Tuesday, December 23, 2025
ADVT 
National

Notorious B.C. Fraudster Rashida Samji Get 6 Years In Jail For $200 Million Ponzi Scheme

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 28 Sep, 2016 12:57 PM
    VANCOUVER — A former notary who ran a Ponzi scheme in British Columbia that defrauded investors of more than $100 million has been sentenced to six years in prison.
     
    Provincial court Judge Gregory Rideout said Wednesday that Rashida Samji "knew exactly what she was doing and went forward with eyes wide open."
     
    The court heard that Samji collected money ranging from $50,000 to $12 million from investors over a nine-year period.
     
    She was found guilty in May of 28 counts of fraud and theft, but 14 counts of theft were stayed.
     
    Investors lost between $44,000 and $8 million from 2003 to 2012, Crown prosecutor Kevin Marks said.
     
    Marks told the court during the woman's sentencing hearing on Tuesday that the victims have suffered physical, emotional and financial hardships.
     
    They had no idea Samji was paying them with their own money instead of up to 12 per cent a year in interest, he told the court.
     
    The Mark Anthony Group, which hired Samji as a notary, was also unaware it had become embroiled in the scheme that had Samji telling investors the company was expanding its winery operations to South Africa, court heard. 
     
    The B.C. Securities Commission fined Samji $33 million after it found she and two companies she controlled committed over $100 million in fraud involving hundreds of investors.
     
    Samji, who declared bankruptcy in 2012, was forced to sell her home and now rents a condo, her lawyer, Richard Peck, told court on Tuesday, adding many of her friends now shun her.
     
    He said Samji was in debt, had surgery for breast cancer and suffered from depression before the scheme was hatched and that when it was discovered, she tried to end her life by overdosing on sleeping pills.
     
    Her mother had died and her brother, a pilot, was killed in a plane crash in British Columbia's Okanagan region, leaving her to care for her 90-year-old father, Peck said.
     
     
    Samji's health will continue to be monitored for the rest of her life, he said, suggesting the various events she'd experienced may partly explain her criminal behaviour.
     
    "There has to be a some spark that takes this otherwise ordinary citizen and gets her involved in a Ponzi scheme," he said. "Any sane person knows that a Ponzi scheme does not last, cannot last."
     
    However, Marks said many people deal with tragedies but don't commit crimes, especially of such a magnitude and for so long, adding the sentence should reflect the suffering of the innocent victims who lost their life savings.
     
    Two of the 28 investors made some money, becoming "net winners" but they consider themselves "net losers" because they're embroiled in ongoing lawsuits, Marks said.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Mural Festival Brings Bright, Massive Paintings To Vancouver Streets

    Mural Festival Brings Bright, Massive Paintings To Vancouver Streets
    VANCOUVER — An east Vancouver neighbourhood has gotten increasingly colourful lately, but the people behind dozens of new murals in the area say the art is about more than beautifying empty walls.

    Mural Festival Brings Bright, Massive Paintings To Vancouver Streets

    B.C. Opts Not To Hike Carbon Tax In New Climate Plan, Won't Adjust Target Dates

    B.C. Opts Not To Hike Carbon Tax In New Climate Plan, Won't Adjust Target Dates
    Premier Christy Clark said Friday that the government needs to keep the province economically competitive to protect jobs in the battle against climate change as she highlighted 21 measures the province is taking to cut emissions.

    B.C. Opts Not To Hike Carbon Tax In New Climate Plan, Won't Adjust Target Dates

    Victoria Workers Try To Coax Shy Snake From Drain With Heat, Food

    Victoria Workers Try To Coax Shy Snake From Drain With Heat, Food
    The creature, believed to be a corn snake up to 1.8 metres in length, was spotted Wednesday as crews used a remote camera to probe the drain for a possible sinkhole.

    Victoria Workers Try To Coax Shy Snake From Drain With Heat, Food

    Vancouver's Insite Safe Injection Clinic Adds Hours To Help Cut Deadly Overdoses

    Vancouver's Insite Safe Injection Clinic Adds Hours To Help Cut Deadly Overdoses
    Vancouver Coastal Health, which operates Insite, says a pilot project begins next Wednesday and will continue for up to six months.

    Vancouver's Insite Safe Injection Clinic Adds Hours To Help Cut Deadly Overdoses

    Quebecer Makes It Far In International Public-Speaking Competition

    Quebecer Makes It Far In International Public-Speaking Competition
    MONTREAL — Raymond Brisebois's 16-year-old daughter was struck and killed by a train in 2012 but he was never able to tell her one last time he loved her because he kept putting off the phone call.

    Quebecer Makes It Far In International Public-Speaking Competition

    Judge Grants Bail To Saskatchewan Farmer Charged With Murder Of First Nations Man

    Judge Grants Bail To Saskatchewan Farmer Charged With Murder Of First Nations Man
    The decision, which was released as the court was closing Friday in Battleford, said Gerald Stanley is to be freed on $10,000 bail.

    Judge Grants Bail To Saskatchewan Farmer Charged With Murder Of First Nations Man