Financial Fraud • Targeted Exploitation • Federal Courts
The $16M Ponzi Scheme Which Targeted African American Christians
A CEO sold a dream of wealth and community prosperity to over 400 Black Christian families. He used their money to pay his own bills. Then he spent years in court trying to avoid the consequences.
Ephren Taylor II stood in front of Black Christian congregations across America, called himself a wealth-builder and a man of community, and then took $16 million (enough to fund a community health clinic for a decade) from over 400 families and spent it on his own payroll.
A “Building Wealth Tour” Built On Lies
Ephren Taylor II ran City Capital Corporation as its CEO. On paper, he was a young Black entrepreneur offering something rare: a pathway to wealth specifically designed for African American and Christian communities. He promoted promissory notes and investments centered on sweepstakes machines, packaging the pitch as socially conscious capitalism for people who had historically been shut out of investment opportunities.
The money never went where he said it would. Federal court documents confirm that the investments were not invested as promised. Instead, every dollar that poured in from trusting investors went directly toward paying City Capital’s ongoing business expenses, including salaries. Taylor’s operation was, in the words of federal prosecutors, “a Ponzi scheme designed to build his own personal wealth.”
Ponzi schemes survive only as long as new money keeps flowing in. When City Capital’s stream of fresh investor funds dried up in 2010, the entire structure collapsed. There was no investment portfolio to recover. There were no returns to cash out. There was only the wreckage: over 400 families, and more than $16 million (roughly $40,000 per victim, the equivalent of a year’s salary for millions of American workers) gone.
The Collapse: Victims, Losses & Sentence at a Glance
He Knew Exactly Who He Was Targeting
Taylor did not stumble upon his victims. He sought them out with precision. The court record is explicit: Taylor focused his sales pitches on African American and Christian communities. These were communities with historical reasons to distrust traditional financial institutions, communities where a young Black man preaching financial empowerment on a “Building Wealth Tour” would earn trust fast. Taylor weaponized that trust.
The framing of the pitch as community-focused wealth-building made it harder for victims to question the scheme. When someone claims to be uplifting your community while also promising returns, the act of skepticism can feel like a betrayal of the group. Taylor exploited exactly that social dynamic. Every dollar raised came with the moral weight of community progress attached to it.
In June 2014, the Department of Justice indicted Taylor on fifteen counts related to his fraudulent schemes. He pleaded guilty to one count of conspiracy to commit wire fraud and mail fraud. The court sentenced him to 235 months (nearly 20 years) in federal prison, plus three years of supervised release, and ordered him to pay $15,590,752.81 (enough to fully cover the annual operating budget of a mid-sized community nonprofit) in restitution to his victims.
What $16 Million in Stolen Trust Actually Costs
Forty thousand dollars. That is the rough average loss per victim when you divide $16 million across 400-plus people. But no spreadsheet captures what $40,000 actually represents in the life of a family who placed it in the hands of a man they believed was building a better future for their community. That is a down payment on a home. A child’s college fund. A retirement nest egg that took a decade to accumulate. For people who have generational wealth stolen from them, losing it to someone who called himself a community champion is a particular kind of devastation.
The mechanism of the betrayal matters. Taylor did not target random strangers. He targeted African American and Christian communities, two groups united by shared history, shared faith, and shared economic exclusion from mainstream financial systems. For generations, Black communities in America have faced redlining, discriminatory lending, and systematic exclusion from the kinds of wealth-building tools that white families accessed freely. Taylor walked into that historical wound and poured salt into it. He positioned himself as the antidote to that exclusion. He was the poison wearing the antidote’s face.
The faith dimension of this betrayal compounds the harm in ways that are difficult to quantify. These were Christian communities. They were making investments that aligned with their values, or so they believed. The “Building Wealth Tour” carried the implicit blessing of spiritual community. When a fellow believer invites you to invest in something that will help your people, the act of trusting that person is itself an act of faith. Taylor converted that sacred act of communal trust into a transaction that served only himself. That is a desecration, and it echoes far beyond the financial loss.
The ripple effects of this kind of scheme reach into every corner of a victim’s life. People who lose their savings do not just lose money; they lose options. They cannot absorb an unexpected medical bill. They cannot help a child who needs help. They cannot retire when their bodies say it is time. They carry the shame of having been deceived, even though the shame belongs entirely to the person who deceived them. And in tight-knit communities built on shared faith and shared struggle, the social wounds of a scheme like this travel through the whole network: who else do you trust now? Who else was in on it? The damage to communal cohesion, to the very social fabric that Taylor claimed to be strengthening, is permanent and immeasurable.
Straight From the Court Documents: The Damning Record
The following are direct statements and quotations drawn verbatim from the federal court record in United States v. Ephren Taylor, II, Eleventh Circuit Court of Appeals, filed September 10, 2025. These are not interpretations. This is the official record.
