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Posted by: StillAnon ( )
Date: June 01, 2012 11:59AM

From the SL Trib.
http://www.sltrib.com/sltrib/money/54219645-79/catledge-investors-fraud-million.html.csp


Check out this crook's "I'm a mormon" page.

http://mormon.org/me/421T/

Ole Joe would be proud.

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Posted by: xyz ( )
Date: June 01, 2012 12:04PM

ROTFLMFAO!!!

Multi-Level Mormonizing at its best!

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Posted by: m ( )
Date: June 01, 2012 12:41PM

*adds to list*

James B. Catledge, 44, used a multilevel marketing operation to raise the millions with false promises that investments were safe and would pay steady returns of up to 12 percent annually, according to a Securities and Exchange Commission lawsuit filed in Las Vegas.
Attorneys in the SEC’s Salt Lake City office filed the Las Vegas complaint last week accusing Catledge, and resort developer Derek F. C. Elliott, 41, of Hillsburgh, Ontario, of fraud, unjust enrichment, sale of unregistered securities by unregistered brokers and lying to investors.

There were up to 1,700 investors who put in up to $170 million, according to a court-ordered report in a separate lawsuit filed by investors in Florida.
-----------
Just the tip of the Pyramid Iceberg


Val Southwick Ponzi Scheme - Bishop
.......................................................
Shawn Merriman Ponzi Scheme- Bishop
..........................................................

Anthony Vassallo "In California, the SEC said Vassallo told investors, many of whom he met in church, that he had developed a software program that allowed him to buy and sell options that generated profits of 3.5 percent a month with little risk."

.....................................................

Kleenmaid collapse - " What's more, chairman Andrew Young and his brother Brad were Mormons and that added to their image as upright and ethical members of the community."
..............................................................

Mortgage Fraud - Sentenced were Bradley Grant Kitchen of Provo, David R. Bolick of Sandy, Steve Wells Cloward of Orem, Ron K. Clarke of Provo, and Jeffery David Garrett of Provo.......... The men were indicted by a federal grand jury in 2007 on charges they conspired to create a multimillion dollar mortgage fraud scheme involving a Utah County development that was originally thought to total $18 million in fraudulent loans.
................................................................
Ted James Johnson Jr-
Investors believed in Giles County businesses
People who gave money to Ted James Johnson Jr. said he seemed to know what he was doing......It was not the cost but the deceit that bothers him, Charles Wayne Gentry said gently from the witness stand Thursday in federal court in Roanoke.
He'd gathered his savings, sold his house and store and counseled his wife and brother-in-law to put in their inheritance -- $724,000 in all -- only to see the money disappear in the collapse of Mountain Investments and Dogwood Farms, two businesses run by a pair of Giles County financial advisers indicted last year on 42 charges tied to securities fraud....
Johnson's investors included fellow Mormons from Giles County and beyond, teachers and university professors, and businessmen.

..........................................................

A major Utah investment fund has collapsed, leaving more than 268 creditors owed $168 million.
Of that total, investors in the Waterford Loan Fund from Utah and 19 other states are owed $100 million, according to preliminary figures compiled by a contract manager for the company and attorneys. Assets were listed at $40 million.

.......................................................
Leticia Avila -

"Leticia Avila used her LDS Church connections and the promise of cooperation from a high-ranking immigration official to con $4,000 apiece from undocumented immigrants attempting to get legal visas, according to more than two dozen affidavits from victims.
Many of the alleged victims say what is most upsetting is that they were betrayed by someone who preyed on their religious faith. They trusted Avila because she was a fellow member of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints Spanish-speaking branch in Millcreek. In some cases, it was a local church leader who suggested they talk with Avila about becoming legal. "

.............................................................
Rick Koerber

"Federal prosecutors on Tuesday accused an Alpine man of defrauding investors in a multimillion dollar real estate scheme.

U.S. Attorney Brett Tolman said Rick Koerber collected more than $100 million from investors but spent much of it on expensive cars, restaurants, movie making and his own housing. Tolman announced a three-count indictment of Koerber on Tuesday.

