Utahns among Texans' investors

Provident is being probed in $485 million fraud

Published: Friday, July 10, 2009 10:45 p.m. MDT
 |  E-MAIL | PRINT | FONT + - 

Don Latimer worked 40 years as a marketing executive and businessman, but now, much of his retirement savings could be gone.

"You work hard for that kind of money," the 79-year-old Springville man said.

Latimer and his wife are among several Utahns and a major local company that are among those who invested money in a Texas-based company that the federal government is investigating in connection with a nearly half-billion-dollar fraud scheme.

The Securities and Exchange Commission this week obtained an emergency asset freeze in a $485 million offering fraud and Ponzi scheme orchestrated by three Dallas businessmen through a company they owned and controlled, Provident Royalties LLC, the SEC said in a news release.

The agency alleges that Provident made a series of fraudulent securities offerings involving oil and gas assets through 21 affiliated entities to more than 7,700 investors throughout the United States from at least June 2006 through January 2009. The company chiefly solicited retail broker-dealers to find investors, with those retail broker-dealers selling Provident stock to investors nationwide, the release said.

In June, prior to the commission action, Provident filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy reorganization in Dallas.

Story continues below

Sinclair Oil & Gas Co., an affiliate of Sinclair Oil Corp., headquartered in Salt Lake City, is the largest creditor in the case — listed in court documents as being owed more than $150 million.

The Latimers invested more than $250,000 in the company through their individual retirement accounts. He told the Deseret News that he was dismayed by the recent revelations surrounding the company.

"I am extremely upset this happened because we investigated the company and from all indications they had money enough to … sell their leases," he said.

"We're hoping it will still work out and that we won't lose everything (we invested)," Latimer said.

Lyle Warner of Sandy said he also was heavily invested in Provident and was taken aback when he found out about the fraud allegations leveled by the SEC.

"It scares the hell out of me," he said. "I got a half-million dollars in them."

According to the SEC's complaint filed in U.S. District Court for the Northern District of Texas, Provident falsely promised yearly returns of up to 18 percent and misrepresented to investors that 85 percent of the funds raised through the offerings would be used to purchase interests in oil and gas real estate, leases, mineral rights, and interests, exploration and development.

Recent comments

Please unzip so you can see daylight! I can't believe what I read....

Dear Howard | July 21, 2009 at 6:33 p.m.

For your information, Sinclair Oil does not buy oil from either...

To Utah Rose | July 17, 2009 at 3:19 p.m.

No one DESERVES to lose their money, especially their retirement....

Anonymous | July 16, 2009 at 10:22 a.m.

previousnext

Latest comments

Couple of things to consider - 1) National debt is about tripled since BO...

Thanks for the sermons, y'all.

If you look at BYU losses, they share one aspect, that is that the teams that...

can't be more wrong. Utah 31 BYU 17

I've been in that cave and I've been in the Birth Canal section of the cave....

Tiger Woods was unconscious

Hello Tiger Woods, I am relieved to know that you are doing well and on to a...

I am laughing so hard right now from looking at the picture of the BYU Fan...

Affluence abounds in Utah

if you figure an annual health care cost of $14,244 per family (towers perrin...

Letters: Free our captive children

Dude, seriously, how do you do it? I can't get the DN to publish MOST of my...

Utes to get tested by Illinois

I have know Marshall Henderson (G) since he was in elementary school. He and...

Advertisements