (and his stolen cash) down, for whatever that's worth.

The NFL, for its part, is also in the crosshairs, but claims that the players bear sole responsibility for their finances. The League is asking for the suit to be dismissed and the NFL players' association is taking a similar tact. Both entities contend that they player contracts state that, in any case, arbitration - not litigation - is the remedy specified in player contracts. How the league will explain away the apparent total negligence of giving its endorsement to known fraudsters is a separate issue.

Meanwhile, with most of the $185 million that Wright swindled from investors still missing, his property is being put up for auction. Wright himself was arrested by the pool at the Miami Ritz Carlton (clearly having seen the error of his ways, of course) back in May and is cooling his heels while waiting for the myriad civil, criminal claims and charges against him to come due.

Couldn't happen to a nicer guy.

-- MDT

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5/19/2006
Kirk Wright Arrested, Facing Prosecution on Fraud Charges
Kirk Wright, the head of defunct hedge fund International management Associates has been arrested in Florida in relation to a February bench warrant issued by a Georgia judge. Wright has been on the lam since it was revealed that he had bilked his investment clients, including several celebrity atheletes, out of $100 million or more.

Thanks to Peter Higgins at 1SecureAudit for the tip.

-- MDT

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4/05/2006
More on Kroll's Investigation of Fraudulent Kirk Wright Hedge Fund
It had been announced a few weeks abck that Kroll had been called in to track down Wright and the now "dissipated" assets of his former hedge fund, International Management Associates. While the agreement to hire the investigative juggernaut is still awaiting approval by the court, this Rocky Mountain News article provides some additional details regarding the ongoing case.
Kroll's on the case - Famed private eye may help find missing hedge fund millions

By James Paton
Rocky Mountain News
March 24, 2006

...Kroll Inc., whose sleuths could receive up to $450 an hour, has been asked to search for the assets of International Management Associates, an Atlanta firm, according to court documents filed Thursday. An agreement to hire the high-profile investigator awaits court approval.

Federal regulators have accused the company and its founder and Chief Executive Kirk Wright of hiding "massive" losses from investors after reeling in as much as $185 million from hundreds of people, including a few one-time Broncos, prominent doctors and others.

Nearly all of the cash has vanished, according to the lawsuit filed by the Securities and Exchange Commission. The allegations came on the heels of a complaint leveled by former Broncos Steve Atwater, Terrell Davis and Ray Crockett, and current wide receiver Rod Smith.

They sued after the hedge fund firm refused to return their money and claimed that Wright had made a big bet short-selling stock of Time Warner even though he had promised not to take on that kind of risk. Efforts to reach the players have been unsuccessful.

International Management told investors that its Taurus Fund rose 20 percent last year, while in reality the assets of the fund and other products "had been largely dissipated" by 2005, the SEC said...

...Wright, the Harvard-educated head of International Management, took money from the hedge funds and made more than $6 million in investments in several real estate ventures and bought a Jaguar, a Bentley, an Aston Martin and other cars, in addition to $600,000 in art and jewelry, SEC papers show...

...Kroll, founded by Jules Kroll and based in New York, declined to comment on the hedge fund case.
More here in the full article.

-- MDT

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3/31/2006
Kirk Wright...Hedge Fiend....and Shady Restauranteur?
The Cleveland Plain Dealer ran an excellent piece on Sunday detailing the further details from the life America's favorite on-the-lam hedge fund manager, Kirk Wright. Apparently Mr. Wright has a colorful past as a purveyor of fine chicken and waffles - and wouldn't you know it, a proper backgrond review would have revealed a variety of restaurant-related schenanigans suggesting that there might be better places to put your money than with Mr. Wright. Like a bonfire. From the Cleveland Plain-Dealer:
Investors burned as project flames out Phil the Fire's money man in hiding; ex-partner is ruined'

Cleveland Plain Dealer
Sunday, March 26, 2006

By Alison Grant

The entertainment district around Cleveland's Gund Arena and Jacobs Field looked like a sure bet in 2003 for someone wanting to open a restaurant near star-power athletes. The Cavaliers had just landed the biggest basketball talent in decades, LeBron James, and the Indians were starting to re build with a roster of young and promising baseball players. For Atlanta hedge fund manager Kirk Wright, the neighborhood's proximity to two sports venues was a beacon.

The building that housed Wright's two restaurants in succession -- Phil the Fire Downtown and The Waterhouse -- still looks primed for customers. Tables with crisp white tablecloths, dinner settings and glasses suggest the dining room closed with full intent to open the next day. But it didn't.

The Waterhouse's last day of business was in late February, about the time Wright became a national story. He disappeared from his Atlanta hedge fund office amid claims by the Securities and Exchange Commission that he fraudulently operated International Management Associates LLC and several other funds.