The number of victims, most of whom live in Utah, could be in the hundreds, said Tolman. But investigators have yet to determine which of Koerber's investors are "purely victims" and who may have "facilitated the crime," he said.

Koerber, who dubs himself a "Capitalist, Mormon, Dad" on his Web site, could not be reached for comment Thursday. Koerber was an ardent backer and donor to the school voucher movement in 2007. "
.............................
New York Times article on Daren Palmer, faithful Mormon in Idaho Falls, who agreed this week to plead guilty in a $78 million dollar scheme where he conned his family and his fellow Mormons.

http://is.gd/inUQmH
.....................................
SALT LAKE CITY -- A Lindon man suspected of orchestrating a Ponzi scheme and defrauding investors out of more than $18 million pleaded guilty to wire fraud in federal court on Thursday.

Jeffrey Lane Mowen, 48, entered the plea as part of a deal with federal prosecutors. In exchange, prosecutors dropped two additional charges of wire fraud, as well as charges of solicitation to commit a crime of violence, tampering with a witness and retaliating against a witness.

Melodie Rydalch, a spokeswoman for the U.S. Attorney's Office in Utah, said though Mowen will be sentenced later, his penalty has already been determined.
--------------------
Wayne Ogden from Ogden, Utah. Active LDS at time of multi-million dollar ponzi scheme.
--------------------
The U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission filed a securities fraud lawsuit last month against Salt Lake City-based Art Intellect Inc. and its three principals, Patrick Merrill Brody, Laura A. Roser, and Gregory D. Wood.

In its original complaint, the SEC says Art Intellect, which operates under the name Mason Hill, collected more than $2.5 million from about 75 investors since April, 2009. The company reportedly claimed that the funds would be used to buy and rehabilitate distressed real estate in Ohio, Florida, and Kansas, and that the company would find renters for each of the properties. The properties were not identified in the lawsuit.

Investors, who were allegedly asked to submit a deposit of $20,000 per property, reportedly were promised returns of 10 percent to 30 percent, with monthly net rental profits of $650 to $1,000.

However, the SEC alleges that the funds were used for Mason Hill's operating expenses, as well as to pay for "lavish trips" and personal expenses for Mr. Brody and Ms. Roser. Funds from later investors also were reportedly used to buy properties and make payments to earlier investors.
--------------------
n March 23, 2011, it filed a complaint against Mike Watson Capital, LLC, a company based in Provo, Utah. The SEC also named Michael P. Watson, a resident of Mapleton, Utah, and Joshua F. Escobedo, a resident of Spanish Fork, Utah as defendants. According to its press release the SEC has alleged that Watson and Escobedo “raised more than $27.5 million from more than 120 investors through Mike Watson Capital’s issuance of promissory notes… Watson and Escobedo told investors that returns were generated by real estate investments, and backed by substantial equity and cash flow produced by company properties. In reality, the properties never generated sufficient income to cover investment interest or redemptions, and therefore investor returns were paid primarily from new investors’ funds.” The SEC alleged that the company owes more than $19 million in unpaid principal and interest on its promissory notes to investors, its real estate portfolio has tanked, and commercial banks have foreclosed on at least nine properties. This one looks pretty grim for the people who initially invested $27 million of their hard-earned money with these two Utah County guys -
-----------------------
http://www.sltrib.com/sltrib/money/51503972-79/investors-clark-complaint-payday.html.csp
A Hyde Park man has been accused in federal court of orchestrating a Ponzi scheme under the guise of an online payday loan company.

The Securities and Exchange Commission on Friday filed a complaint in U.S. District Court against John Scott Clark, 58, and his businesses, Logan-based Impact Cash and Impact Payment Systems. The SEC alleges that between March 2006 and September 2010, more than $47 million was raised from 120 investors who were promised lavish returns for funding payday loans.

