Stephen Gerard Versalko was guilty of a $17.7million fraud
The Auckland bank investment adviser who lived the high
life for years on money stolen from clients was "nothing, if
not resourceful in the way he presented the investment
opportunities," the Serious Fraud Office says.
SFO director Adam Feeley, said last night that Stephen Gerard
Versalko, 51, stole $17.76 million over nine years from 30
wealthy ASB Bank customers by sheltering under the banner of
a bank that people trusted.
"He made it very clear that it was branded as part of the
ASB, so people figured: 'I'm not dealing with dealing with an
individual, I'm not dealing with an independent finance
adviser, I'm dealing with a bank, and I can trust a bank,"
said Mr Feeley. He used bank letterheads: "It was carried out
under the banner of a bank".
Versalko paid his victims back $4.6 million of their own
money in "returns" on their non-existent investments, while
splurging $3.4 million on two prostitutes: $800,000 to one
sex worker and about $2.6 million to the other.
Yesterday in Auckland District Court Judge Christopher Field
sentenced Versalko to six years imprisonment, with a minimum
non-parole period of four years jail.
Until he was caught out last August, the fraudster was used
to more plush accommodations: He bought a $3.2 million
Remuera home, a $1.8 million bach in the Coromandel town of
Whangapoua, and spent $500,000 on maintenance. He also spent
$313,000 on wine over a seven-year period.
Mr Feeley said he did not know where Versalko's family
thought his money was coming from: "I guess they thought he
was doing well at work, and in one sense, he was."
The investment adviser called himself "Mr Invincible" when
investigators caught up with him.
The nation's biggest employee fraud, it beats the $16.9m
Otago District Health Board chief information officer Michael
Andrew Swann, and business associate Kerry Harford
misappropriated through fake invoices.
Judge Field put the starting point for Versalko's sentence at
10-1/2 years, the same as was used for Swann, but gave the
Aucklander a bigger reduction for mitigating factors than
Swann, whose final sentence was 9-1/2 years jail with a
minimum non-parole period of 4-1/2 years.
Versalko's lawyer, Stuart Grieve, QC, told the court that one
of the prostitutes had blackmailed his client for $1.2m.
The SFO summary of facts said Versalko began the fraud in
2000, when he had a credit card debt of about $30,000, and
mainly targeted elderly women living outside of New Zealand,
with high-interest tax-free investments which were supposedly
government guaranteed. The clients tended not to access
account online.
ASB has paid out all the investors not only the principal
Versalko took from them but also all the interest they were
promised.
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