Preet Bharara, the United States Attorney for the Southern District of New York, and Mary Galligan, the Acting Assistant Director in Charge of the New York Field Office of the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI), announced today the arrest of Robert Kelly, the chief executive officer of Wwebnet Inc. (Wwebnet), a software development company, on securities and wire fraud charges. Kelly allegedly diverted for his own personal use over $2 million in investor proceeds that was intended for the development of a software program capable of transmitting music, videos, and movies over the Internet. He used the money to trade options, to pay his personal income taxes, and for other purposes unrelated to software development. Kelly was arrested yesterday afternoon in Raleigh, North Carolina, and was presented there in federal court this morning.
Manhattan U.S. Attorney Preet Bharara stated, “As alleged, Robert Kelly was simply an old-fashioned grifter touting a new technology opportunity in order to pick people’s pockets. He is the latest in a long line of defendants who allegedly lured unsuspecting investors with the allure of new technology only to be caught by law enforcement but, regrettably, probably not the last.”
FBI Acting Assistant Director in Charge Mary Galligan stated, “The audacity of this defendant’s alleged scheme was matched by its simplicity. He solicited and obtained millions of dollars from investors and simply pocketed the money for personal use. He told investors they were funding software development, then told his development team he hadn’t found investors. Taking investors’ money under false pretenses is essentially stealing it.”
According to the complaint unsealed yesterday in Manhattan federal court:
From 2004 through November 2008, Kelly solicited investors to send money to various Wwebnet-related bank accounts by misrepresenting that the funds would be used to develop software for transmitting music, videos, and movies over the Internet. Instead of using the millions of dollars in investor proceeds that he obtained for legitimate business purposes, Kelly diverted a substantial portion of the money that he raised for his own financial benefit. For example, Kelly transferred at least $2.11 million in investor funds into his personal trading account in the Cayman Islands which he used to trade options. By May 2008, that account had a zero balance. Kelly also used money he received from investors to pay his federal and state personal income taxes. At the same time that he was using investors’ money for his own personal benefit, Kelly falsely told his software development team that he was unable to allocate adequate resources for software development and could do so only when he was able to raise money from investors.
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