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PAYMENT PROCESSOR PLEADS GUILTY

march 26, 2012
Preet Bharara, the United States Attorney for the Southern District of New York, Announced that CHAD ELIE, a payment processor who worked with Internet poker companies, Pokerstars, Full Tilt Poker and Absolute Poker (the “Poker Companies”), pled guilty today to conspiring to commit bank fraud and operate illegal gambling businesses in connection with a scheme to deceive banks into processing hundreds of millions of dollars in Internet gambling transactions.

ELIE pled guilty today before U.S. District Judge Lewis A. Kaplan.

According to the Superseding Information filed today in Manhattan federal court, the indictment in which ELIE was initially charged, other documents previously filed in the case,
and statements made in court:

In late 2006, Congress enacted the Unlawful Internet Gambling Enforcement Act (“UIGEA”), making it a crime to “knowingly accept” most forms of payment “in connection with the participation of another person in unlawful Internet gambling.” After several Internet
gambling businesses withdrew from the U.S. market following the passage of the UIGEA, the Poker Companies became the top three Internet poker operators continuing to do business in the
United States. Because United States banks were largely unwilling to process Internet gambling payments, companies turned to third party payment processors, including ELIE, who disguised
payments so that they would appear unrelated to online gambling. ELIE and others lied to United States banks by claiming that the financial transactions they were processing were for businesses other than Internet poker companies, and they created phony corporations and
websites to disguise payments to the Poker Companies.

ELIE served as a payment processor for each of the three Poker Companies at various times from 2008 through early 2011. For example, in 2008, ELIE opened a bank account that he falsely represented would be used to process payments for “payday loans” in order to disguise
his processing of transactions for Pokerstars. In the summer of 2009, he opened an account at another bank, falsely claiming that it would be used to process payments for various Internet membership clubs. He then used it to process millions of dollars in payments for the Poker
Companies. When a bank employee questioned ELIE about the Transactions, he falsely denied that the transactions had anything to do with Internet gambling. Finally, beginning in the fall of 2009 and continuing into early 2011, ELIE offered to invest millions of dollars in three failing banks, including SunFirst Bank, in exchange for the banks’ agreements to process Internet poker transactions. All three banks have since been ordered closed by bank regulators.

* * *
ELIE, 32, of Las Vegas, Nevada, faces a maximum sentence of five years in prison. In
connection with his guilty plea, ELIE agreed to forfeit his interest in more than $25 million held
in various payment processing accounts in the United States and abroad and to pay an additional
$500,000 to the United States. The forfeited funds may be made available for remission as
necessary and appropriate in order to compensate the fraud victims in U.S. v. Pokerstars, et al.
11 Civ. 2564 (LBS). ELIE will be sentenced by Judge Kaplan on October 6, 2012.
Mr. Bharara praised the FBI for its outstanding work in the investigation, which he noted
is ongoing. Mr. Bharara also thanked Immigration and Customs Enforcement’s Homeland
Security Investigations New York and New Jersey offices for their continued assistance in the
investigation.

To date, five additional defendants charged with ELIE in the Superseding Indictment
have appeared in the United States – Bradley Franzen, Ira Rubin, Brent Beckley, Ryan Lang, and
John Campos. All have pled guilty except Campos, who is scheduled to go to trial on April 9,
2012 before Judge Kaplan. He is presumed innocent unless and until proven guilty.
This matter is being handled by the Office’s Complex Frauds Unit. Assistant U.S.
Attorneys Arlo Devlin-Brown, Andrew Goldstein, Niketh Velamoor, and Nicole Friedlander are
in charge of the criminal case, and Assistant U. S. Attorneys Sharon Cohen Levin, Jason Cowley,
and Michael Lockard are in charge of related civil money laundering and forfeiture actions.
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