According to the complaint, Clark sold securities through both companies that totaled $47 million. About $4 million of that allegedly was raised for equity investments in the companies, while the rest came from investors who agreed to provide capital to the companies for payday loans.
---------------

Raymond P. Morris, 42, of Draper, conducted an unregistered offering and operated the Ponzi scheme “at least” between March 2007 and January 2009. The scheme defrauded “at least 90 investors” and was a Ponzi out of the gate, the agency said.Three other Utah men, including attorney Luc D. Nguyen, 40, of Draper, helped the fraud spread by conducting no due diligence, recklessly repeating assertions made by Morris as though they were truthful and coming up with their own lies to drive money to the scheme, the agency alleged.Also charged were James L. Haley, 49, of Draper, and Jay J. Linford, 49, of Orem.
---------------------
PROVO - The aftermath of a massive Ponzi scheme that may have affected hundreds in Utah County has turned into a nasty tangle of overlapping court cases.
The questions are as basic as who is a victim and who is a perpetrator. And the answers likely won't come any time soon.
Prosecutors last October secured a temporary restraining order from 4th District Judge Fred Howard freezing over $2 million in assets belonging to several people connected with the California payday lending company Money & More.
Prosecutors in April filed an array of securities fraud and money laundering charges against five people: Larry O. Bosh, of St. George; D. Shawn Benson, of Ivins, Washington County; Michael J. Smith, of Mona, Juab County; David Q. Poulsen, of Salem; and Gale Robinson, of San Jacinto, Calif., the owner of Money & More.
-----------------------------------
SALT LAKE CITY (AP)-

A Utah money manager accused of running a multimillion-dollar Ponzi scheme has pleaded guilty to a federal wire fraud charge in exchange for a 10-year prison sentence.
Jeffrey Mowen entered the plea in Salt Lake City's U.S.
udge Dee Benson set sentencing for April 15.
As part of the plea agreement, Mowen will forfeit any assets gained from the scheme, including 29 cars that were not sold at public auction.
Defense attorney Stephen McCaughey says in exchange for the plea, prosecutors agreed to drop a murder-for-hire charge.
Prosecutors contend Mowen defrauded investors of millions of dollars and tried to arrange the killing of four witnesses. He was arrested last April in Panama.
------------------------
Former secretary of Murray painting contractor steals $1.3 million
July 23rd, 2011 @ 5:04pm
By Dennis Romboy

SALT LAKE CITY - A former secretary for a Murray painting contractor funneled more than a $1 million in customer payments into a personal account, according to a federal indictment.

Pamela Jane Madsen is charged in U.S. District Court with five counts of mail fraud and four counts of money laundering. Madsen worked for Professional Painting Inc., where her duties included payroll, data entry and preparing checks for deposit.

Prosecutors say Madsen created an account at U.S. Bank in November 2007 under a slight variation of her employer's name. For the next three years, she deposited customers' checks totaling at least $1.3 million into the account for her personal use, according to the indictment.

Madsen credited customers' accounts on the company's books to make it look like they had paid their bills, according to the indictment. Some of the checks came from two of the state largest general contractors, Jacobsen Construction and Big-D Construction.

The indictment seeks to seize from Madsen two pickup trucks, a BMW sedan, two snowmobiles and homes in Bluffdale and Taylorsville.
------------------------------------
SEC: Two Utah County Men Ran Ponzi Scheme
Ballard Spahr partner Brent R. Baker is representing one of two Utah men accused in federal court of running a $27.5 million Ponzi scheme. Mr. Baker's client is accused of posing as a broker for a Provo-based business, according to a complaint filed by the Securities and Exchange Commission.

