Monday, October 23rd 2017

Newegg Sued for Alleged Involvement in Ponzi Scheme Through Fake Orders

Newegg (owned by Beijing-based Hangzhou Liaison Interactive Information Technology) has been sued by a conglomerate of South Korean banks. The plaintiffs claim that the Southern California computer parts retailer has aided, abetted, and profited from enabling a Ponzi Scheme to take place with its products orders. The lawsuit, filed in U.S. District Court in Los Angeles, alleges that Newegg and ASI Corp., a South Korean computer wholesaler, made fraudulent orders from Korean hardware manufacturer Moneual, whose chief executive, Hong-seok Park, was sentenced in 2015 to 23 years in prison for financial fraud, and additionally subject to fines and forfeitures.

Newegg and ASI took part on the whole scheme by creating non-existent, exaggerated-pricing (sometimes 300x higher than market value) orders for Moneual products, thus allowing it to gain a higher valuation from investors. By inflating sales figures, the suit alleges that Moneual was able to receive hundreds of millions of dollars from South Korean banks. As a reward, Newegg and ASI received kickbacks from Moneual.
All in all, it's suspected that Moneual managed to get their hands on around $3 billion in loans from ten major Korean banks through this scheme. The complaint said "No such business would have bought the products at such an inflated price, unless it intended to create the illusion of extensive, profitable, high-value commerce between it and its supplier for the purpose of defrauding lenders into supporting the transactions."

The four banks are demanding a jury trial and monetary damages. They say that $230 million is still owed from the faulty loans that Moneual obtained.
Sources: LA Times, Digital Trends
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36 Comments on Newegg Sued for Alleged Involvement in Ponzi Scheme Through Fake Orders

#26
lexluthermiester
BiggieShadyMaybe, but I think getting a kickback for signing one side of many bogus orders needed for this scheme to work is being exactly a part of the scheme
You might be right, it'll be interesting to see how this plays out.
Posted on Reply
#27
cadaveca
My name is Dave
BiggieShadyMaybe, but I think getting a kickback for signing one side of many bogus orders needed for this scheme to work is being exactly a part of the scheme
I recently tried to order something from Newegg, tried three different credit cards...

All three denied order after order went through, and de-activated card for fraud alert.



Apparently, if this news item turns out how I am kind of expecting, Newegg is a big problem for not just CC fraud. Does make me feel better about my experience, and also bolsters my choice of never ordering from them. :roll:
Posted on Reply
#28
Divide Overflow
Site has gone straight down the crapper since being taken over by the Chinese last year.
Posted on Reply
#29
ensabrenoir
.... always be careful that your ordering from them and not some third party.....Newegg or Amazon. Unless it's fufilled by Amazon.
Posted on Reply
#30
evernessince
ensabrenoir.... always be careful that your ordering from them and not some third party.....Newegg or Amazon. Unless it's fufilled by Amazon.
FYI fulfilled by Amazon isn't any safer. There have already been multiple scams surrounding it in fact. Amazon takes "the same" product and groups it together in one listing. So those discount "nike" sneakers you are buying could be legit or they could be from a Chinese fake factory, either way Amazon groups them together and sells them.
Posted on Reply
#31
lexluthermiester
ensabrenoir.... always be careful that your ordering from them and not some third party.....Newegg or Amazon. Unless it's fufilled by Amazon.
As a general rule that advice is wise. However, at least on Amazon, sellers with good reputations can generally be counted on to deliver the goods they offer in the condition stated.
Posted on Reply
#32
Kenneth Waycaster
Dave65Been using Newegg for years, never had a problem..
This is about banks suing Newegg for a Ponzi scheme, why would you have any problems?
Posted on Reply
#33
thesmokingman
Not surprised by Newegg committing this level of fraud.
Posted on Reply
#34
jboydgolfer
it'll be exactly what i warned of if Newegg gets a kick in the a$$ & i have to admit i wont shed a tear if they are forced to shut down.....they are Totally cool with sellers Bribing users for good reviews, and several other shady business tactics, and practices that scream "dont do business with us"....these guys re NOT the company they were a few years ago, AVOID at all costs.


:roll:
Posted on Reply
#35
Easy Rhino
Linux Advocate
Stopped using Newegg when I got Prime.
Posted on Reply
#36
bonehead123
Well, IF they are doing this, shame on them!

However, for everything I have ordered this year and last (over $3k worth of stuff), I have used Paypal to pay for it and have never had any issues whatsoever...

Only had to do 2 returns, also nottaproblemo :)

Rebates, well they are a hit & miss game, but I have been lucky and actually received all 17 that I submitted after about 6-12 weeks. slow as hell yes, but no problems either!
Posted on Reply
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