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Press Release

Scammer who re-victimized unhappy investors sentenced to 30 months in prison

For Immediate Release
U.S. Attorney's Office, Western District of Washington
Accepted thousands in payments while making false claims that he could recover money from bad investments

Seattle – A former Seattle resident who relocated to Laguna Niguel, California in the midst of his fraud scheme, was sentenced today in U.S. District Court in Seattle to 30 months in prison for mail fraud, announced U.S. Attorney Brian T. Moran.  Between 2011 and 2014, TROY CLINTON VAN SICKLE, 48, fraudulently operated an asset recovery business that defrauded unhappy investors who previously had lost money they had invested with a Bellevue investment company.  At sentencing, U.S. District Judge James L. Robart found that VAN SICKLE,  had been living a life of crime since he was 21, and had shown no respect for the law. 

According to records filed in the case, during May and June 2011, VAN SICKLE represented to the unhappy investors that he had a company, Troy C. Van Sickle Consulting and Collections, and that for a fee he could help them recover their lost funds.  VAN SICKLE falsely claimed that he had helped other investors recover large sums, and, in order to win investors’ trust, VAN SICKLE made various promises, including entering into a romantic relationship with one of the investors. 

In February of 2012, VAN SICKLE moved to California.  After he moved, VAN SICKLE’s agent told the investors that if they loaned him $75,000, he would (1) use the money in order to recover their lost investment, and (2) repay the $75,000 in 30 days.  In fact, VAN SICKLE planned to use the money for his own purposes, including paying his rent through the end of the year, and did not intend to repay the investors.  In July 2013, after one of the investors who loaned VAN SICKLE funds repeatedly sought the return of the money he loaned VAN SICKLE, VAN SICKLE sent the investor an invoice with false charges purporting to explain how VAN SICKLE had used the loaned funds in order to try to recover the investor’s funds.

Over the course of the scheme, VAN SICKLE fraudulently took in $75,000.  Under the terms of the Plea Agreement, in addition to repaying the investors that $75,000, VAN SICKLE has agreed to repay the investors an additional $175,000 in funds that he received from the investors. 

The case was investigated by the FBI and the Washington State Department of Financial Institutions.  The case is being prosecuted by Assistant United States Attorneys Arlen Storm and Andre Penalver

Contact

Press contact for the U.S. Attorney’s Office is Communications Director Emily Langlie at (206) 553-4110 or Emily.Langlie@usdoj.gov.

Updated September 30, 2019

Topic
Financial Fraud