Pop Promoter Pearlman Pleads Guilty To Frauds Totaling $300 Million

Lou Pearlman, the promoter responsible for foisting N’Sync and the Backstreet Boys on an unsuspecting public, on Thursday pleaded guilty to two counts of conspiracy, one count of money laundering and one count of making a false claim in a bankruptcy in connection with long-running fraud schemes which caused losses to 250 investors estimated at $200 million and losses to 10 financial institutions estimated at $100 million. The plea was entered before US District Judge G. Kendall Sharp in Orlando. Pearlman could face up to 25 years in prison but has agreed to cooperate with authorities investigating other unnamed parties in exchange for the possibility of a reduction in sentence. Pearlman is currently in custody and appeared in court wearing shackles. Full details of the schemes have not been revealed but in court Pearlman acknowledged a Ponzi scheme involving the sale of “employee investment savings accounts,” a bank fraud involving faked financial statements, and a plot to siphon frozen assets from a bankruptcy case. Sentencing has been scheduled for May 21, 2008. Orlando Sentinel here, AP here.

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