Citibank Accused Of Aiding $112 Million Ponzi Scheme That Targeted Haitian-American Community
A class-action lawsuit filed in Florida alleges that financial giant Citibank, N.A. served as a “critical linchpin” for a massive Ponzi scheme that defrauded over 1,500 investors of $112 million. The scheme, orchestrated by Royal Bengal Logistics, Inc. (RBL), specifically targeted vulnerable communities, including a majority of Haitian-American individuals in South Florida. The legal complaint details how Citibank, far from being a passive bystander, allegedly had “actual knowledge” of the fraud, flagged the account, and then proceeded to provide “substantial assistance” by manually green-lighting every transaction that kept the scheme alive.
The Anatomy of The Fraud
According to the court filing, RBL ran two classic Ponzi schemes from approximately August 2019 to June 2023. The “Equipment Scheme” solicited funds to purportedly purchase semi-trucks and trailers, while the “Loan Scheme” promised impossibly high, guaranteed returns on short-term loans. RBL promised investors returns ranging from 12.5% to as high as 325%.
RBL told investors their money was safe and that the company was a booming success with a fleet of over 200 trucks generating up to $1 million per month. The reality was a sham. The complaint states RBL’s trucking business actually operated at a loss of more than $18 million. To pay the “guaranteed” returns to existing investors, RBL used approximately $70 million of new investor money. This is the textbook definition of a Ponzi scheme: robbing Peter to pay Paul.
The Non-Financial Ledger: A Betrayal of Trust
This was not a simple financial crime. It was a calculated betrayal that exploited community trust. RBL’s scheme was surgically aimed at South Florida’s Haitian-American community and first responders, groups that often rely on tight-knit social networks. The promise of “guaranteed” high returns is a powerful lure for anyone trying to build generational wealth against a system that often works against them. RBL sold a dream of financial independence. It delivered a nightmare.
Citibank’s alleged role transforms this story from a standard fraud case into an indictment of corporate negligence. When people deposit money into a global bank like Citibank, they assume a basic level of security. The lawsuit claims that this trust was weaponized. After flagging RBL’s account for fraud, any illusion of safety should have been shattered. Instead, the bank is accused of becoming an active facilitator. Every deposit manually approved by a Citibank employee was another nail in the coffin for an unsuspecting family’s life savings.
Legal Receipts: The Allegations in Their Own Words
The court documents do not mince words when describing Citibank’s alleged role. These are not interpretations; they are the direct claims laid out in the official complaint against the bank.
“Citi not only maintained the account that RBL used to facilitate the fraudulent scheme (the ‘Account’) but, also, had actual control over each and every deposit made into the Account by unsuspecting investors. Indeed, as elaborated below, Citi flagged the Account for fraud, causing each and every deposit or withdrawal to be specifically approved by Citi before posting.”
“Yet, driven by Citi’s desire to gain more business from and make money on RBL, Citi engaged in a pattern of behavior that demonstrated its knowledge or willful ignorance of the Schemes. In either case, Citi acted in bad faith in enabling the Schemes to continue for months, costing innocent investors millions of dollars in the process.”
Societal Impact: Deepening Economic Inequality
The RBL-Citibank affair is a stark illustration of wealth extraction. $112 million was not lost in a risky but legitimate market venture; it was siphoned directly from working families and communities and diverted. The complaint alleges RBL used investor funds to “trade hundreds of millions of dollars of equities on margin,” a high-risk activity completely disconnected from the promised trucking business. This is a direct transfer of wealth from Main Street to a high-stakes casino, allegedly with a major bank holding the door open. When a financial institution fails to stop a fraud that targets a specific minority community, it reinforces and deepens existing economic inequality.
What Now? The Path to Accountability
The victims of this scheme are now seeking justice through the court system. But accountability must extend beyond a single lawsuit. The allegations suggest a catastrophic failure of compliance and ethics at one of the world’s most powerful banks. This requires systemic scrutiny.
Corporate Roles on Watch
The individuals responsible for compliance and risk management at Citibank during the period of August 2019 to June 2023 must be held accountable. Key roles under scrutiny should include:
- The Chief Compliance Officer at Citibank, N.A.
- The Head of Anti-Money Laundering (AML) Compliance
- The Board of Directors’ Risk Management Committee
Real change rarely comes from the top. It comes from organized, sustained pressure from below. Support mutual aid funds and legal defense organizations working with the affected communities. Demand that regulators enforce existing anti-money laundering laws with vigor. This case is a reminder that the financial system does not police itself. We, the people, are the last line of defense.
sources:
[1] https://www.sec.gov/enforcement-litigation/litigation-releases/lr-25755
[2] the attached PDF 🙂
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