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Smirnow never let on that he was a lookout during a Canadian bank robbery in 2000 and was sentenced to four years in prison, according to the complaint and newspaper accounts. At the time, he was a construction worker contracted to do sewer work, the Sarnia Observer in Ontario has reported. Smirnow also has convictions, some dating to 1979, of burglary, drug trafficking and possessing stolen property in Canada, the complaint said. He told an employee that he was involved in a double homicide in Ontario and had organized crime ties there, according to an affidavit written by Jacob Gholson, a U.S. Postal Inspection Service inspector who investigated Smirnow's alleged scheme leading to Friday's charges. The affidavit was filed with the federal complaint. Using investors' funds, Smirnow at one point bought a $315,000 house in Ontario, Gholson wrote. Prosecutors believe Smirnow concocted the scheme in 2007, initially running it out of his rental home Baysville, Ontario. By the time it unraveled last year, it had attracted victims from every U.S. state except Maine and Vermont, the U.S. government says. Smirnow's investors were offered their choice of seven-, 15-, 30- and 60-day plans with varying rates of return, offering the average person investment opportunities generally only available to the very rich, prosecutors said. Some of Smirnow's earliest clients made substantial returns, but most investors lost everything, authorities said. The complaint concluded: "Pathway to Prosperity was a massive Ponzi scheme."
[Associated
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