Related To Story MARCUS SCHRENKER CASE |
Schrenker Taken From Hospital To Jail
Indiana Financial Manager On Special Watch
POSTED: 7:14 am EST January 19,
2009
UPDATED: 8:32 am EST January 19,
2009
PENSACOLA, Fla. -- An Indianapolis-area financial manager suspected of faking his death in a plane crash has been transferred from a hospital to a county jail in Florida.Scott Wilson, deputy U.S. marshal with the Northern District of Florida, said Marcus Schrenker, 38, was taken from a Tallahassee hospital to the Escambia County Jail in Pensacola on Sunday.A sheriff's office spokesman said Schrenker was placed on special watch.
Authorities believe Schrenker intentionally crashed his plane last week and made a phony distress call in an attempt to stage his death. He was facing a divorce and financial fraud allegations.Investigators said Schrenker parachuted out over Alabama and sped away on a motorcycle. He was arrested at a Florida Panhandle campground, where he had slashed his wrists.Schrenker may not return to Indiana to face charges here until at least April.Because he is already in Florida, Indiana officials said Schrenker will be tried there first before being brought back to Indiana to face felony fraud charges alleging that he acted as a financial adviser after his state license expired on Dec. 31.Authorities in Indiana had been investigating Schrenker's businesses on allegations that he sold clients annuities and charged them exorbitant fees they weren't aware they would face.State Insurance Commissioner Jim Atterholt said Schrenker would close the investors out of one annuity and move them to another while charging them especially high "surrender charges" -- in one case costing a retired couple $135,000 of their original $900,000 investment.On Dec. 31, officers searched Schrenker's home, seizing his family's passports, $6,036 in cash, the title to a Lexus and deposit slips for bank accounts in his wife Michelle Schrenker's name. They also took six computers and nine large plastic tubs filled with various financial and corporate documents.Regulators In 3 States Were Warned About Schrenker For YearsSchrenker handled lucrative accounts in several states for years despite repeated accusations that he was bilking investors.Regulators in at least three states were warned about Marcus Schrenker, in one case as early as 2002.But it took nearly seven years -- and suspected losses reaching into the millions of dollars -- before Indiana launched a criminal investigation of Schrenker, whose high-flying lifestyle included planes, luxury cars and a 10,000-square-foot home. Officials say he deliberately switched his licensing from state to state to create confusion about who should have been watching him.Schrenker's wife filed for divorce Dec. 30, a day before Indiana police served a search warrant on his home and office, seizing computers, tubs full of financial documents and evidence of recent document shredding. This was within days of his losing a $533,000 judgment to an insurance company.With his personal and financial woes mounting, Schrenker bailed out of his plane Jan. 11 near Birmingham, Ala., and sped away on a motorcycle. The plane, left on autopilot, continued for 200 miles before crashing near homes in the Florida panhandle.Last Tuesday, the 38-year-old financier was arrested at a Florida campground where a suspected suicide attempt left him hospitalized with a self-inflicted gash to a wrist. He was released Sunday from a Tallahassee hospital.Schrenker was being held Monday in the Escambia County Jail, though a court date had not been set. Federal court records did not list an attorney for him.Felony charges from his financial dealings are pending in Indiana, where authorities have frozen Schrenker's assets and those of his wife. He also faces nearly $9 million in potential and actual judgments and legal claims, some filed in other states, on complaints that he failed to refund unwarranted commissions and charged exorbitant fees."That guy's house of cards is falling rapidly," said Charles Kinney, an airline pilot from Atlanta who has made formal complaints that Schrenker scammed up to $135,000 from his parents' retirement fund. "We knew this day was coming."Authorities in Indiana and Georgia have received at least nine complaints since 2002 against Schrenker and his companies -- Icon Wealth Management, Heritage Wealth Management and Heritage Insurance Services. A financial industry regulatory group says there were two other complaints filed in 2001.Georgia's insurance department worked with five people who filed complaints over Schrenker's handling of annuities -- including charging exorbitant "surrender fees" the investors didn't know they'd face -- starting in late 2006, said spokesman Glenn Allen. The department eventually obtained $2.5 million in refunds for the investors, working with insurance companies that issued those annuities.By the time Georgia officials notified Indiana about Schrenker in April 2007, he had already withdrawn his Georgia insurance license. A group of relatives and friends led by Kinney next raised concerns in Kentucky, where Schrenker withdrew his license in December 2007.Indiana Insurance Commissioner Jim Atterholt said Schrenker, who had obtained an Indiana license in the interim, created confusion by pulling the out-of-state licenses."Some of the regulators had difficulty getting their arms around him because he was switching his license," said Atterholt, whose office is investigating complaints made by Kinney and several other investors.Financial crimes often seem to languish for a host of reasons, said Jeff Modisett, a former Indiana attorney general who specializes in white collar defense and investigations for St. Louis-based law firm Bryan Cave LLP.The evidence often doesn't immediately rise to the surface, as with violent crimes. Instead, lengthy, detailed investigations are usually needed, and those can be delayed by jurisdiction dispute, manpower shortages or other issues, Modisett said."Unless you have a squeaky wheel, it's not unusual for these types of crimes to take a long period to be fully investigated," he said.That's frustrating for people like former Indiana securities commissioner Mark E. Maddox, who filed a complaint with state regulators in 2002 alleging Schrenker misappropriated about $700,000 from one client. Maddox, an attorney who represented that investor, said Schrenker misappropriated the money with steep penalties and new commissions for himself by improperly switching the man's money between mutual funds.That investor eventually recovered about $500,000, but no official action was taken against Schrenker. Maddox raised concerns about Schrenker again in September after learning he had opened a new business, "but we just couldn't get anybody to do anything about it."Current securities commissioner Chris Naylor said state investigators found no evidence "to warrant criminal or civil actions" in the 2002 case.Naylor said Maddox faxed information in September to his office alleging that Schrenker did not have a securities license to run his new business but that a review showed Schrenker had a valid securities license at that time.In the summer of 2007, frustrated by their inability to get criminal charges filed against Schrenker in Georgia or Kentucky, Kinney and the other investors in his group contacted Indiana's Department of Insurance, where he said a law clerk finally took their complaints seriously.Lisa Harpenau, now an attorney with the department, said the case now has eight counts alleging misappropriation, forgery and unwarranted annuities fees, and more victims have come forward since Schrenker's arrest. The department plans a hearing Thursday on whether to permanently revoke Schrenker's Indiana insurance license.And the state's securities division is investigating a complaint it received in December 2008 that led to the current Indiana charges against Schrenker.Jack Stone, who moved into an Indianapolis home near Schrenker after winning an $8 million Indiana lottery prize in 1997, will be watching. He said he lost $150,000 of his winnings through fees from unauthorized mutual fund changes but got two-thirds back from his smooth-talking neighbor after hiring an attorney."I tell you, the guy's a con," Stone said. "He's a nice guy if things go his way, but he's a con."
Previous Stories:
- January 15, 2009: Schrenker Won't Be Back In Indiana Until April
- January 14, 2009: Feds Charge Schrenker With Faking Distress, Wrecking Plane
- January 14, 2009: Wife Denies Involvement In Pilot Evasion
- January 14, 2009: Police: Fugitive Businessman Uttered 'Die' When Found
- January 13, 2009: Friend Details Fugitive Businessman's Struggles
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