Wright almost totally dissipated the funds' assets -- an estimated $115 million to $185 million, the SEC said in a lawsuit. Seven current and former National Football League players and other investors also sued, claiming Wright fleeced them of tens of millions of dollars.

Besides pro athletes, Wright's business grew by focusing on affluent black doctors and other professionals. Former NFL players Terrell Davis and Steve Atwater, and current Denver Bronco Rod Smith, are among the plaintiffs in one suit against Wright.

Wright is in hiding, and his lawyer, Jacob Frenkel, says he fears for his life because of threats from two former NFL players. Frenkel said he doesn't believe Wright has confided to anyone when he intends to present himself to the court.

The 36-year-old Harvard-educated money manager had emerged on the Cleveland busi ness scene in 2003 as the charismatic financier of Phil the Fire Down town. He teamed up on the Gateway restaurant with Phil Davis, who had popularized a chicken- and-waffles combo - the first Phil the Fire - two years earlier at a location on Shaker Square.

In 2005, Wright opened a second, fancier restaurant at the same location downtown with former New England Patriots safety Willie Clay as an investor. Like its predecessor, The Waterhouse hoped to cater to fans pouring into Gateway and the athletes they came to see.

But Phil the Fire Downtown and The Waterhouse were brief and troubled enterprises. Both closed within months of their launches. And both left a trail of angry business associates in their wake.

Now, Cleveland has approved hiring a special prosecutor to look into allegations by Davis that Kirk Wright forced him out of Phil the Fire Downtown with a false claim that Davis diverted money from it to his failing restaurant on Shaker Square.

The investigation is the latest in a barrage of lawsuits, counterclaims, tax liens, judgments and finger-pointing spawned by the two shuttered eateries...

Much more here, courtesy of the Plain Dealer.

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2 Comments.
Anonymous Anonymoussaid...
It's over. He got away with it and there's not a damned thing anyone can do about it. It's all gone. There's nothing left. It's all over with.
Anonymous Anonymoussaid...
Corruption in Sustainable Community Associates Oberlin Review (April 21, 2006):

In a June 23, 2003, e-mail to Oberlin city manager Rob Dispirito, Sustainable Community Associates (SCA) president Josh Rosen extolled the virtues of "a very successful minority-owned business in Cleveland" identified as Phil the Fire. Relating SCA’s bilateral negotiations, Rosen drooled:

"They are interested in opening up a location in our building. This would become a real destination point for folks in Lorain County and be a major score for Oberlin. He asked me what programs or incentives Oberlin offers given he is looking at other locations in Lorain County. I was wondering if either the City or OCIC had a low interest loan pool or some other incentive program that can be explored. I was also curious as to what if any programs existed for minority businesses and minority business recruitment. We expect to meet with the owner sometime next week, and I think it would greatly improve Oberlin’s prospects of landing this business if we could discuss potential incentives with him."

On March 14 and March 29, 2003, Ben & Jerry’s co-founder Jerry Greenfield, Oberlin College class of ‘73, executed two $20,000 promissory notes to Phil B. Davis, Phil the Fire’s flamboyant proprietor, at prime plus 200 basis points, collateralized by an equity stake in Phil the Fire. Mr. Davis, a former deodorant salesman, failed to make a single payment on the bargain-rate loans. On October 31, 2003, the well-heeled ice cream czar and the wannabe waffle king consummated a Halloween wing-and-a-prayer loan consolidation through a $100,000 line of credit issued by Shore Bank. Mr. Davis subsequently defaulted on every facet of the original loans.

According to Cuyahoga County Court records, Phil the Fire’s tax returns, prepared by leading public accounting firm SS & G, show a loss of nearly $50,000 in 2002. In an amended July 19, 2004, brief attached to the extensive litigation spawned by Phil the Fire’s demise, Phil B. Davis declares on line #93, "Defendant never claimed that the operations of Phil the Fire on Shaker Square had yielded a profit after its first year of operations." The Ohio Department of Taxation affixed eight liens totaling $69,555.63 to Phil the Fire’s Shaker Square carcass. The Ohio Bureau of Workers Compensation weighed in with unpaid claims of $7,265.37.

Mr. Davis’ Shaker Square operation inherited the retail storefront formerly occupied by Hungarian strudel purveyor Lucy’s Sweet Surrender, a 49-year Buckeye neighborhood fixture employing a bevy of elderly, veteran strudel kneaders. On assuming the balance of Lucy’s ten-year lease, Mr. Davis seized $75,000 in specialized bakery equipment belonging to Lucy’s proprietor Michael Feigenbaum. Lucy’s never fully recovered and, according to Mr. Feigenbaum’s Hotel Bruce web posting, is "living on fumes."

On Sunday, March 26, 2006, the Cleveland Plain Dealer ran a front-page expose detailing the implosion of both the Shaker Square and downtown Phil the Fire and Waterhouse Restaurants, established with the financial backing of fugitive Atlanta hedge fund manager Kirk Wright. I, not any member of this body [Oberlin City Council], was the original source for that story.

