Lack of co-operation stymies investigation into B.C. mortgage broker and missing $225M, court hears
Receiver says Greg Martel has not complied with court orders
Efforts tountangle the financial web of Victoria mortgage broker Greg Martel, whohas been accused of running his business like a Ponzi scheme, have hit a brick wall, according to investigators trying to locate the many millionshe owesto investors.
Receiver PricewaterhouseCoopers (PwC) said in a report that Martel has not complied with court orders to produce financial documents and a sworn list of assets and has ignored requests for communication.
The report also raisesmore serious concerns aboutMartel's conduct and citesan email from Martel attempting to move assets from one American bank to another, purportedly toremove them from the scope of the court order.
Martel and his company, My Mortgage Auction Corp (MMAC), also known as Shop Your Own Mortgage, owes hundreds, maybe thousands of investors$226 million, according to aPwClist of unsecured creditors.
Martel's whereabouts are uncertain, and so far, investigators have not located the missing millions, nor have they recovered records proving the investments he sold actually existed.
Investor Ayla Stimpsoncame to B.C. Supreme Court in Vancouver Wednesday to witness the proceedings in person.
Stimpson, who is due to give birth to her first child in two weeks, put in $300,000 in November 2022 after two Shop Your Own Mortgage employees assured her the investment was sound.
"I don't think that I'll ever see my money again," she said. "It's becoming clear that he's not co-operating, and there are nofunds to pay back investors what they are owed."
Martel's lawyer,Ritchie Clark, claimed in an email his client is having trouble complying with court orders because he is "out of the jurisdiction due to having received a number of death threats and threats of violence to his family."
According to Clark, Martel also said he washaving trouble accessing his records because staff at a number of his companies had quit.
But Justice Shelley Fitzpatrick was having none of the excuses, telling Clark that his client was putting himself in serious legal jeopardy by ignoring the court.
"I think it's manifestly the case that the information that has been requested either will be in his possessionor control," said Fitzpatrick.
"The receiver's undisputed investigation ... indicates that he was the one running this company, and more critically, the one making these investments that all of these hundreds of investors are wanting to learn about in terms of recovery of loans made to the defendant."
Fitzpatrickrestated the court orderdemanding Martel produce records and an asset list with a new deadline of May 26.
She also granted expanded investigatory powers to the receiver to possibly pursue assets in the United States, where Martel is involved in a number of companies, along with a provision allowing itto assign MMAC into bankruptcyif it deems it necessary.
"This court including myself personally do not take failure to abide by court orders lightly, and I sincerely hope [Martel] will fully appreciate that," said Fitzpatrick.
The next court date is June 9.