Victims of a $7 Billion Fraud May Soon Be Paid. For Some, Its Too Late.

It’s been 15 years since Thomas Swingle first learned that about $1 million of his family’s savings had gone up in smoke, after the financier Robert Allen Stanford was exposed for having sold billions in fraudulent certificates of deposit to investors around the world.The memory of those days is still painful.“It was literally a life-changing event,” Mr.Swingle, 72, said of the $7 billion scheme that unraveled in early 2009.

“It is like someone hit you in the chest with a sledgehammer.”Now, victims of Mr.Stanford’s company, Stanford Financial, are on the verge of recouping some of their losses, but Mr.

Swingle and his wife, Cindy Finch, have to contend with another decision they made: In 2021, they agreed to sell their claim to any future settlement to an investment fund for around $60,000.That means they won’t get a penny of the funds that are about to be disbursed.Instead, it’ll all go to the claim buyer.It’s a decision fraud victims have to agonize over in the wake of a big financial scam: Large investors offer them cash in exchange for the rights to any future payment.

Many small investors who don’t have much insight into what might happen next may feel they don’t have a choice but to settle for a quick lump sum, rather than wait for a future payment that may never come.When Mr.Swingle and Ms.

Finch sold their claim, he said, it appeared Stanford’s defrauded customers were unlikely to get anything back at all.Had the couple held on to the rights, they might be able to claim as much as $350,000.We are having trouble retrieving the article content.Please enable JavaScript in your browser settings.Thank you for your patience while we verify access.

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Publisher: The New York Times

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