Saturday, December 20, 2025
ADVT 
National

Alberta Appeal Court Upholds Conviction Of Calgary Man In Ponzi Scheme

Darpan News Desk, 13 Apr, 2017 01:43 PM
    CALGARY — A Calgary man jailed in one of the largest Ponzi schemes in Canadian history has failed in his attempt to have his conviction overturned.
     
    Milowe Brost was sentenced to 12 years in prison for an elaborate, multimillion-dollar fraud in which investors were promised unrealistic returns.
     
    He was also found guilty of money laundering.
     
    He was convicted along with his business partner Gary Sorenson.
     
    Lawyers for Brost had argued that he should have been granted a mistrial when Sorenson, who was representing himself, admitted to jurors in his final submission that he used investment funds in a fishing lodge.
     
    The Alberta Court of Appeal said even if it was a confession, it didn't point to wrongdoing by Brost.
     
    "He did not implicate the appellant and used the prepositions "I" and "me" 11 times in this particular passage," the judges wrote of Sorenson's submission.
     
    The judges also rejected arguments that Justice Robert Hall should not have removed a sick juror and that he erred in his charge to the jury.
     
    "The appellant has failed to establish how the conduct of the trial by his self-represented co-accused ... amounted to a miscarriage of justice. He has not represented any reviewable error underlying the conviction and the appeal is dismissed."
     
    The trial of Sorenson and Brost heard more than 2,400 investors from around the world lost up to $200 million in total. Police have estimated the figure could be as high as $400 million. Many people lost their life savings.
     
    Investors were promised a 34 per cent annual return on a “low-risk” investment of $99,000, which was supposed to grow to just over $1 million within eight years. They were told the business involved selling gold for refining.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Cetacean Ban At Vancouver Aquarium Was Public's Will: Park Board Commissioner

    Cetacean Ban At Vancouver Aquarium Was Public's Will: Park Board Commissioner
    VANCOUVER — The unexplained deaths of two belugas at the Vancouver Aquarium last fall were a "tipping point" in the city's debate over cetacean captivity and helped lead to a historic vote to ban the practice, says a park board commissioner.

    Cetacean Ban At Vancouver Aquarium Was Public's Will: Park Board Commissioner

    Vancouver Board Looks At Amending Bylaw To Prohibit Whales At Aquarium

    VANCOUVER — The Vancouver Park Board has unanimously decided to have staff look into amending the Parks Control bylaw to prohibit the importation and display of live whales, dolphins and porpoises.

    Vancouver Board Looks At Amending Bylaw To Prohibit Whales At Aquarium

    Canada's Unemployment Rate Drops To Lowest Level In More Than Two Years

    OTTAWA — Canada's unemployment rate dropped to 6.6 per cent last month, its lowest level in more than two years, Statistics Canada said Friday, as the economy created more jobs than expected even with fewer people looking for work.

    Canada's Unemployment Rate Drops To Lowest Level In More Than Two Years

    Woman Who Gave Water To Pig On Way To Slaughterhouse Was Like Gandhi, Mandela: Lawyer

    Woman Who Gave Water To Pig On Way To Slaughterhouse Was Like Gandhi, Mandela: Lawyer
    Defence lawyer Gary Grill also compared Anita Krajnc's actions — and the resulting legal battle — to the experiences of historic rights activists such as Gandhi, Nelson Mandela and Susan B. Anthony.

    Woman Who Gave Water To Pig On Way To Slaughterhouse Was Like Gandhi, Mandela: Lawyer

    U.S., Canada 'Perplexed' About Migrant Surge Into Canada

    U.S., Canada 'Perplexed' About Migrant Surge Into Canada
    The majority travelled to the United States with the necessary visas, Kelly said Friday after a meeting in Ottawa with cabinet members including his Canadian counterpart, Public Safety Minister Ralph Goodale.

    U.S., Canada 'Perplexed' About Migrant Surge Into Canada

    Senate Colleagues Urge Don Meredith To Quit Over Sexual Relationship With 16-Yr-Old Girl

    Senate Colleagues Urge Don Meredith To Quit Over Sexual Relationship With 16-Yr-Old Girl
    OTTAWA — Colleagues of all political stripes pilloried Don Meredith and urged the controversial Conservative senator to give up his Senate seat Friday following an explosive ethics investigation of his sexual relationship with a 16-year-old girl.

    Senate Colleagues Urge Don Meredith To Quit Over Sexual Relationship With 16-Yr-Old Girl