Alabama Pastor and Attorney Are Arrested for Securities Fraud

A pastor in Jefferson County and an attorney from Trussville, Alabama have been arrested for investment fraud – they were cheating investors by selling phony securities.

According to the Alabama Securities Commission, Pastor Randall Layne Pardue and attorney Cary Allen Burdette were booked and indicted for conducting securities business without a proper license. Both have been accused of cheating investors in fraud schemes. Burdette has been charged with 13 counts of fraud in connection with the sale of a security, and one count for each sale of security by an unregistered agent. Securities FraudPardue, the pastor of an unidentified Birmingham area church, is being charged with seven counts of fraud in connection with the sale of a security, and one count for each sale of an unregistered security.

Pardue convinced at least half a dozen members of his church to invest in his scheme. He reportedly told some of his investors he would be investing their money in a gulf shores condo project. Burdette was also a member of the church.

There are few details about the fraud, but one fact is: gullible investors are more likely to trust their money to people who seem like upstanding members of their community - church going, reputed people. The stereotype of the oily haired salesman is yesterday’s investment fraud news. Today’s fraudster knows that a carefully cultivated image of respectability nets investors faster than any group presentations or brochures could.

 

 

 

Birmingham, Alabama Mayor arrested on bribery and fraud charges

Birmingham, Alabama Mayor Larry Langford was arrested Monday on bribery and fraud charges for allegedly steering millions of dollars of Jefferson County bond work to a friend in exchange for more than $230,000 in bribes. Langford, his friend Montgomery investment banker Bill Blount, and lobbyist Al LaPierre are all charged with charges including conspiracy, bribery, fraud, money laundering, and filing false tax returns. Langford is accused of telling Wall Street firms JP Morgan, Goldman Sachs, Bank of America, and Lehman Brothers they had to let Blount's investment banking firm in on the deal if they wanted to handle the county's bond work.