How Whistleblowers Can Report Ponzi Schemes and Receive SEC Whistleblower Awards
Fraudsters beware: The days of running decades-long Ponzi schemes are over. Whistleblowers can now report your frauds and scams to the SEC and potentially earn multimillion-dollar awards for their efforts.
Since 2011, the SEC has issued more than $2.2 billion in awards to whistleblowers who provided original information to the SEC about violations of federal securities laws, including reports of Ponzi schemes, scams, and other frauds. Under the SEC Whistleblower Program, the SEC awards eligible whistleblowers when their tips lead to successful enforcement actions with monetary sanctions in excess of $1 million. A whistleblower may receive an award of between 10% and 30% of the total monetary sanctions collected. If represented by counsel, a whistleblower may submit a tip anonymously to the SEC.
Luckily for whistleblowers (and unfortunately for Bernie Madoff wannabes), there has never been a better time for whistleblowers to report Ponzi schemes to the SEC and receive whistleblower awards. As explained below, Ponzi schemes are near all-time highs and the SEC is focused on rooting out these frauds. Whistleblowers can identify these Ponzi schemes based on their common characteristics and “red flags” for fraud. Once identified, whistleblowers should take the appropriate steps to report the Ponzi schemes in accordance with the rules of the SEC Whistleblower Program to ensure their eligibility for an award and to maximize their award percentage.
Whistleblowers Needed: Ponzi Schemes Are Near All-Time Highs
In 2020, CNBC reported that Ponzi schemes hit their highest level in a decade, with authorities uncovering 60 alleged Ponzi schemes with a total of $3.25 billion in investor funds. This level of fraudulent offerings, however, was not an outlier. It was the beginning of a trend. In 2022, authorities uncovered 57 Ponzi schemes that involved over $5.3 billion of potential losses. In 2023, authorities uncovered 66 Ponzi schemes that involved nearly $2 billion in potential investor losses.
In lockstep with the increasing number of Ponzi schemes, the SEC Office of the Whistleblower has received an increasing number of whistleblower tips related to Ponzi schemes in recent years. According to the SEC Office of the Whistleblower’s Annual Reports to Congress, the percentage of whistleblower tips related to offering frauds, such as Ponzi schemes, has increased in every fiscal year (FY) since 2021:
- FY 2021: 16% of whistleblower tips
- FY 2022: 17% of whistleblower tips
- FY 2023: 19% of whistleblower tips
- FY 2024: 21% of whistleblower tips
In 2016, the former Director of the SEC’s Division of Enforcement recognized in a speech the importance of whistleblowers to the SEC in rooting out Ponzi schemes, stating:
Offering frauds and Ponzi schemes are another class of cases where whistleblowers have greatly aided us. Retail investors are frequently the largest class of victimized investors in these schemes and they also can be difficult to detect until it is too late. Whistleblowers have provided us with timely and valuable tips enabling the Commission to quickly halt these fraudulent schemes and protect investors from further harm. Whistleblowers also have helped focus us on false and misleading statements in offering memoranda or marketing materials, enabling us to act quickly and stop these investment frauds from attracting more investors.
Nearly a decade later, the same remains true. Whistleblowers are critically important to the SEC in identifying and halting Ponzi schemes.
SEC Increases Focus on Ponzi Schemes
According to a recent Bloomberg article, the SEC under the Trump administration “will turn away from more expansive or novel enforcement tools used in the Biden administration, and double down on bread-and-butter fraud cases.” This sentiment has been echoed by experts throughout the industry. The SEC’s increased focus on fraud cases bodes well for whistleblowers reporting Ponzi schemes and other fraudulent investment offerings, as the SEC will likely dedicate more of its limited resources to combatting these scams.
How Whistleblowers Can Spot a Ponzi Scheme
A new paper titled “Ponzi Schemes: A Review” by Zhe Peng and Phelim P. Boyle outlines the key features of Ponzi schemes. Whistleblowers should consider these features when attempting to identify a Ponzi scheme. The paper examines 8 key features: “(i) the promoter or founder; (ii) the plausible story; (iii) trust-building mechanisms; (iv) the investment promise; (v) withdrawal features; (vi) marketing strategies; (vii) regulations; (viii) agency issues; and (ix) how the scheme ends.”
The SEC has also published investor warnings describing red flags for Ponzi schemes. According to the SEC, investors (and whistleblowers) should consider the following underlying traits of an investment offering when seeking to identify a potential Ponzi scheme:
- Promises of high investment returns with little or no risk;
- Regular, positive returns regardless of market conditions;
- Investments that are not registered with the SEC or an appropriate state regulator;
- Unlicensed individuals or unregistered firms;
- Secretive or complex strategies for which investors cannot get complete information;
- Lack of paperwork or inaccessibility to information about an investment in writing;
- Difficulty receiving payment; and
- Promises of “rolling over” investments and higher returns in the future on the amounts rolled over.
