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

    Supporters And Critics Of Motion Condemning Islamophobia Clash In Montreal

    Supporters And Critics Of Motion Condemning Islamophobia Clash In Montreal
    There were some tense moments in the streets of Montreal on Saturday as there were some clashes between supporters and opponents of a Parliamentary motion condemning Islamophobia.

    Supporters And Critics Of Motion Condemning Islamophobia Clash In Montreal

    Edmonton Man Guilty Of First-Degree Murder In Warehouse Stabbings

    Jayme Pasieka, 32, was also been convicted on four counts of attempted murder and four counts of aggravated assault in the attack three years ago.

    Edmonton Man Guilty Of First-Degree Murder In Warehouse Stabbings

    'A Lot Of Mental Strength': Truck Driver Found Alive After Two Days Trapped In Crashed Rig In B.C.

    'A Lot Of Mental Strength': Truck Driver Found Alive After Two Days Trapped In Crashed Rig In B.C.
    HOPE, B.C. — A truck driver trapped for more than two days in an overturned rig on the side of a British Columbia highway is in hospital after what one emergency worker is describing as the longest rescue operation his organization has ever been involved in.

    'A Lot Of Mental Strength': Truck Driver Found Alive After Two Days Trapped In Crashed Rig In B.C.

    Christy Clark Says $40-million Rural B.C. Internet Infrastructure Project Creates Jobs

    Christy Clark Says $40-million Rural B.C. Internet Infrastructure Project Creates Jobs
    MERRITT, B.C. — The mayor of a hard hit oil and gas community in British Columbia's northeast says the provincial government's rural economic development strategy fails to recognize the dire straits facing his town and other remote areas.

    Christy Clark Says $40-million Rural B.C. Internet Infrastructure Project Creates Jobs

    Public Safety Minister Speaks At Manitoba-U.S. Border Site Of Illegal Crossings

    Public Safety Minister Speaks At Manitoba-U.S. Border Site Of Illegal Crossings
    The federal government is enforcing border laws and is willing to put more resources in place to deal with the influx of asylum-seekers from the United States, federal Public Safety Minister Ralph Goodale said Saturday.

    Public Safety Minister Speaks At Manitoba-U.S. Border Site Of Illegal Crossings

    Student From Abbotsford, B.C., Dies During Ski Trip To Whistler, School Says

    Student From Abbotsford, B.C., Dies During Ski Trip To Whistler, School Says
    Vijay Manuel says Whistler personnel conducted as search Friday afternoon and found that the student had died.

    Student From Abbotsford, B.C., Dies During Ski Trip To Whistler, School Says