“Taylor focused his sales pitches on African American and Christian communities. Taylor falsely represented the revenues and returns of his touted investments, which were not invested as promised. Instead, the investments were used to pay ongoing business expenses, including salaries and other payments.” Eleventh Circuit Court of Appeals, Opinion of the Court, United States v. Taylor
“City Capital depended on a continuous stream of investor funds, which dried up in 2010 and caused investors to lose their money. Taylor’s operation, described as ‘a Ponzi scheme designed to build his own personal wealth,’ involved over 400 victims who lost over $16 million.” Eleventh Circuit Court of Appeals, Opinion of the Court, citing U.S. Attorney’s Office for the N. Dist. of Ga. (Mar. 17, 2015)
“The District Court sentenced him to 235 months’ incarceration, three years of supervised release, and ordered him to pay $15,590,752.81 in restitution.” Eleventh Circuit Court of Appeals, Opinion of the Court, United States v. Taylor
“In October 2014, Taylor pleaded guilty to one count of conspiracy to commit wire fraud and mail fraud under 18 U.S.C. §§ 1341 and 1349.” Eleventh Circuit Court of Appeals, Opinion of the Court, United States v. Taylor
“Taylor consistently attempted to add claims challenging the judgment that authorized his confinement in his later-filed motions… Taylor’s opportunistic attempts to leverage the limited remand to tack on more claims to the pending appeal of his original § 2255 motion are foreclosed.” Eleventh Circuit Court of Appeals, Opinion of the Court, United States v. Taylor
A Decade of Legal Maneuvering While Victims Got Nothing Back
Fifteen to Twenty Separate Filings. Years of Court Time. Victims Still Waiting.
After his conviction, Taylor mounted a years-long legal campaign. Between 2016 and 2020, he filed somewhere between fifteen and twenty separate pro se motions and filings across two courts and three separate appeals. The Eleventh Circuit described the resulting procedural tangle as a “lamentable” complication that illustrated exactly why strict gatekeeping rules exist for habeas petitions.
In 2019 alone, Taylor filed a motion for reconsideration, a notice of appeal, an amended notice of appeal, a Rule 60(b) motion, and during a narrow legal “limited remand” window meant only for addressing a certificate of appealability, he filed seven additional motions. The court records describe this as an attempt to “hijack the limited remand” to tack on new legal claims. The appellate court was direct about what it saw: opportunism dressed as legal argument.
Each filing consumed judicial resources. Each hearing, response, and ruling took time from an already strained federal court system. And while Taylor’s legal team (eventually, he received appointed counsel for his appeal) constructed procedural argument after procedural argument, the 400-plus victims were simply waiting for a restitution payment system that has historically been inadequate at actually returning money to fraud victims.
Timeline of Key Legal Events: 2014–2025
He Argued His Lawyer Failed Him. The Court Said Otherwise.
Taylor’s first major post-conviction motion argued ineffective assistance of counsel across four grounds: his attorney misadvised him on the plea agreement, failed to object to sentencing enhancements, failed to raise his Xanax and alcohol use at sentencing, and failed to raise his cooperation with the government. The court reviewed all four claims and rejected all four. On the drug use issue, the court noted the information was already in the Pre-Sentence Investigation Report and Taylor had been recommended for a drug-treatment program.
On the cooperation claim, the court made a pointed observation: only the Government, not the defense, can formally move for a sentence reduction based on cooperation. Taylor’s lawyer had raised his cooperation at sentencing. The system simply did not reward it the way Taylor hoped.
The Damage That Doesn’t Show Up in the Court Record
Economic Inequality: Stealing From the People Who Could Least Afford It
Investment fraud disproportionately destroys communities that already have the least. The Federal Reserve’s Survey of Consumer Finances consistently documents the racial wealth gap in America: white families hold roughly eight times the wealth of Black families on average. Against that backdrop, Taylor’s specific targeting of African American communities carries a magnitude of harm that a dollar figure alone fails to convey.
When a scheme like this collapses, it does not just wipe out a bank balance. It wipes out the financial headroom that allows people to take economic risks, absorb shocks, and build toward the next generation. Generational wealth transfer, already dramatically harder for Black families due to centuries of legal and institutional exclusion, becomes impossible when the savings earmarked for that transfer are gone. The damage compounds across time in ways the court’s restitution order can never fully remediate.
The source documents confirm Taylor’s scheme drew over $16 million (roughly $40,000 per victim on average) out of communities that were specifically chosen because they were trusting and economically motivated to believe in an insider offering them access. That is a targeted extraction of resources from a systematically underserved population. The downstream effects, reduced ability to homeown, fund education, retire with dignity, or pass assets to children, persist for decades in affected families.
Public Health: The Stress Economy of Financial Betrayal
The American Psychological Association consistently documents financial stress as one of the leading drivers of physical and mental health decline in the United States. For fraud victims, that stress carries an additional layer: the psychological injury of betrayal by someone they trusted. Research on financial trauma documents elevated rates of anxiety, depression, sleep disorders, and stress-related physical illness among people who have suffered significant financial fraud.
In tight-knit faith communities, the public dimension of victimization adds further psychological weight. Victims of schemes like Taylor’s often report shame, even though they bear no responsibility for the fraud. That shame, in communities where financial vulnerability carries stigma, can prevent people from seeking help, reporting fraud, or trusting institutions that might actually serve them in the future. The public health cost of that deterred help-seeking cascades outward and never appears in a restitution order.
Who’s Watching and What You Can Do
Taylor is serving a federal sentence. The restitution order of $15,590,752.81 (equivalent to 50 family homes) stands. But restitution orders and actual payments to victims are two very different things. The regulatory and watchdog bodies below are the institutions empowered to prevent the next Ephren Taylor.
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