Samuel Israel III posts

Feed

Hedge fund fugitive turns himself in -- did he run out of gas?

It turns out that former hedge fund manager and convicted swindler Samuel Israel III did not in fact kill himself. As I, and others, have suspected, he headed for the border after faking his suicide on June 10, the day he was suppose to start serving a 20 year sentence for fraud. But it wasn't the border we thought it was. Instead of Mexico or Argentina, it seems that he headed for . . . Massachusetts.

According to DealBook, Israel popped into a police station in Southwick, Mass., "near the Connecticut border," to turn himself in. He was talking to his mother on a cell phone at the time. No word on what he was saying, but "Hi Mom, I'm going to jail now" probably gets us pretty close.

Israel's disappearance was the subject of much speculation. His SUV was found near a bridge that spans the Hudson River, with the words "suicide is painless" written in the dust on the hood. But the police figured out pretty quickly that the implied suicide was a fake and arrested his girlfriend as an accomplice in his plot to escape prison. Soon after, a photograph of the ratty camper Israel was apparently living in was circulated in the press.

We now know he didn't get very far in that old camper, less than a hundred miles. Was it the cost of gasoline and the lousy mileage of that big V-8 engine? Maybe when Israel was setting aside the escape money he knew he would eventually need, he didn't realize that gas would cost so much in 2008. I suppose high gas prices are hurting everyone these days, even high-flying, big money charlatans like Samuel Israel.

Convicted hedge fund founder disappears - suicide or escape plan?

Samuel Israel III founded the Bayou Hedge Fund Group in 1996. Within a few years, the hedge fund was deep in the red, and Israel and some of his associates came up with a novel way to deal with their problem: they created their own auditing firm and promptly gave themselves a clean bill of health. Making profits is easy when you cook the books, and Bayou cooked with the best of them, long and well enough to keep the criminal enterprise going for several more years.

Eventually, Israel was caught and Bayou went belly up. Some estimates put the total investor loss at more than $450 million. Last April, Israel was sentenced to 20 years in prison, and he was to begin serving that time today. But ABC News is reporting that Israel failed to show up at prison. His SUV was found near a bridge that spans the Hudson River, with the words "suicide is painless" written in the dust on the hood. But no body has been found and no one saw him jump.

Somehow, I have trouble imagining a thief of such epic proportions killing himself. Escape at all cost seems a more likely pursuit. I suspect that a careful review of all passengers getting onto planes to Buenos Aires or Bangkok today might just yield a former hedge fund manager trying to pull off one more scam.

Symbol Lookup
IndexesChangePrice
DJIA-74.9212,454.83
NASDAQ-1.852,837.53
S&P 500-2.861,317.82

Last updated: May 27, 2012: 04:16 PM

Hot Stocks

General Electric

19.20-0.05(-0.26)

Alcoa

8.630.00(0.00)

Apple Inc

562.29-3.03(-0.54)

Google Inc 'A'

591.53-12.13(-2.01)

Bank of America

7.15+0.01(+0.14)

Wal-Mart Stores

65.31+0.24(+0.37)

Exxon Mobil Corp

82.08-0.53(-0.64)

Ford

10.60+0.01(+0.09)

Citigroup

26.47-0.19(-0.71)

IBM

194.30-1.79(-0.91)

Yahoo

15.36+0.01(+0.07)

Starbucks

54.56-0.20(-0.37)

Microsoft

29.06-0.01(-0.03)

Home Depot

49.44-0.27(-0.54)

DailyFinance Headlines

AOL Business News

BioHealth Investor Headlines

Sponsored Links

My Portfolios

Track your stocks here!

Find out why more people track their portfolios on AOL Money & Finance then anywhere else.

BloggingStocks Partners

More from AOL Money & Finance

Page Loaded in 1338149798641 ms.