Recently, fraudsters have begun to rely on scam promissory notes and virtual currencies to raise money for Ponzi schemes.
How to Report a Ponzi Scheme to the SEC and Receive an Award
To report a Ponzi scheme and qualify for an award under the SEC Whistleblower Program, the SEC requires that whistleblowers or their attorneys report the tip online through the SEC’s Tip, Complaint or Referral Portal or mail/fax a Form TCR to the SEC Office of the Whistleblower. If represented by counsel, a whistleblower may submit a tip anonymously to the SEC.
In FY 2024, the SEC Office of the Whistleblower received 24,980 whistleblower tips and, as noted above, the office has received an increasing number of whistleblower tips related to Ponzi schemes since FY 2021. Before submitting a tip, whistleblowers should consult with an experienced whistleblower attorney and review the SEC whistleblower rules to, among other things, understand eligibility requirements and consider the factors that can significantly increase or decrease the size of a future whistleblower award.
To date, the largest SEC whistleblower awards by amount are:
- $279 million SEC whistleblower award (May 5, 2023)
- $114 million SEC whistleblower award (October 22, 2020)
- $110 million SEC whistleblower award (September 15, 2021)
- $82 million SEC whistleblower award (August 23, 2024)
- $50 million SEC whistleblower award (April 15, 2021)
- $50 million SEC whistleblower award (March 19, 2018)
- $50 million SEC whistleblower award (June 4, 2020)
- $39 million SEC whistleblower award (September 6, 2018)
- $37 million SEC whistleblower award (December 19, 2022)
- $37 million SEC whistleblower award (July 26, 2024)
Experienced SEC whistleblower attorneys can guide whistleblowers through the lengthy and complex process, increasing the likelihood of the whistleblower obtaining an award and maximizing the award percentage. The article “5 Tips for SEC Whistleblowers to Get SEC Whistleblower Awards” discusses lessons learned by whistleblower attorneys from their review of previous SEC whistleblower award determinations. Whistleblowers that we have been privileged to represent have helped the SEC halt Ponzi schemes and other offering frauds that raised more than $1 billion, and our clients’ disclosures have helped return funds to harmed investors.
SEC Whistleblower Attorneys
If you have original information that you would like to report to the SEC Whistleblower Office, contact the Director of our SEC whistleblower practice at [email protected] or call our leading SEC whistleblower lawyers at (202) 930-5901 or (202) 262-8959. All inquiries are confidential. The law firm’s SEC whistleblower attorneys will work to quickly provide SEC whistleblowers with the highest-quality representation. In conjunction with our courageous clients, we have helped the SEC halt multi-million dollar investment schemes, expose violations at large publicly traded companies, and return funds to defrauded investors.
In contrast to many other SEC whistleblower law firms, our team includes a Certified Public Accountant and Certified Fraud Examiner with substantial experience auditing public companies and investigating complex fraud schemes.
We understand the many challenges that the SEC faces in investigating our clients’ disclosures and take measures to increase the likelihood that the SEC will be able to effectively pursue the disclosures we provide on behalf of our clients. U.S. News and Best Lawyers® named Zuckerman Law a Tier 1 firm in the Washington DC metropolitan area.
For more information about the SEC Whistleblower Program and how to report a Ponzi scheme, download the eBook: Tips from SEC Whistleblower Attorneys to Maximize an SEC Whistleblower Award. Also, click below to hear SEC whistleblower lawyer Matt Stock’s tips for SEC whistleblowers:
For more information about Ponzi schemes, see the SEC’s General Resources on Ponzi schemes.
For more information about SEC whistleblower awards, download our eBook:
Ponzi Scheme SEC Whistleblower Lawyers
How to Qualify for an SEC Whistleblower Bounty
- See our column in Forbes: One Billion Reasons Why The SEC Whistleblower-Reward Program Is Effective.
- See our column in Going Concern: Sarbanes-Oxley 15 Years Later: Accountants Need to Speak Up Now More Than Ever.
- See our post in Accounting Today: Whistleblower Protections and Incentives for Auditors and Accountants.
- See our post in The Compliance and Ethics Blog: Shkreli Trial Reveals the Challenges Faced by Compliance Whistleblowers.
Are Whistleblowers Protected from Retaliation?
Click here to learn more about anti-retaliation protections for SEC whistleblowers under the Dodd-Frank Act and Sarbanes-Oxley Act.