Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

CEO lost 36 mil????

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • CEO lost 36 mil????

    CHARLOTTE, N.C. (AP) - A former corporate executive accused of using company money and bank loans to cover more than $30 million in gambling losses pleaded guilty Tuesday to federal fraud charges.

    Carl L. Mosack, 69, declined an opportunity to speak before U.S. District Judge Graham Mullen accepted the plea agreement. Mosack will serve two years in prison and forfeit his interest in some real estate holdings and stock for the guilty pleas to wire and bank fraud charges.

    Mosack, who came to court with his wife, Tricia, is expected to be sentenced in about two or three months, said his attorney, David Rudolf.

    Mullen released the man without bond and allowed Mosack to take a trip to the Caribbean before he is sentenced.

    "The government recognized Mr. Mosack was in part a victim of the people who were taking advantage of his addiction," said Rudolf. "There were no losses to anyone except Mr. Mosack."

    Mosack is former president and chief executive officer of Conbraco Industries Inc., of Matthews, a suburb of Charlotte. He declined to talk to reporters.

    Prosecutors said that during a one-year period in 1999 and 2000, Mosack lost $36 million gambling, primarily on sporting events, and won about $5 million. He allegedly placed bets of up to $1 million on some days.

    Mosack has pledged to repay the company for losses he caused, Rudolf said.

    Asked how much he owed the company, the attorney said "millions of dollars."

    According to Rudolf, Mosack still owns a large stake in the company. Conbraco, founded by Mosack's father, employs about 1,600 people and sells more than $100 million worth of industrial valves and gauges annually.

    Last year, Mosack's gambling apparently brought the 73-year-old company close to ruin. First Union threatened to declare the company in default on its $8 million line of credit when it learned of his use of company loans to finance gambling debts.


  • #2
    For those of us fascinated by ultra-high wagering, can anyone shed any light on how or where someone is able to play for these kind of amounts? In a book I read about an oil tycoon who played for millions with US organizations in the pre-offshore days, but I'm skeptical, probably because it is so out of my realm of possibility. Would anyone offshore accept that type of action? I guess if you wanted to to play for those types of amounts you could be directed to the proper channels here in the states, but is it possible?

    Comment


    • #3
      There probably aren't too many books that would take bets that large, except for the fact that it sounds like he wasn't extremely skilled in his play. Knowing he was more of a novice, books would take advantage of that.

      The question is, how many different bets did he make, which sports, etc. It could have been broken down to smaller numbers.

      The story also indicates he bet "primarily"
      on sporting events. He probably went to Vegas/Atlantic City and gambled on table games too. In Vegas, if he was playing large sums of money on table games, he would also be given preferential treatment when making large sports wagers.

      Las Vegas allows very large wagering, especially in baccarat, where if you have the credit limit, you can bet as much as $250,000 PER HAND! It doesn't take long to go through a million that way!

      Comment


      • #4
        There are more than a few bookmakers offshore who would gladly have taken all this guy could dish out for the simple fact that they knew they had a whale on their hands.

        Comment


        • #5
          And why does this joker get to take a trip to the Caribbean before landing in jail? To pay one of YOUR sponsors perhaps.

          Comment


          • #6
            I hope so. Nothing worse than a deadbeat to the tune of 36 mil.

            Comment


            • #7
              And I thought I was on a losing streak!!!!!!

              Comment

              Working...
              X