Wanted on state and federal mail and securities fraud warrants for allegedly absconding with $185 million in investor assets, Wright targeted novice minority investors, particularly professional athletes with significant discretionary income. Equipped, according to the New York Post, with "a materialistic streak that would make Madonna blush," Wright’s illicitly acquired auto collection included a Bentley, a Jaguar, an Aston Martin, a BMW and a Lamborghini. A March 9, 2006, Wall Street Journal article reported Mr. Wright’s financial seductions occurred in "suites he rented at Atlanta Falcon football games." Since February 2002, SCA’s financial patron, Home Depot co-founder Arthur Blank, has owned the Atlanta Falcons. According to Phil B. Davis’ Cuyahoga County court filings, Davis "met twice with Wright in Plaintiff’s Atlanta office."

In a short, tumultuous five-month life-span, Phil the Fire’s illiquid downtown Cleveland gravy train racked up well in excess of a million dollars in unpaid debts and forfeitures — including over $15,000 in Ohio workers compensation liens — was on a C.O.D. basis with vendors and, according to Phil Davis’ July 28, 2004, court filings, had a chronic negative cash flow. Channel 19 reporter Scott Taylor ran an investigative piece broadcast March 14, 2004, on Phil the Fire Gateway’s imminent meltdown. On March 23, 2004, the IRS slapped a $226,259 tax lien on Phil the Fire for failure to pay federal withholding taxes. On April 15, 2004, Phil the Fire employees picketed outside the swank downtown eatery to protest their untendered paychecks. Although Phil Davis’ initial capital contribution to the Gateway Phil the Fire restaurant was a nominal $100, as set forth in the operating agreement, Mr. Davis retained a 60% ownership stake. On March 31, 2004, as the downtown Phil the Fire hemorrhaged cash and the chickens came home to roost, Mr. Davis borrowed $20,000, via a promissory note, from Phil the Fire’s talented chef, Alexander Daniels. Despite receiving $50,000 from Mr. Wright on April 26, 2004, in an impetuous, global out-of-court settlement, Mr. Davis defaulted on the bulk ($15,000) of Mr. Daniels’ unsecured loan and a contracted $11,000 culinary consultant’s fee.

SCA’s failure to properly vet potential vendors is a classic example of the inevitable pitfalls of delegating substantial operational control of a major development project to irresponsible, inept neophytes. This is the Rubicon where the insufficient rubber check meets the incandescent yellow brick road. Last time I inquired, despite legions of tree-huggers, Oberlin wasn’t blessed with a biodegradable bond rating. SCA’s profligate, pedigreed opportunists treat Oberlin’s municipal reserves like Paris Hilton’s trust fund. Since March 25, 2005, these insufferable mendicants have squandered over $154,000 in HUD EDI Special Projects Funds — in addition to cannibalizing the city’s legal budget to the tune of $67,300 and inflicting economic development costs of $8,800 — on a poorly designed, fiscally untenable, perennially altered boondoggle that has yet to be formally submitted to the city planning board. This convoluted "reverse brain drain" Wrong Way Corrigan albatross deserves rapid embalmment, a cryogenic freeze or serious Freudian analysis.

-Mark Chesler
Oberlin, OH

http://ouch.blog-city.com/sustainable_community_associates_stone_soup_1.htm
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3/28/2006
More on Fugitive Hedge "Fiend" Kirk Wright
Leave it to the New York Post to come up with something like "hedge fiend." But the shoe apparently fits for Kirk Wright, formerly of supposed hedge fund, International Management Associates, and late of the lam. Wright skipped town after it became clear to many of his clients, which include several prominent National Football League players, that something was amiss with Interntaional Management's "management" of their money. Subsequently investigative giany, Kroll was brought it to help track the $100 million plus is missing assets and Wright himself. The New York Post has further details on the continuing story, with a particular Postian emphasis on the lavis lifestyle Wright made for himself at his client's expense.

-- MDT

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Anonymous Anonymoussaid...
"hedge fiend" as applied to Kirk Wright is actually a complimentary reference, as compared to what the man really is, whose true description would probably be censored on this blog.
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2/28/2006
SEC Files Fraud Suit Against Hedge Fund that Catered to NFL Players, Among Others
A warrant has been issued for the arrest of Kirk Wright, founder of International Management, an Atlanta-based hedge fund that counted among it's clientele several National Football League players. The SEC has filed a lawsuit against Wright and his company in relation to fraudlent financial statements indicating that the fund had some $185 million in assets with Ameritrade. The SEC subsequently confirmed that International Management had less than $500,000 in it's Ameritrade account.

Doesn't quite sound like a book-keeping error does it?

Read more here.

And for links to several additional articles, check out the blog maintained by Connecticut-based Toomre Capital Markets.

-- MDT

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