Abstract:Federal court finalizes $3.4M penalty and lifetime ban in Daniel Winston LaMarco Ponzi-style forex case; CFTC highlights investor protection and enforcement.
A federal court in New York entered final judgment against Daniel Winston LaMarco, imposing $3,450,400 in monetary relief and permanently banning him from all commodity-related activity for orchestrating a Ponzi-style foreign exchange scheme. The order requires $862,600 in restitution to victims and a $2,587,800 civil monetary penalty, closing the Commodity Futures Trading Commissions seven-year enforcement action that began in July 2017.
Judge Diane Gujarati of the U.S. District Court for the Eastern District of New York adopted findings that LaMarco committed forex fraud and commodity pool operator fraud, and entered a permanent injunction barring future violations of the Commodity Exchange Act. The final judgment followed a series of rulings, including a September 4, 2024, summary judgment on liability and a July 10, 2025, remedies order, both tied to Magistrate Judge James M. Wicks recommendations.
According to the court record, LaMarco solicited nearly $1.5 million from friends and acquaintances to trade forex contracts via a commodity pool run through GDLogix, Inc., then lost nearly all of it through personal trading while diverting about $630,050 as purported profits to earlier participants in a Ponzi-like fashion. The court concluded he misappropriated funds, made material misrepresentations, and conducted no trading on behalf of pool participants, despite issuing false monthly statements.
GDLogix, Inc., LaMarco‘s company, received a parallel default judgment imposing identical monetary penalties—$862,600 restitution and $2,587,800 in civil penalties—along with permanent registration and trading bans. The corporate default was entered after GDLogix failed to retain counsel and respond, with the court granting the CFTC’s default request and later imposing final remedies.
In addition to remedies for fraud, the court sanctioned LaMarco in June 2025 for filing repetitive defamatory allegations against the CFTC and threatening agency counsel, striking portions of his filings and finding his conduct inexcusable and in bad faith. Those sanctions factored into the courts assessment of his litigation behavior and reinforced the need for permanent injunctive relief.
The civil judgment follows LaMarcos related criminal case, in which he pleaded guilty to commodities fraud and wire fraud and received a 42-month prison sentence with $872,600 in restitution on February 3, 2017. The CFTC reiterated that restitution orders may not result in recovery if a defendant lacks assets, but emphasized ongoing enforcement to protect customers and ensure accountability.
These outcomes demonstrate how courts and the CFTC respond to Ponzi-style foreign exchange scheme conviction matters, combining restitution-focused remedies with protective injunctions to safeguard investors and preserve market integrity.
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Indian investor Maryam Khan, 35, was scammed out of nearly ₹35 Lakh in a fraudulent stock investment scheme orchestrated by individuals impersonating the legitimate financial firm Zerodha. The scam began when Khan came across a Facebook Reel on July 4 promoting fake investment opportunities. After contacting the WhatsApp number listed in the ad, she was approached by a woman named Shruti Sindhawani, who convinced her to join a WhatsApp group and download an app called Lumien Max, allegedly a Demat account platform. Initially, Khan transferred ₹25,000 and received fake profit updates along with a bogus "Zerodha winning certificate," which encouraged her to invest a total of ₹3,487,000.
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