Georgia Republican apologizes for $140M Ponzi scheme as judge freezes assets
Brant Frost IV said in a statement issued through his lawyers that he 'would like to apologize personally to those I have harmed, but I am under restrictions which prevent me from doing so.'
'I take full responsibility for my actions and am resolved to spend the rest of my life trying to repay as much as I can to the many people I misled and let down," Frost said in the statement. 'I will be cooperating with the receiver and federal authorities and ask that everyone allow the receiver time to sort things out and do his best to repair the damage I created.'
The U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission said in a civil lawsuit filed Thursday that First Liberty Building and Loan, controlled by Frost, lied to investors about its business of making high-interest loans to companies. Instead, investigators said that its loans mostly went sour and that it then raised more money to repay earlier investors, while Frost skimmed millions for himself and his family.
The firm's collapse rocked the religious and political networks that fed cash to the business, based in suburban Newnan, southwest of Atlanta. It also could have ramifications in state Republican politics, cutting off funding to the far-right candidates that Frost and his family have favored. Investigators said Frost spent $570,000 from investor funds on political contributions.
U.S. District Judge Michael Brown on Friday froze Frost's personal and corporate assets, banned him from the securities business, and ordered him to pay back ill-gotten gains with interest and fines. The SEC requested the order and Frost agreed to it without admitting or denying any factual allegations.
The judge also appointed financial consultant S. Gregory Hays as receiver. He will take control of assets, examine the books and try to claw back money. Everyone else is barred, for now, from suing Frost or First Liberty.
The SEC said the business had only $2.67 million in cash as of May 30. With 300 investors out $140 million, that means the average investor put in nearly $500,000.
Frost is alleged to have taken $17 million for himself, his family and affiliated companies, spending $573,000 on political donations to Republicans, $160,000 on jewelry, $20,800 on a Patek Philippe watch and $335,000 to buy gold coins. Frost is also accused of spending $320,000 to rent a vacation home over multiple years in Kennebunkport, Maine, the town where the family of late president George H. W. Bush spent summers.
The SEC said in court papers that Frost kept writing checks and soliciting new investors even after he made 'misrepresentations' when investigators first met with Frost on May 15. Court papers included a June 16 email asking investors to put between $100,000 and $500,000 into a loan to First Liberty itself, claiming the company was developing an AI software system to help banks and credit unions complete loan applications quickly. The company went out of business 11 days later on June 27.
Federal prosecutors have declined to say whether they will seek criminal charges. Sometimes, both an SEC civil case and a federal criminal case are filed over investment frauds. The business is also being investigated by the Georgia secretary of state for possible violations of securities law.
First Liberty said it made loans to companies that needed cash while they waited for more conventional loans from the U.S. Small Business Administration. It charged high rates of interest — 18% on most loans, prosecutors said. First Liberty promised investors equally high rates of return — 8% to 16%. The company advertised heavily to find new investors over the past year, branching out from the original 'family and friends' approach.
Frost has been an important player in Georgia politics since 1988, when he coordinated televangelist Pat Robertson's Republican presidential bid in the state. His son, Brant Frost V, is chairman of the Coweta County Republican Party and former second vice-chair of the state Republican Party. Daughter Katie Frost is the Republican chairman of the 3rd Congressional District, which includes Coweta County and other areas southwest of Atlanta.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles
Yahoo
31 minutes ago
- Yahoo
911 call released in theft of Beyoncé's unreleased music
For the first time, we're hearing the moment Beyoncé's choreographer made the call for help after he discovered someone had broken into his SUV and stolen his laptop and hard drives containing the Grammy-winning singer's unreleased music. On Monday night, Channel 2's Michael Seiden obtained the 911 call placed by Christopher Grant after he discovered someone had broken into his Jeep Wagoneer at 99 Krog Street. 'Someone broke into my car,' Grant told the dispatcher. 'I was parked in a garage while I went to a restaurant. But they stole, like my computers and everything, but it has the tracker on it.' Grant told the dispatcher that he's using the 'Find My' app to track his stolen devices. 'They have my computers, and it's really, really important information in there,' he said. ' I work with someone who's like of a high status, and I really need the, um, my computer and everything.' [DOWNLOAD: Free WSB-TV News app for alerts as news breaks] Police said they are following up on multiple leads. Investigators tracked the items to an undisclosed location where the headphones were pinging, according to the incident report. 'I conducted a suspicious stop in the area, due to the information that was relayed to me,' an officer wrote in the report. 'There were several cars in the area also that the AirPods were pinging to in that area also. After further investigation, a silver (redacted), which had traveled into zone 5 was moving at the same time as the tracking on the AirPods.' Seiden learned the name of the person that police have questioned, but Channel 2 will not name them until they are named a suspect or charged with a crime. You can hear the call here. TRENDING STORIES: Gwinnett teen forced to cut himself by online predator as nationwide threat grows Good Samaritan jumps in to help officer wrangle gunman to the ground along Peachtree Street Unreleased Beyoncé music stolen in Atlanta during Cowboy Carter tour [SIGN UP: WSB-TV Daily Headlines Newsletter]
Yahoo
32 minutes ago
- Yahoo
We're about to find out who's really paying for tariffs
