Barry Minkow (born March 17, 1967) was an American teenage entrepreneur who managed to present the front of a successful businessman for a number of years during the 1980s. He was convicted of fraud, and became a prison inmate for over 7 years subsequent to his misdeeds. During his time in prison, Minkow became involved in Christian ministry, which continued after his probationary release from prison in April, 1995. Today he is senior pastor of a San Diego, California church, having publicly renounced and forsaken his previous misdeeds. Minkow is also a recognized fraud expert, and speaks on the subject to university students and the business community in an effort to prevent fraud.
Minkow worked hard to form dozens of business contacts. His most important contact was Tom Padgett of Interstate Appraisal Services, an insurance claims adjuster who could get large restoration contracts. He was presented as a business success story in magazines and TV shows. Mayor of Los Angeles Tom Bradley declared a Barry Minkow Day. He lectured in business schools and contributed to Narcotics Anonymous. He had a Ferrari Testarossa and a mansion in Woodland Hills. Zzzz Best' stock rose to $18 (USD) a share on Wall Street, valuing the company at more than $280 million (USD).
However, behind the scenes his company was nothing more than a front to attract investment for a Ponzi scheme. Zzzz Best did not clean anywhere near as many carpets as claimed but generated a plausible paper trail to fool potential investors. Interstate Appraisal Services was formed as a separate company to support this fraud. Minkow raised money by factoring his accounts receivable for work under contract. One of the first contracts he received was from the Genovese Mafia family. He hired reputable accountants and lawyers to boost his image. Later, upon indictment, he claimed that he had intended to form a legitimate business empire and pay back everything, nobody being the wiser.
There were signs of problems, but investors chose to ignore them. The company's Chief Financial Officer also owned a florist's business, and that company was accused by customers of having stolen over $92,000 by charging flowers to their credit cards without authorization. Minkow decided to ignore these allegations, and short-sellers including the Feshbach Brothers, took positions betting that the stock would fall.
Magazines and TV shows did not bother to check his background. Investigations by the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission, the FBI, two accounting firms and various individual investigators found nothing. Minkow bribed a security guard to give him access to a newly constructed building in Sacramento, California, so that he could present it to his auditors as a wreck that Zzzz Best had recently finished restoring. Zzzz Best was about to buy rival carpet cleaning company KeyServe when their stock suddenly plunged. Members of the press had been researching the company, and communicating with short-sellers who had done their own research. These investigations indicated that the company's contracts had been largely fictional. The story ran in the Los Angeles Times, and spurred FBI investigation of Minkow's link to the Genovese crime family and white separatists movements. Minkow gave himself up in 1987.
Since 1997 he has served as the senior pastor of San Diego's Community Bible Church. As of 2006, Rev. Minkow remains in this position.
Minkow also is an executive at the Fraud Discovery Institute in San Diego, which he helped found. In this capacity, he posed as a potential investor in an investment scheme run by fellow pastor Steve O. Cooper, of the Nu-Way Christian Ministries Inc. of San Diego, then passed the information he received to state and federal authorities. Cooper and his wife had been promising investors returns of 3% a month, and their scheme was shut down by regulators in August 2005. He has similarly investigated the Turning International Ltd. scam by Derek Turner in the Bahamas, Rainmaker Managed Living, MX Factors, and others.
1967 births | Fraudsters | Living people | People from the San Fernando Valley
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