Mr. Baker said his client wasn’t aware that the business was running a Ponzi scheme and has been cooperating with the SEC investigation. He "is looking forward to putting this behind him," Mr. Baker said.
--------------------------

Utah Ponzi Scheme Revealed

His name is John Scott Clark, and according to the Securities and Exchange Commission, he’s a Ponzier. The Utah man and his two funds, Impact Cash and Impact Payment Systems, scored $47 million from gullible investors, including three hedge funds that should have known better.
------------------------
Provo councilman Steve Turley charged with felonies

PROVO -- After a year of complaints, doing their own investigation and raising Cain at Provo Municipal Council meetings, a group of citizens knew they were heard on Wednesday when the Utah County Attorney's Office charged Municipal Councilman Steve Turley with 10 second-degree felonies and his fellow elected officials asked him to resign.

The "exhaustive" official investigation from the Utah County Bureau of Investigations took into account complaints, Turley's activities on the Municipal Council and as a developer and landowner and a request from the city for an ethical investigation, although they only looked at possible criminal activity, not any ethical questions.

The evidence gathered supported seven counts of communications fraud, two counts of exploitation of a vulnerable adult and one count of a pattern of unlawful activity. This came a week after the group of 23 citizens again approached the city and asked for an investigation and the meeting itself devolved into mayhem.



Accusations

Those that made it through the county attorney's screening process may not have been the charges expected. According to documents filed with 4th District Court in Provo, the investigator obtained evidence that Turley "engaged in a course of conduct to defraud others or obtain money, property or other items by means of false of fraudulent pretenses, representations, promises or material omissions," through which he received property with a value of more than $5,000. Some of these will sound familiar; others may not.

Turley's activities started raising eyebrows most publicly in 2009, when he approached the city about doing reclamation work in Slate Canyon. He told residents and the Municipal Council that he had no interest in profits. The construction company with which he was negotiating, however, bought more than $1 million in equipment because of Turley's representations that this would be a significant mining project, according to court documents. When Turley was challenged about the amount of gravel to be removed, he told the council it was about a third of the amount he'd told the construction company; he also admitted he could profit from developing the land.

Other charges dealt with a two-year court case about a million-dollar tract of land in Diamond Fork Canyon. According to the probable cause statements, Turley in June 2009 presented a copy of a check for $2.645 million to the attorney for Trudy Childs, who owns 2,500 acres in Diamond Fork Canyon; Turley represented that those funds were available to enforce a 90-day option he held to buy the property. The county investigator found that Turley did not have the actual check, and the owner of the funds did not intend to allow Turley to use the money. Turley sued Childs two years ago to enforce the contract; the lawsuit has been tied up in dueling paperwork ever since. Turley claimed that he gave childs a 90-day, $30,000 loan and she gave him an option to buy her property if she didn't pay him in 90 days. She didn't; he tried to exercise the option. Childs claimed that she only intended to give him an option on 80 acres of her property and that he falsified paperwork to get all of her land.

That's not the only lawsuit that mixes in with the charges. One of the counts against Turley alleges that in November 2007, he had an elderly person sign over property using a quitclaim deed; he would then deed another property in exchange for that. The transfer of property never happened, and Turley then took out a loan using the man's original property, which has since gone into foreclosure. This is likely Ted Taylor's property, the Carpenter Seed building on South State Street in Provo. Taylor sued Turley early last year; he claimed he didn't intend to sell Turley the land on which his building sat and he also never got the townhouse that was supposed to be built on the land west of the store.

In another case, Turley sued the person he's now being charged with victimizing. Between Aug. 1, 2007, and June 30, 2008, Turley, while doing business with someone who is elderly and also reportedly has physical and mental impairment, "unjustly or improperly used or managed the resources of the victim by purporting to have her sign over her life lease on her residence without any compensation, and without her understanding what she signed, or if she signed," according to the documents. This is likely the case dealing with Deanna Thorn, who owned a home and Brand X Burger in Springville. He still has a lawsuit pending against her.

In June 2008, Turley met with the business owner, presumably Thorn, and negotiated with her to re-open a local restaurant in Springville, then he leased the same property to someone else at about the same time, according to the documents.

Several counts dealt with his property development. According to documents, in December 2006, Turley had a potential homebuyer sign a purchasing agreement raising the offer price of a home Turley was building to $265,000, but promised that the final price would still be $172,000. Turley then allegedly used the new agreement, absent the lower final price, to get an extension on a loan from the bank, which the bank would not have provided with the complete information.

