‘Ever
been scammed?’
by
JEREMAIAH OPINIANO
Editor’s note: Victim requested anonymity in exchange for
baring her story.
SOMEWHERE
IN LUZON ISLAND–OVERSEAS worker’s wife Virginia Recuerda’s
mind wanders to a Citibank check in her drawer every time a television
show on scams began airing at Channel 11 recently.
That check for US$3,000 and the show remind her of how trust in other
people could lead to financial disaster.
It’s exactly three years ago that Recuerda got that check–equivalent
to three months her husband’s salary overseas–which she
can’t transform into hard cash due to a scam known as Ponzi.
“See this? This check is our money,” Recuerda told the
OFW Journalism Consortium Inc. Her gaze measured, Recuerda doesn’t
allow the check to leave her hands.
The check, a contract from a local holdings company, and a handwritten
acknowledgment receipt add on to the memory of how she fell for an
investment scheme in 2002.
Television actor Leo Martinez’s gaze and voice narrating the
cases of scams that clutched Filipino investors like Recuerda only
refresh her regrets of believing a certain Maridina Dizon that her
US$4,000 investment could earn four percent.
“I found her [Maridina] trustworthy since her husband’s
an executive of a bank,” Recuerda recalls.
“She was also very articulate and can explain things really
well.”
Recuerda said it was her friend who Maridina also lured for investment
that she was introduced to Dizon who represented Logaton Holdings
Inc.
Logaton, it was revealed after several dinners and cocktail parties
where Maridina brought her, acted as an agent of Multinational Telecommunications
Investors Corp. or MultiTel.
A year after Recuerda forked over to Dizon her money in a tête-à-tête
at a fastfood chain, MultiTel’s founder Rosario Baladjay was
arrested in Mangaldan, Pangasinan for complaints of estafa.
It was only through the television that Recuerda confirmed something
amiss would happen to her investment.
My heart thumped like a train when I saw Baladjay on television, she
said.
“I almost broke down with nervousness; like the many retirees
and senior citizens that also fell for the scheme.”
Natural
prey
WITH their substantial disposable income, potentials for savings and
some pundits say a desire to return home for good, OFWs are a natural
target for legitimate businesses and illegal money-making ventures.
The Securities and Exchange Commission says most of these ventures
seduce investors with the promise of extremely high returns that range
from 4 percent to 29 percent.
Lawyer Lalaine Monserate of the SEC’s Compliance and Enforcement
Division explained Ponzi schemes, for example, also pay investors
“exceptional returns from the deposits of a growing number of
new investors.”
While Recuerda and her friend Lilian were supposed to get 4-percent
interest for their investment, Dizon was to get seven percent every
time she brought in third-party investors like them.
Monserate said the Ponzi scheme is similar to pyramiding, which rewards
participants for inducing other people to join, and which focus is
primarily on the exchange of money for recruitment, and not for the
selling of products such as health supplements, food and shoes.
Aside from the dangled promising returns, the factor of trust comes
in when a scam operator brings along or introduced to the victim by
a confidant.
In Recuerda’s case, it was her friend Lilian who, she said,
attested to the viability of the investment.
As a semblance of formality, documents are presented, like the acknowledgment
receipt that Dizon gave to Recuerda when she paid US$1,000 in 2002
“for placement at MultiTel.”
With the promise of high returns and the confidence in her friend,
Recuerda relented and accepted the receipt handwritten only by Dizon.
“See here, she even wrote the serial numbers of the dollar bills
I gave her,” Recuerda said as her fingers traced the yellowing
paper.
The receipt was later replaced by a peach-colored paper bearing a
contract for the investment between Logaton, Recuerda and her husband
Felipe.
Money
walks
EVERY
month since then, Dizon would invite Recuerda to dinners catered by
MultiTel owner Baladjay.
“She [Baladjay] would even personally call to invite us to prove
that she was telling the truth [about the viability of the investment].”
