
Miami man pleads guilty to stealing millions from Venezuelans for wedding at French chateau
Efrain Betancourt Jr., a dual citizen of the United States and Colombia, obtained about $66 million from more than 600 Venezuelan-American investors in the Miami area that he churned through his payday loan company, Sky Group USA, over a five-year period, according to a plea agreement filed last week.
Of that total, his company made about $12.2 million in consumer loans, but he and other employees spent the rest of the investors' money on operating costs, sales agent commissions and personal expenses, according to a factual statement filed with the plea agreement.
Betancourt, 36, who was born in Venezuela and grew up in the Miami area, pocketed more than $6.5 million that he spent on his French Riviera wedding as well Caribbean vacations, expensive jewelry, a private plane and a luxury high-rise condo on Biscayne Boulevard, the statement said.
Betancourt, the former Sky Group CEO, will likely be ordered by U.S. District Judge Darrin Gayles to pay a forfeiture of $8.3 million as part of his sentencing, a higher loss figure that includes additional credit card expenses, according to federal prosecutor Roger Cruz. He plans to dismiss six wire fraud counts in Betancourt's indictment at his sentencing.
Betancourt has been in federal custody since his arrest last November by FBI agents at Miami International Airport, after Cruz argued he was a flight risk to Latin America or the United Arab Emirates.
Betancourt, represented by defense attorney Sam Rabin, cut his plea deal in Miami federal court last Wednesday — about three years after he and his company reached a civil settlement with the Securities and Exchange Commission. SEC lawyers accused him of using his payday loan business to swindle investors, and a federal judge ordered him and his company to pay back more than $39 million.
'Ponzi scheme'
But since the settlement agreement that he and Sky Group struck with the SEC, Bentacourt's investors have received nothing for their losses, according to authorities.
Both the SEC and federal prosecutors accused Betancourt of operating a 'Ponzi scheme' that began in 2016 by selling promissory notes to investors with promises of double- and triple-digit annual returns. Some investors were paid back in part, but most were not, leaving a huge debt after Sky Group imploded during the COVID-19 pandemic in 2020.
Betancourt's scheme collapsed when countless borrowers defaulted on their payday loans during the pandemic. His company, Sky Group, incurred a severe cash-flow problem and was unable to make interest payments on investors' promissory notes.
'Never paid a dime'
A Miami lawyer representing three investors who won civil arbitration cases against Betancourt said he brought the investment scheme to the SEC's attention five years ago.
'He never paid a dime to resolve the claims,' attorney Richard Diaz told the Miami Herald. 'My clients and I are looking forward to personally attending his sentencing to express to the judge the gravity of his greed and fraud, which economically devastated, not just hurt, many families.'
Cruz, the prosecutor, wrote in court papers that 'millions of dollars in fraudulent proceeds directly obtained by this defendant have disappeared, were funneled by him to his wife and other family members, and have otherwise been transferred oversees.'
Buys luxury condo at Epic: feds
According to the SEC, Betancourt misappropriated investors' money for his personal use, including costs associated with buying a $1.5 million condominium at Epic Residences on Biscayne Boulevard and for service on his personal Piper airplane.
Betancourt was also accused of transferring at least another $3.6 million to friends and family, including his ex-wife, Angelica Betancourt, and to EEB Capital Group LLC for 'no apparent legitimate business purpose,' SEC officials said.
That company's bank accounts were controlled by Efrain Betancourt and his current wife, Leidy Badillo.
In a SEC settlement in 2022, EEB Capital agreed to pay $2.2 million toward the judgment against Sky Group and Efrain Betancourt.
Angelica Betancourt argued that she only earned an annual salary of $60,000 from the payday loan company, according to court records. But in 2022, she also agreed to pay about $1.1 million toward the judgment against Sky Group and her ex-husband..