In January 2007, while building two homes, Turley allegedly ordered cabinets for accessory apartments in the homes knowing that city zoning did not allow for accessory apartments, but told the potential homebuyers they were acceptable, which allowed him to charge more for the homes. He sold four of these homes; all later had financial difficulty and two were going through foreclosure.

Finally, in September 2007, a person moved into a home Turley owned, and Turley said he was going to deed the house to him. The documents state that deed was never recorded and couldn't be because Turley didn't have clear title to the home. He then listed that home as an asset in a loan application.

Turley was elected in 2003, re-elected in 2007 and is up for re-election this year; he is not running again. He is currently serving as a high council member in the Provo Bonneville Stake of the LDS Church.



Read more: http://www.heraldextra.com/news/local/central/provo/article_341120bc-b8a7-11e0-a5e9-001cc4c03286

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Posted by: fossilman ( )
Date: June 01, 2012 03:32PM

Wow. Just noticed my cousin's name on this list. Knew he was in trouble for something, and heard that he was spending time in prison, but didn't know what it was for. He never seemed the kind of person that would fraud people of money. Funny how that is. As a kid he was a really fun guy, and I enjoyed spending time with him.

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Posted by: Flyer ( )
Date: June 01, 2012 12:43PM


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Posted by: Once More ( )
Date: June 01, 2012 12:47PM

The perp pictured with Mitt Romney:
http://jamescatledge.com/images/james_04f.jpg

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Posted by: xyz ( )
Date: June 01, 2012 12:54PM

the eBay billionaire and California gubernatorial candidate who bought Princeton University a new $30,000,000 dorm complex and thus bought her son Griffith Rutherford Harsh V out of a rape charge.

Catledge is batting a thousand in the "hanging with scumbags" category...

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Posted by: m ( )
Date: June 01, 2012 01:00PM

James paid his own way through college and his two-year LDS mission. James's mother, Janie, made certain he achieved the rank of Eagle Scout, the highest honor in scouting. Janie said, "No Eagle means no driver's license," and that was all he needed to know.

When James was a young man, his mother also gave him great advice. She told him it was more important to be focused and to dream big rather than just to dream. She promised if he did that, he could accomplish anything. After graduation from high school, James moved west to attend college. At age 19 he was called to serve a mission for his church. As a missionary he found his passion in serving others. Working in northern California he was able to serve hundreds. Later he enrolled at Brigham Young University where he studied Business and Communications.

http://jamescatledge.com/about.html

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Posted by: GNPE ( )
Date: June 01, 2012 01:12PM

the mormon guy is J. Byran Catledge.

he's on the short list for the next GA vacancy.

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Posted by: xyz ( )
Date: June 01, 2012 01:17PM

The photos are of the same guy.

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Posted by: GNPE ( )
Date: June 01, 2012 06:42PM

I was more into the name thing: J Byran Catledge...

oh well, it's Friday.

Pls return to what you were about.

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Posted by: xyz ( )
Date: June 01, 2012 06:44PM

LOL! I'm slow today - I just 'got' what you were referring to!

Carry on!

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Posted by: pamarnold ( )
Date: June 01, 2012 03:15PM

While he was on his mission (Santa Rosa, CA) he swept me off my feet and promised me a lifetime together. He wrote the most beautiful love letters with promises of eternity and a large family. I bought my wedding dress and when I told him (after he was at BYU) he dumped me cold. No explanation what so ever. I felt totally violated. He is a big scam artist. I do feel for his wife and children. They are the innocent victims in situations like this. I posted the article this morning on my facebook and one of my friends said he deceived us all. She had been there witnesses the greatest emotional scam of me. Sad. Thank God I didn't marry him though. Everything works out for a reason.

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Posted by: anon90 ( )
Date: June 01, 2012 03:25PM

"My name is James B. Catledge. I am a husband, father, con-artist, and I'm a mormon.

