MMM Founder: Sergey Mavrodi dies of heart attack
Russian
businessman Sergei Mavrodi, whose MMM pyramid scheme deprived millions of
Russians of their savings in the 1990s, has died of a heart attack, according
to Russia media at age 62.
Reports said
the 62-year-old was rushed to the hospital late on March 25 with pain in his
chest and died several hours later.
Mavrodi’s
MMM financial pyramid was a typical Ponzi scheme in which earlier investors
receive their profits from subsequent investors. Mavrodi promised returns of 20
percent to 75 percent a month, as well as lotteries and bonuses for investors.
As soon as
the number of new clients stopped growing, the pyramid collapsed, causing huge
financial losses for at least 10 million people, in some cases leaving them
destitute.
In 1994,
Mavrodi was elected as a lawmaker, a decision he later said was to ensure he
received immunity from prosecution. In 1996, he lost his parliamentary mandate.
In 2007, a
Moscow court found him guilty of financial fraud and sentenced him to 4 1/2
years in a penal colony.
In 2011,
Mavrodi launched another pyramid scheme called MMM-2011, calling on investors
to purchase so-called Mavro currency units in a bid to get rid of the “unfair”
financial system. Some 15 months later, Mavrodi halted the project.
From
2011-16, Mavrodi launched Ponzi schemes under the MMM brand in India, China,
South Africa, Zimbabwe, and Nigeria.
In many of
those countries, Mavrodi’s operations were subsequently shut down or suspended.
Comments