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The $2.1 Million Party That Helped Expose One of America’s Most Infamous Corporate Frauds

The $2.1 Million Party That Helped Expose One of America’s Most Infamous Corporate Frauds

The $2.1 Million Party That Helped Expose One of America’s Most Infamous Corporate Frauds
Michael Loccisano / Getty Images Entertainment via Getty Images
Charles Ponzi
Public Domain / Wikimedia Commons
Michael Milken
Alberto E. Rodriguez / Getty Images Entertainment via Getty Images
Ivan Boesky
Archive Photos / Getty Images
Martin Frankel
Darrin Klimek / Getty Images
Jordan Belfort
Michael Loccisano / Getty Images Entertainment via Getty Images
Telemarketing fraudsters
Alexandra Iakovleva / E+ via Getty Images
Richard Scrushy
Gary Tramontina / Getty Images News via Getty Images
Bernie Madoff
Mario Tama / Getty Images News via Getty Images
Nick Leeson
Koichi Kamoshida / Getty Images
James McDermott Jr.
hxdbzxy / iStock via Getty Images
Sam Waksal
Stephen Chernin / Getty Images News via Getty Images
Barry Minkow
AndreyPopov / iStock via Getty Images
Kenneth Lay and Jeffrey Skilling
Dave Einsel / Getty Images News via Getty Images
John Rigas
Spencer Platt / Getty Images News via Getty Images
Martha Stewart
Denis Contreras / Getty Images
Joe Nacchio
Public Domain / Wikimedia Commons
Bernie Ebbers
Chris Hondros / Getty Images News via Getty Images
Aviv Mizrahi and Aryeh Greenes
Courtesy of FBI.Gov Archives
Dennis Kozlowski and Mark Swartz
Michael Nagle / Getty Images News via Getty Images
Sam Israel
Public Domain / Wikimedia Commons
Allen Stanford
Public Domain / Wikimedia Commons
Wells Fargo bank
Sundry Photography / iStock Editorial via Getty Images
Jérôme Kerviel
Max malafosse/CC BY-SA 4.0
Samuel Bankman-Fried
Alex Wong / Getty Images News via Getty Images
Jack Abramoff
Alex Wong / Getty Images News via Getty Images
The $2.1 Million Party That Helped Expose One of America’s Most Infamous Corporate Frauds
Charles Ponzi
Michael Milken
Ivan Boesky
Martin Frankel
Jordan Belfort
Telemarketing fraudsters
Richard Scrushy
Bernie Madoff
Nick Leeson
James McDermott Jr.
Sam Waksal
Barry Minkow
Kenneth Lay and Jeffrey Skilling
John Rigas
Martha Stewart
Joe Nacchio
Bernie Ebbers
Aviv Mizrahi and Aryeh Greenes
Dennis Kozlowski and Mark Swartz
Sam Israel
Allen Stanford
Wells Fargo bank
Jérôme Kerviel
Samuel Bankman-Fried
Jack Abramoff

The $2.1 Million Party That Helped Expose One of America’s Most Infamous Corporate Frauds

White-collar crime is often built on trust. Investors, employees, customers, and shareholders all rely on executives, fund managers, advisers, and corporate leaders to handle money honestly. When that trust is broken, the damage can stretch far beyond one company or one balance sheet. Some financial crimes wipe out retirement savings, destroy businesses, shake markets, and leave ordinary people paying the price for decisions made behind closed doors.

My Investment News looks at some of the most infamous white-collar criminals and corporate fraud cases in history, including the Tyco scandal tied to former CEO Dennis Kozlowski. Kozlowski became notorious for extravagant spending, including a $2.1 million birthday party for his wife in Sardinia, about half of which was reportedly paid for by Tyco. He and former CFO Mark Swartz were later convicted in 2005 in connection with unauthorized bonuses, improper loans, and other misuse of company funds.

The list also includes modern financial scandals such as FTX founder Sam Bankman-Fried, who was sentenced in March 2024 to 25 years in prison after being convicted on fraud and conspiracy charges tied to the collapse of the cryptocurrency exchange. These cases show how fraud can appear in many forms, from Ponzi schemes and accounting scandals to unauthorized trading, fake accounts, investor deception, and the misuse of customer funds.

For investors, these stories are more than courtroom history. They are reminders that impressive returns, famous founders, prestigious companies, and polished public images do not eliminate risk. Understanding how these scandals unfolded can help explain why transparency, oversight, audited financials, and healthy skepticism matter whenever money is involved.

Here are the most infamous white-collar criminals in history.

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