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Posted by: Outcast ( )
Date: June 01, 2012 03:39PM

"James B. Catledge, 44, used a multilevel marketing operation to raise the millions with false promises"

Funny how so many Mormons seem bent on this method of making a living...seems like they must have learned it from somewhere in their environment...hmmm!

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Posted by: jaredsotherbrother ( )
Date: June 01, 2012 03:53PM

From his "I'm a Mormon" bullshit nugget:

"The mormon faith is full of human beings who want to be better than our natural instincts would have us be."

Thank God for the "mormon faith", otherwise his natural instincts would have him be a serial killer or puppy molester.

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Posted by: heyimginger ( )
Date: June 01, 2012 06:42PM

jaredsotherbrother Wrote:
-------------------------------------------------------
> From his "I'm a Mormon" bullshit nugget:
>
> "The mormon faith is full of human beings who want
> to be better than our natural instincts would have
> us be."
>
> Thank God for the "mormon faith", otherwise his
> natural instincts would have him be a serial
> killer or puppy molester.


I love the part about human instincts.

The late well known atheist, Christopher Hitchens, on many occasions would ask the audience during his debates:

"If you saw a pregnant woman on the ground being kicked in the stomach, how would that make you feel?"

If the audience was christian, they would act sort of confused, unable to answer the question without first considering "what would Jesus do."

On the other hand, if the audience was mostly atheists, agnostic, or non-religous folks, then the large majority of the attendees would be awe struck by the absurdity of Hitchen's question. Why? Well, to the atheists, the obvious answer in this case is the "deeply human reaction", which is: upon seeing the woman being kicked in the stomach, one becomes absolultey horrified to the point of wishing swift death or judgement upon the person doing the kicking.

Perhaps the scariest part about religion, is the question posed by those who profess to know of a higher power guiding our lives:

"But if there wasn't a God, then why wouldn't I go around killing people and commting adultery all day, what's to stop us from doing that."

Indeed, there is nothing stopping them from eathing children, their own feces, or screwing their own dog. Is this not completely insane that they've managed to weed out their own humnan nature so that if god doesn't exist then their only other reaction is to eat children, screw animals, and eat feces? Oh yes, it certainly is the most asinine form of insanity I can think of.

For this reason, each night before I go to bed, I give thanks to our ancestoers who were sufficiently dullisional to profess prophetic powers thereby reteaching "human instincts" to those less fortunate souls who seem to have lost thier humanity. I guess that without the "I'm a Mormon" videos that profesy of the goodness of the flying spaghetti monsters teachings, then we'd be having our faces eaten off right this very moment by our next door neighbors; it kind of makes me want to get down on my knees and praise evolution for creating a nut-job like Joseph Smith and others.

Yes, the disbelief in God combined with the belief that many humans need a God to relearn their humanity actually forces me to believe in a God and thank him for protecting me from those humans who hestiate to react upon seeing a pregnant woman kicked in the stomach. Yes, this is a viscious and circular cycle of disbelief resulting in belief, I've named it "circular atheistianity"; for thse who've been converted to this belief by reading my post, please feel free to update the "religion" secion of your facebook profile with this new religion.



Edited 4 time(s). Last edit at 06/01/2012 06:49PM by heyimginger.

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Posted by: Zeezromp ( )
Date: June 01, 2012 05:32PM

If found guilty and successfully prosecuted then hopefully the church will be ordered to pay any tithes back to the authorities who try to rescue whats left of the assets?

Shocking stuff and just shows what dangers lurk behind the 'I'm a Mormon' Bullshit.

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Posted by: Sister_Twister ( )
Date: June 01, 2012 06:13PM

I know the house in the background. It's in the riverbottoms in provo, where all the great scam artists live.

It should be called the 'bottom feeders' subdivision.

So glad I don't live in Happy Valley anymore, it's getting too dangerous.

Here's a joke:
How do you boil Holy water?

Answer:
You boil the hell out of it.

