How to Avoid Gold Ripoffs: Former Fraudster Gives Tips
As gold prices skyrocket, so do precious metal ripoffs, experts say.
Oct. 28, 2011 — -- As the price of gold has skyrocketed over the past five years, so have the number of high-pressure salesmen luring thousands of consumers into shady precious metal investments.
"We're seeing all sorts of investment scams proliferate given the down economy. People are worried about their nest egg," said David Vladeck, the director of the Federal Trade Commission's Bureau of Consumer Protection. "And these kinds of commodities, precious metals, are being touted as a safe alternative to other investments, and like any other investment they have risks and in the case of these commodities, the risk is often very high."
For example, Vladeck said that the FTC has received numerous complaints about schemes in which sellers promise that if consumers invest in gold or other precious metals, they'll see quick returns but may gloss over the exorbitant fees the sellers will collect from unsuspecting investors.
"Their sales pitch is: this is a safe investment, you'll make a lot of money quickly, there's very little risk, and it's a good way to double or triple your money in a short time," said Vladeck. "[But] they don't make money by investing in gold. They make money by charging very high commissions, very high interest rates. And so they're panning for gold in your wallet, not trying to get the profits that they claim that you can get purchasing gold or other precious metals."
In another scheme, Vladeck said sellers may pitch investments in gold coins of historical significance as opposed to bullion, sometimes purposefully overinflating the investment value to make the sale. Vladeck said that the historical significance is not as important as the gold's basic "melt value".
"That's generally a fraction of what the purchase price is," he said.
Former fraudster Jamie Campany used to own and run a precious metals telemarketing operation that bilked nearly $30 million from 1,400 investors in a Ponzi-like scheme. Now facing up to 25 years in federal prison, he decided to come clean to ABC News' Chief Investigative Correspondent Brian Ross about how brokers for his company played on his victims' economic fears in an interview that aired Thursday on "Good Morning America".
Campany is scheduled to be sentenced in mid-November, but for now he said he regrets the pain he caused his victims and he wants to atone for his crimes by educating consumers on how to avoid people like him.