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Trader Who Ripped Off His Mom, Friends Gets 8 Years

Trader Who Ripped Off His Mom, Friends Gets 8 Years

(Bloomberg) -- A former Morgan Stanley trader who ran a phony hedge fund from his rented home in the wealthy New York suburb of Pound Ridge, ripping off friends and even his mother, was sentenced to eight years in prison for the $22 million fraud.

Michael Scronic, 46, took money from 46 people, including a former college roommate who went on to become Facebook Inc.’s chief financial officer, in a seven-year scam that unraveled with his arrest by FBI agents last year. Scronic pleaded guilty in March to securities fraud, admitting that he lost the money betting on risky short-term options, while taking about $500,000 a year to cover his expenses.

Scronic “capitalized on the good-heartedness of his friends, and the way they got repaid makes this egregious,” U.S. District Judge Cathy Seibel said in a hearing Thursday in White Plains, New York. “When you do what Mr. Scronic did to people who loved him, I think you forfeit your right to think you’re a good person.”

Scronic, who claimed he was in the grip of a longtime gambling compulsion that drove him from one bad trade to another, admitted in court papers that his Scronic Macro Fund was “really nothing more than a name.”

“My victims weren’t strangers,” Scronic told the judge in court. “We were at each others’ weddings. Their kids called me Uncle Mike.” Scronic said he always thought he would somehow make up the losses, but “I realize now the absolute lunacy of that.”

He used the money raised from his friends to pay for what prosecutors called "a lavish lifestyle," that included $12,275 for monthly rent on a five-bedroom house with its pool and tennis court, his mortgage on a Vermont vacation home, fees for beach and country clubs, and credit card bills.

Scronic has a “moderate to severe” gambling disorder and is working hard on recovery, his lawyer, Alexei Schacht, said. Scronic had asked for a reduced sentence of three years so he can spend time with his 6-year-old son. Prosecutors had argued for 10 years or more.

"I thought the judge paid extremely careful attention to this case," Schacht said after court. "I’m just disappointed that she didn’t appreciate how fully he’s changed" since the arrest a year ago.

Victims Watching

Among Scronic’s victims was Gideon Yu, a part owner of the San Francisco 49ers and former chief financial officer of YouTube and Facebook. Yu lost $3.5 million he loaned to his former roommate at Stanford University where they met in 1989. He was in court for the sentencing.

About three dozen people attended the hearing, including victims, family members and 10 members of Scronic’s Gamblers Anonymous group.

The judge heard from four of Scronic’s victims, including Ari Perlman, who met Scronic when they were both graduate students at the University of Chicago. He called Scronic "the conniving, dishonest thief that stole my family’s hard-earned money."

Perlman urged the judge to impose the maximum sentence.

"I do not feel vindictive,” he said, “just violated."

Victims included his mother, Marianne Scronic. who watched the two-hour hearing with a box of tissues in her lap. She lost $50,000 to her son’s fraud. She also asked the judge to show leniency.

"He couldn’t face everybody" after losing their money, she said. "And then the losses got worse and worse."

The case is U.S. v. Scronic, 18-cr-00043, U.S. District Court, Southern District of New York (White Plains).

To contact the reporter on this story: Bob Van Voris in federal court in Manhattan at rvanvoris@bloomberg.net

To contact the editors responsible for this story: David Glovin at dglovin@bloomberg.net, Steve Stroth

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