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Posted by: He's our man! ( )
Date: June 13, 2012 02:48PM

can you tell me what business is located at this address?


1774 N University Pkwy Ste 60 Provo, UT

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Posted by: Riverman ( )
Date: June 13, 2012 07:34PM

it is Jamba Juice

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Posted by: 3X ( )
Date: June 01, 2012 07:17PM

Mr. Catledge's exposition, "How I Live My Faith" - a classic:


"By trying hard to practice what I believe. My faith is very much a part of me, I am optimistic and courageous as a father because of what i know to be true about my Father in heaven and his son Jesus Christ. They love me and want me to be happy. They effect the choices I make and guide me as I make tough life choices. As a businessman and father, tough choices are not always clear. My faith gives me the reassurance that even the wrong path can be a great lesson and forgiveness is blessing afforded to me and everyone else who understands."

http://mormon.org/me/421T/

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Posted by: lilygeorge ( )
Date: June 01, 2012 09:51PM

It was a Multi level marketing scheme AND it revolved around Timeshares??? What kind of idiot still exists that would not run away from the sales pitch on this one? oh...

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Posted by: That's our man! ( )
Date: June 05, 2012 01:41PM

m Wrote:
-------------------------------------------------------
> Is this the same guy that spoke to The Marriott
> School of Business?
>
> http://bx.businessweek.com/marriott-school-of-mana
> gement/byu-marriott-school-of-business-invites-jam
> es-catledge-president-and-ceo-net-worth-solutions-
> to-speak-to-students/8182260533480894282-00118bf47
> 0ef5db48392cf2732cebc72/


That's our man!
JAMES BRYAN CATLEDGE
recently moved back to HENDERSON FROM RNCHO SANTA FE

http://scam.com/showthread.php?t=140060&page=12

http://www.sec.gov/litigation/litreleases.shtml

LR-22382 May 31, 2012 James B. Catledge, Derek F.C. Elliott, EMI Resorts (S.V.G.) Inc., EMI Sun Village, Inc. and Sun Village Juan Dolio, Inc.
See also: SEC Complaint

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Posted by: That's our man! ( )
Date: June 05, 2012 01:41PM


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Posted by: GET HIM ( )
Date: June 05, 2012 01:42PM


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Posted by: m ( )
Date: June 02, 2012 12:12PM

top...

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Posted by: Jonny the Smoke ( )
Date: June 05, 2012 02:50PM

I noticed he mentioned nothing about being honest in his "I'm a mormon" thingy...but he does mention this.....here is his out for his illegal deeds....

"As a businessman and father, tough choices are not always clear. My faith gives me the reassurance that even the wrong path can be a great lesson and forgiveness is blessing afforded to me and everyone else who understands."

So he can make a "tough choice" in business and go down a "wrong path"....but it's all OK because forgiveness is a blessing afforded to...HIM!!!!!!

Wonderful!

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Posted by: scooter ( )
Date: June 13, 2012 02:55PM


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Posted by: Minnie ( )
Date: June 13, 2012 03:02PM

considering the tie to mormonism and creating their own 'truth' I wonder if they couldn't use the defense that it's a religious practice.

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Posted by: GNPE ( )
Date: June 13, 2012 03:45PM

Step 1 in the 'MormonScam' plan:

Be a 'worthy' PH holder, bear your testimonkey often; add a slight touch of Humility. Make sure that you (give the appearance of) moving in the upper circles of Mo Royalty, given what area you're grooming to be your 'investors'.
Bright & Shiny: spouse & kids; New Car (as close to TSMs as possible), lodgings in the best section of town, immaculately manicured.

NOT TO BE CONFUSED WITH being a legit TBM;
(think anyone will be able to tell the difference?)



Edited 1 time(s). Last edit at 06/13/2012 03:47PM by guynoirprivateeye.

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Posted by: T-Bone ( )
Date: June 13, 2012 07:16PM

Hurry up and save a copy of his, "And I'm Mormon" page before the corporation puts it down the memory hole.

T-Bone

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