Tuesday, February 10, 2026
ADVT 
National

Investment Scam Mastermind To Be Sentenced In 'Ponzi Scheme' Fraud

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 19 Jan, 2017 01:57 PM
    HALIFAX — A Nova Scotia financial manager who was the mastermind behind an investment scam that bilked about 200 investors out of more than $1 million is to be sentenced later this year.
     
    Quintin Sponagle of Upper Vaughan, N.S., pleaded guilty to fraud last month from his work with Jabez Financial Services Inc. of Windsor, N.S. — a company that was registered in Panama.
     
    He has admitted in court that he was responsible for $1.1 million worth of fraudulent activity.
     
    Sponagle was supposed to be sentenced Thursday, but provincial court Judge Anne Derrick granted an adjournment to allow him more time to consult with a lawyer — something he chose not to do early in the proceedings. She also said more time was needed to pull together victim impact statements.
     
    The RCMP alleged the accused fled to Panama in 2006 after he defrauded about 189 investors of more than $4 million.
     
    In October 2011, the Nova Scotia Securities Commission found Sponagle and Trevor Hill engaged in unfair practices, solicited investments without being registered in Panama or Canada, and failed to file a prospectus before distributing securities.
     
    The commission concluded that between April and September 2006, the pair traded securities after receiving $4.1 million from 137 residents of Nova Scotia and 52 residents of other provinces.
     
    "Mr. Sponagle spent investors' money on himself, and indulged friends, relatives and business associates including Mr. Hill and his family," the commission said in a statement dated Oct. 20, 2011.
     
    The commission said the pair's actions amounted to a "deceptive and dishonest ruse, designed to extract money from trusting and unsuspecting Canadian investors. It was in the nature of a 'Ponzi scheme.'"
     
    The commission said Sponagle was the "mastermind of this scam," and it banned both men from becoming or acting as a director or officer of any publicly traded company, or acting as an investment fund manager or promoter. They were also ordered to each pay a $500,000 fine — the maximum penalty at the time.
     
    Canada sought Sponagle's extradition from Panama, and he was arrested in April 2013 by Panamanian authorities.
     
    Though he opposed the extradition process in court, he was returned to Canada in November 2014.
     
    Sponagle was originally charged with three counts of fraud over $5,000 and one of theft over $5,000. He was released on bail in December 2014 after he posted a $45,000 surety.
     
    His trial was scheduled to start in Halifax provincial court this month, but he pleaded guilty on Dec. 22.
     
    Auditors recovered about $2 million from Sponagle's accounts, but only a portion was returned to investors, once financial fees were covered.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Vancouver Police Traffic Stop Uncovers 56 Kilos Of Cocaine

    Police say patrol officers stopped a SUV with two people inside on Tuesday after they saw some suspicious behaviour.

    Vancouver Police Traffic Stop Uncovers 56 Kilos Of Cocaine

    Christy Clark Says Rachel Notley's Trip To B.C. To Promote Pipeline Took Courage

    Christy Clark Says Rachel Notley's Trip To B.C. To Promote Pipeline Took Courage
    Clark says she is meeting with Notley on Friday in Ottawa, where the premiers and prime minister meet to discuss the environment and health care.

    Christy Clark Says Rachel Notley's Trip To B.C. To Promote Pipeline Took Courage

    No Evidence To Convict Woman In Child Brides Case, B.C. Court Hears

    No Evidence To Convict Woman In Child Brides Case, B.C. Court Hears
      Joe Doyle, who is acting as an adviser to the court, says there's nothing that shows Gail Blackmore aided or abetted in the removal of a 13-year-old girl from Canada for a sexual purpose.

    No Evidence To Convict Woman In Child Brides Case, B.C. Court Hears

    Falling Ice From Metro Vancouver Bridges Damages At Least 40 Vehicles

    Falling Ice From Metro Vancouver Bridges Damages At Least 40 Vehicles
    A winter storm brought more than five centimetres of snow to the region Monday and there were numerous reports of snow and ice falling from bridges, leaving vehicles with cracked windshields and dented roofs.

    Falling Ice From Metro Vancouver Bridges Damages At Least 40 Vehicles

    Woman In Her 80s Trapped Outside Dies: Storm Warnings, Extreme Cold Continue On Prairies

    Woman In Her 80s Trapped Outside Dies: Storm Warnings, Extreme Cold Continue On Prairies
    Paramedics say a woman in her 80s was trapped for at least an hour outside a home near Didsbury in central Alberta on Monday.

    Woman In Her 80s Trapped Outside Dies: Storm Warnings, Extreme Cold Continue On Prairies

    Teen Who Sparked Toronto's Worst Mass Shooting Sentenced To Life In Prison

    Teen Who Sparked Toronto's Worst Mass Shooting Sentenced To Life In Prison
    Folorunso Owusu, who was 17 years old when he fired a gun sparking pandemonium on Danzig Street, was sentenced as an adult.

    Teen Who Sparked Toronto's Worst Mass Shooting Sentenced To Life In Prison