B.C. businessman David Sidoo faces allegations of fraud in complaint by U.S. SEC - Action News
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B.C. businessman David Sidoo faces allegations of fraud in complaint by U.S. SEC

Vancouver businessman David Sidoo was allegedly part of a 'global' business ring that defrauded investors out of millions of dollars, according to a court filing from the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC).

Former CFL player allegedly defrauded investors out of millions of dollars as part of multi-investor ring

Businessman and former CFL player David Sidoo is seen here after he pleaded guilty to a mail fraud conspiracy charge in 2020. This week, he was named in a regulatory complaint alleging he was part of a multi-investor business ring that defrauded investors out of millions of dollars. (Jonathan Wiggs/The Boston Globe/AP)

Vancouver businessman David Sidoo was allegedly part of a business ring that defrauded investors out of millions of dollars, according to a court filing from the U.S.Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC).

Thecomplaint, filed before the district court in the southern district of New York on Thursday, names Sidoo along with seven other defendants as being part of a "pump and dump" scheme.

Regulators say the defendants boughtstocks in various companies, artificially inflated their stock prices, and then sold the assets to unsuspecting investors, making millions of dollars in the process.

The scheme started in 2006 and continued until 2020, according to documents, and regulators say the defendants earned more than $145 million USillegally.

The SEC is seeking firm regulatory action against all eightdefendants, including injunctions forbidding them from further trading.

Sidoo is not being criminally charged and the allegations have not been proven in court.

However,four of his co-defendants were given charges of wire fraud, securities fraud, and money laundering in a separate indictment.

It is another legal setback for Sidoo, a former CFL player who was stripped of his Order of B.C. and imprisoned after he was involved in acollege admissions scandal in the U.S. in2020.

Sidoo, 62, is also a philanthropist, theformerCEO of mining firm Advantage Lithium Corp.,and a founding shareholder of American Oil & Gas Inc., which was sold in 2010 for more than $600 million.

According to the complaint, the "global" scheme to defraud investorsinvolved four of Sidoo's co-defendants, as well as six other peoplewho have been criminally charged as part of a separate FBI investigation.

"These pernicious 'pump and dump' schemes made the defendants rich while causing real harm to ordinary, retail investors who were left swallowing the losses," said U.S. federal attorney Damian Williams in a statement announcing the FBI's criminal charges.

None of the allegationshave been proven in court.

David Sidoo in an interview with CBC News in 2011. He was stripped of his Order of B.C. following his involvement in the college admissions scandal in 2020. (CBC)

17 companies allegedly 'dumped'

The principal defendant in the SEC complaint is Ronald Bauer, a Canadian-British dual citizen who investigators say currently lives in the U.K.

Bauer allegedly oversaw numerous acts of fraud using the "pump and dump" method, according to the complaint. Investigators say he and his co-defendants used 17 companies in total as part of the scheme.

Regulators say the eightmen bought controlling stakes in companies using offshore companies to conceal their involvement.

They then allegedly used media campaigns to convince other investors to buy their companies' stocks without disclosing their ownership.

The investors did so by setting up "front companies" shell companies owned by them and distributing their stock among these companies. To other investors, it appeared that no one company held all the stock, despite that being the case.

Sidoo was allegedly involved in orchestrating the scheme using two companies, North American Oil & Gas Corp., and American Helium Inc.

According to the complaint, Sidooand other investors allegedly made over $16million US bydefrauding investors using the companies.

Though Sidoo has not been criminally charged, four of his co-defendants, including Bauer,face up to 20 years in prison for each of the crimes they have been charged with.

The FBI says numerous authorities around the world were involved in the investigation, including the RCMP, Alberta Securities Commission, and the Toronto Police Service.

The David Sidoo Field on UBC's Vancouver campus was renamed, on Sidoo's request, following his involvement in the 2020 college admissions scandal. (Ben Nelms/CBC)

Sidoo played professional football for six years for the Saskatchewan Roughriders and B.C. Lions.

He was sentenced to three months in prison in 2020 after he was found to have paid $200,000 US to have a professional test-writer impersonate his two sons and write their SATs.

The conviction led to him losing his Order of B.C. which had been awarded for his philanthropy and the University of British Columbiarenaming a footballfield that had originallybeen named after him.

With files from Karin Larsen