Dizon and Baladjay, hence, acted as a tag-team, with the former assuring
Recuerda and other investors they could get their money back with
interest.
“I believed in them so much I planned to add US$2,000 more in
my investment,” Recuerda said.
That time she has already earned half of the US$4,000 she gave Dizon.
But after Felipe returned to his work abroad in 2003, unsolicited
advice against hiking that investment poured in, especially from my
in-laws and other friends, she said.
Her worries grew when on March 12 that year, news reports cited Baladjay
was arrested in view of regulators’ clamp down on MultiTel and
other suspected Ponzi and pyramid schemes.
With the US$3,000 Citibank check and a contract nestled in her handbag,
Recuerda said she immediately went to Logaton’s Makati City
office, a two-hour drive from her house.
What she found there was a room bare of furniture; not even a paper
clip on the floor.
The Logaton office was gone.
Dizon, meanwhile, became difficult to contact after she told Recuerda
to exchange the check for cash after she comes home from the United
States for her child’s enrolment.
“She was still confident and reassuring,” Recuerda recalled.
Later, Recuerda was told by fellow MultiTel investors that Dizon couldn’t
return to the Philippines because her name was “blacklisted”
by US immigration and law enforcement officials.
Recuerda doesn’t know if Dizon was able to slip past authorities
after two years.
She may still be hiding somewhere in the US with our money, Recuerda
can only surmise.
However, the real money may still be with Baladjay and husband Saturnino,
whose P10-billion worth of assets the Supreme Court ruled in May this
year to remain frozen, throwing out a Court of Appeals decision to
lift the freezing of these assets.
Haul
SOME P25 billion to 90 billion were lost to these schemes, SEC officials
said, affecting a low estimate of 250,000 Filipinos and a high estimate
of a million Filipinos who include overseas workers, class A, B, and
C sectors, and government and private sector employees and retirees.
Up to 4,000 people, mostly Filipinos, in the United Arab Emirates
and Oman lost US$2 million to the Manila-based PowerHomes Unlimited,
says a 2003 report by Gulf News. An appeals court in Manila said PowerHomes
had no real product to sell outright and earns primarily through recruitment.
The document tagged this scheme as “pyramiding”.
Recuerda said her husband’s fellow worker lost half a million
pesos to this type of scam.
In MultiTel’s case, complainants claim they lost P625 million
in principal investment and P125-million in interest payments.
SEC’s June 1 website showed it issued cease and desist orders
against 48 companies that include MultiTel, its sister company MultiTel
Investment Holdings, PowerHomes, and the Tibayan Group of Companies
for conducting “fraudulent investment schemes.”
Filipinos abroad and at home should always check the websites of SEC
and the trade and industry department for announcements and steps
to elude these investment schemes, said SEC director Hubert Dominic
Guevara.
Guevara also observed that even OFWs who fell prey to these investment
schemes “don’t conduct due diligence on the companies
that approached them”.
“They shouldn’t wait for the time they are not earning
anything before they lodge in complaints.”
“The first line of defense is the people themselves as we in
the SEC can only do so much as a regulator,” he added.
Guevara’s advice came late for Recuerda.
Still she says she has learned her lesson: “I focus on my work
and my son who’s preparing for a board examination as a licensed
professional”.
Her husband, however, remains working abroad, the only sad twist on
their aim to double their savings.
But Recuerda said the decision to pour money into the MultiTel investment
was a conjugal decision and responsibility she and Felipe shares.
“Money has never been an issue between my husband and I.”
While our trust in people outside our family of three has eroded,
our trust in hard work through good investment hasn’t, she adds.
Recuerda points to her son as the best investment they have right
now. end
OFW Journalism Consortium Inc. in partnership with the Ateneo de Manila
University-Economic Policy Reform and Advocacy (EPRA) consortium
This article is
free, but to publish, broadcast, rewrite, or redistribute this, please
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