Earnings season gets going in earnest this week, giving investors a fuller picture of how tariffs are impacting the bottom line—and specifically how much of the cost is being eaten by companies and how much is being passed on to consumers. So far, tariffs have yet to fuel a surge in inflation, but their effects are expected to show up more later this year. Earnings for the second quarter will heat up this week, with more at stake than usual as they represent a fuller picture on how tariffs are actually affecting businesses and consumers. The top U.S. banks will report, starting with JPMorgan Chase, Citigroup and Wells Fargo on Tuesday. In the tech sector, streaming leader Netflix and chip giant TSMC report on Thursday. Among industrials, results from Alcoa, GE Aerospace, and 3M are also due this week. The consensus estimate on Wall Street is that earnings from S&P 500 companies grew just 4% in the second quarter from a year ago, the slowest pace since 2023 and down from first-quarter growth of 13%. That comes as President Donald Trump's trade war has yet to fuel a big inflation inflation spike, though tariffs are expected to show up more in economic data later this year. The consumer price index will come out on Tuesday, and analysts expect a 0.3% monthly increase for June, up from May's 0.1% pace. The producer price index is due on Wednesday, and is also expected to show acceleration to 0.2% from 0.1%. The uptick could be a due to companies running out of inventories that were stockpiled ahead of the tariffs, forcing them to incorporate more of those costs in the price of their goods. Capital Economics said last week that Wall Street doesn't see Corporate America shouldering much of the future tariff burden, and exporters don't appear to be cutting their prices aggressively to offset the tariffs. A survey published last week by KPMG found more than 80% of companies plan to hike prices in the next six months, and 73% said they have already passed on up to half of tariff-related costs to consumers. But that was still not enough to preserve earnings, as 57% of firms said their gross margins are falling. Meanwhile, economists at Goldman Sachs expect companies will pass on 70% of tariff costs to consumers via higher prices, according to a note earlier this month. If that pans out, it would be a heavier blow than some earlier forecasts. Chris Harvey, Wells Fargo Securities' head of equity strategy, said if tariffs settle around 10%, then a third of the cost could be eaten by the importer, a third by companies, and a third by consumers. 'That's not a big impact,' he told CNBC on May 30. That 10% target looks increasingly optimistic, as Trump has continued to push for aggressive rates. Goldman Sachs expects the effective rate to eventually settle around 17%. But companies that pass on tariff costs also risk a backlash. The KPMG survey said 34% of companies said customer pushback is a challenge, and 45% said sales are already beginning to dip. And there's one consumer in particular that companies need to avoid annoying: Trump. In May, he warned Walmart not to hike prices after the retail giant said on an earnings call that prices could go up on a wide array of products. 'Walmart should STOP trying to blame Tariffs as the reason for raising prices throughout the chain,' Trump posted on Truth Social. 'Walmart made BILLIONS OF DOLLARS last year, far more than expected. Between Walmart and China they should, as is said, 'EAT THE TARIFFS,' and not charge valued customers ANYTHING. I'll be watching, and so will your customers!!!' Capital Economics said last week it suspects U.S. firms will eat more costs, 'if only in the short run for political reasons.' Either way, the upcoming earnings reports will reveal more definitively who is eating how much. More pain on the consumer side could fuel inflation and prevent the Federal Reserve from lowering rates, weighing on the stock market. More pain on the corporate side will erode earnings—and also weigh on the stock market. This story was originally featured on Error in retrieving data Sign in to access your portfolio Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data
Yahoo
35 minutes ago
- Yahoo
Pentagon to start using Grok as part of a $200 million deal with Musk's xAI
The Pentagon has signed on to use Grok, the AI chatbot built by Elon Musk's company xAI, as part of a new $200 million agreement that opens the door for its deployment across the federal government, the company announced Monday. The announcement comes amid Musk's public breakup with President Trump and days after Grok generated antisemitic responses and praised Adolf Hitler. The rollout is part of "Grok for Government," a newly launched suite of tools designed for use by federal agencies, local governments, and national security operations. xAI said its products, including its latest Grok 4 model, will now be available for purchase through the General Services Administration (GSA), allowing any federal office to adopt the technology. The move aligns with the Trump administration's push for more aggressive adoption of artificial intelligence across the government. Since taking office in January, Mr. Trump has championed AI as a pillar of national security and innovation. Musk himself briefly served in the Trump administration earlier this year, overseeing the White House's Department of Government Efficiency, or DOGE, before stepping down in May amid a public break with Mr. Trump over his sweeping tax and spending bill. Musk has since emerged as a sharp critic of that legislation, even floating the idea of launching a third political party. Despite the rift, xAI has continued to expand its government work. The new offering includes custom national security tools, AI-powered science and health applications, and cleared engineering support for classified environments. The announcement comes just days after Grok generated antisemitic responses to user prompts and referenced Hitler as part of what the company called an effort to make the model "less politically correct." Hours later, Musk wrote in a post on X that "Grok was too compliant to user prompts. Too eager to please and be manipulated, essentially. That is being addressed." The posts were later deleted and xAI said it "quickly" patched the issue. One day later, xAI launched an upgraded version of Grok it described as a major leap forward. Musk also announced that Grok would be used in Teslas. But the latest version was not without kinks, too: Grok checked with Musk's views before answering a question, according to The Associated Press. Grok was introduced in late 2023 as a more unfiltered alternative to other chatbots like ChatGPT, and is already integrated into Musk's social media platform X, formerly known as Twitter. "America is the world leader in AI," xAI said in Monday's post announcing the Pentagon deal. "We're excited to contribute back to the country that made xAI uniquely possible here." Sen. Lindsey Graham says "a turning point, regarding Russia's invasion of Ukraine, is coming" Trump pushes senators to make $9.4 trillion in spending cuts Student's unique talent that's for the birds