| For
Release: June 18, 2001
Court Appoints Temporary Receiver over
International Pyramid Operation
Illegal Scheme Claims It Is Operating in
200 Countries World Wide
The Federal Trade Commission has asked a U. S.
District Court Judge to halt the unlawful operations of
SkyBiz.com, charging that the operation that purports to
sell online tutorials on Web-based products is actually
a massive illegal pyramid scheme which may have conned
consumers around the world out of approximately
$175,000,000. At the request of the FTC, Chief Judge
Terry C. Kern has temporarily halted all unlawful
activities of the SkyBiz operation, frozen the
defendants' assets to preserve them for consumer
redress, and appointed a receiver, pending the preliminary injunction hearing
scheduled for June 26, 2001.
The FTC suit was filed in U. S. District Court in the
Northern District of Oklahoma. The corporate and
individual defendants are based in Tulsa. The corporate
entities named in the suit include: SkyBiz.com, Inc;
World Service Corporation; Nanci Corporation
International; and WorldWide Service Corporation.
Several individual defendants were also named,
including: James S. Brown; Stephen D. McCullough; Elias
F. Masso; Nanci H. Masso; Kier E. Masso; and Ronald E.
Blanton.
In papers filed with the court, the FTC alleges that
since late 1998, the defendants have promoted a
work-at-home business opportunity with claims of quick
riches. One SkyBiz presentation claimed, "This
system was put together by a gentleman named Eric
Rasmussen who basically joined SkyBiz and six months
later was able to retire with an income of about 400,000
a month. Currently, [he] lives in the Gold Coast of
Australia and he's making 76,000 a week and
growing." In in-person sales presentations,
seminars, teleconferences, Web site presentations and in
other marketing material, the defendants touted the
opportunity to earn thousands of dollars a week by
recruiting new "Associates" into the program. They
provided CD-Roms, computer disks, videos and books
promoting the SkyBiz programs and they provide a
PowerPoint presentation on their website that can be
downloaded to aid in recruiting new members. The cost to
join the SkyBiz Program is $125, ostensibly used to buy
an "e-Commerce Web Pak," but in reality was to purchase
the right to receive compensation for recruiting
additional participants. Participants were urged to
invest in more than one "Web Pak," to maximize their
earning potential.
The FTC charged that the claims that consumers who
invested in SkyBiz would make substantial income were
false; that failure to disclose that most people in
pyramid schemes lose money is deceptive; that defendant
provided the means and instrumentalities for others to
deceive consumers by providing speakers and promotional
materials that made the false and misleading claims; and
that SkyBiz was actually an illegal pyramid scheme. All
four violate the FTC Act.
The complaint was filed by the FTC in U.S. District
Court for the Northern District of Oklahoma on May 30,
2001, under seal. The seal was lifted June 8,
2001. |