Source: U.S. Department of JusticeVerified 2026-07-10
The Ponzi scheme is named for Charles Ponzi, who in 1920 promised investors a 50% profit in 45 days by trading international postal reply coupons. He was really paying earlier investors with later investors’ money — the same mechanism every Ponzi has used since.
Allen Stanford sold billions in certificates of deposit promising safe, above-market returns — all backed by a $7 billion Ponzi scheme. In 2012 he was sentenced to 110 years in prison.
When Enron collapsed into bankruptcy in December 2001, it took its auditor down with it: Arthur Andersen, one of the world’s five largest accounting firms, was convicted of obstruction and effectively ceased to exist — even though the Supreme Court later overturned the conviction.