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Business Insider
29 minutes ago
- Business Insider
A made-in-America apparel brand describes how Walmart helped it produce a more affordable US flag T-shirt
Check the tags on much of the American flag-themed apparel being worn this Independence Day weekend, and the country of origin may be somewhere other than the US. Making stuff overseas is typically cheaper, after all. That doesn't sit well with Bayard Winthrop, the founder of California-based apparel brand American Giant. "We can think of a lot of other mainstream brands or retailers that certainly don't abide by that for Fourth of July — or for any other thing," he told Business Insider. Bayard founded American Giant in 2011 with the mission of revitalizing US textile manufacturing, starting with what it dubbed "the greatest hoodie ever made." In recent years, the company celebrated Independence Day with a version of the iconic American flag T-shirt made entirely in the US. But Bayard said it was a challenge to achieve the kinds of production efficiencies that can lower costs. American factories can produce high-quality clothing, but it often comes at a premium price. For example, American Giant's website lists this year's US flag tee for $65. Bayard said the reasons for this include finer yarns and a more labor-intensive sewing process. "Those products are premium," he said. "They're optimized for top, top quality." About two years ago, Walmart approached him with a challenge to produce a made-in-US T-shirt at the retail giant's famously low prices. This was part of what is now a $350 billion commitment to invest in sourcing products that support American jobs until 2030. At the time, Bayard thought that the lowest possible price for an American-made shirt would have been $20 and that it would be "incredibly difficult" to make. The companies were able to make a shirt that is now available online and across roughly 1,500 Walmart stores for $12.98 — one-fifth of the price of the top-of-the-line version. American Giant developed a design that lowered costs by using a slightly thicker yarn and a tubular-knit pattern, rather than the side-sewn style of his main shirts, Bayard said. "But the vastly more important part of the costing is when you have Walmart and the volumes that they put there — which are huge — and staying committed to the program for an extended period of time," he said. Bayard stands firmly behind the quality of the less expensive Walmart product. "We think we're putting great quality stuff into the market, and we're offering these different entry points for customers," he said. Bayard said the first design for Walmart, released last year, exceeded sales expectations and was expanded to include four styles this year. The episode highlights one of the major hurdles to bringing back US manufacturing more broadly. The costs of starting (or restarting) industrial production can be both daunting and inefficient. (Look no further than the complicated and expensive process one team had to go through to make a grill scrubber entirely in the US.) If the effort to revive US manufacturing is going to succeed, Bayard said that small and large companies need to work together with sustained, long-term commitments that help the supply chain develop and become more cost-effective. "Poking at the problem with your 500-unit volumes" is "admirable," he said. "But if you actually want to make an impact, get serious about it and figure out ways to join forces with somebody like Walmart that's actually trying to do something good."


Politico
32 minutes ago
- Politico
Stars, stripes and side-eye
Send tips | Subscribe here | Email Canada Playbook | Follow Politico Canada Thanks for reading Canada Playbook. It's Friday! Happy Fourth to our American readers. In today's edition: → PETE HOEKSTRA throws his first July 4 bash in Ottawa. → Ottawa holds firm as deadlines shift — and Playbook gets the inside scoop. → Who killed the campaign? Conservatives circle the BBQ grill. Trade war RED, WHITE AND YOU — Free beer or free trade? That's the question for Ottawa's political class. The bubble has been keeping quiet about U.S. Ambassador PETE HOEKSTRA's July 4th party. It's his first bash in Canada, and the Ottawa fishbowl event is one of the biggest of the year. 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Newsweek
33 minutes ago
- Newsweek
Child Tax Credit Warning: Millions of Children Could Be Ineligible
Based on facts, either observed and verified firsthand by the reporter, or reported and verified from knowledgeable sources. Almost one in three children could be left out of the boosted Child Tax Credit (CTC) approved by Congress this week, researchers said. Why It Matters The CTC is a federal tax benefit aimed at helping families offset the cost of raising children. As of 2024, the credit provides up to $2,000 per qualifying child under the age of 17, with up to $1,600 of that amount refundable. This means eligible families can receive a portion of the credit as a refund even if they owe no federal income tax. Changes to the CTC are embedded in the Republican One Big Beautiful Bill Act. The sprawling megabill, the bedrock of President Donald Trump's fiscal agenda, passed its final vote in the House on Thursday. Beginning in the 2025 tax year, the CTC will rise from its current $2,000 to $2,200 until the legislation expires in 2028—providing a welcome, albeit temporary, boost for many American families once the president signs it into law. But low-income parents and their children are unlikely to benefit, researchers at Columbia University told Newsweek. A stock photo of children walking toward a school entrance. A stock photo of children walking toward a school entrance. GETTY What To Know Megan A. Curran, the policy director at the Center on Poverty and Social Policy at Columbia University, told Newsweek that 28.3 percent, or 19.3 million children, would not see this increase and would "be left out" of the full $2,200 because "they are in families that do not earn enough to qualify for the new, higher minimum income threshold requirements." Under the new policy, a two-adult, two-child family would need to earn $41,500 to get the full $2,200 credit, Curran said. Under the current policy, a family of that size needs annual earnings of $36,000 to receive the full $2,000. "It will also ultimately be much worse for these children because not only do they see no gains from the CTC in this bill, but they are the same children who are now at high risk of losing their health care and food assistance," such as Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program benefits and school meals, Curran said. While the expanded CTC approved in the bill is higher, Curran said that even families who receive the full temporary increase are "unlikely to feel it in reality because the CTC has lost value since it was established as $2,000 back at the end of 2017." "In order to keep up with inflation, the CTC would need to be about $2,500 today in order to maintain its real value from 2017/2018," she said. "Because it is only raised now to $2,200, this means that what is being passed is actually less generous than what was originally passed in the Tax Cuts and Jobs Act as it is smaller in real terms than the original $2,000 credit was then." What Happens Next The CTC boost is temporary and expires in 2028 unless lawmakers extend it. At that point, it would drop back down to $2,000 and be indexed to inflation for subsequent years.