close
close
Lawyers for alleged gold-scam victims seek involuntary bankruptcy for California firm

Lawyers for alleged gold-scam victims seek involuntary bankruptcy for California firm

Lawyers representing dozens of plaintiffs who claim they were swindled out of their retirement savings by a now defunct Los Angeles gold investor are trying to push the alleged scammers into federal bankruptcy to speed up any recovery.

According to a US Bankruptcy Court filing late last month, alleged victims of Oxford Gold Group LLC want to force the company into a Chapter 7 bankruptcy proceeding in order to collect more than $6 million in lost retirement savings.

The plaintiffs’ attorneys last week filed what’s called an involuntary petition for bankruptcy on behalf of 49 Oxford Gold victims.

The legal maneuver allows creditors, like the Oxford victims, to force a debtor into a proceeding where a trustee is appointed by the government to take find out what assets exist and take control over them to protect creditors like the Oxford victims. A hearing on the matter has been set for Sept. 11.

San Diego attorney Maria Severson, who co-represents scores of allegedly defrauded investors, said she is also seeking the appointment of a trustee to take over responsibility for whatever money is left.

“Each day that Oxford Gold remains in control, there will be waste and dissipation of assets,” she said. “Appointing an interim trustee is necessary to preserve the property of Oxford Gold and prevent loss of its assets and funds, if any are left, so that Oxford Gold victims have a chance at recovering some of their funds.”

Company executives were named in a class-action lawsuit filed last month in Los Angeles federal court.

The legal complaint accuses the defendants of accepting millions of dollars in retirement savings from investors who saw and heard commercials for Oxford Gold Group on local television and radio broadcasts.

It also names as a defendant the Equity Trust Co., an Ohio company that specializes in self-directed investment accounts focused on precious metals, cryptocurrency and other alternative assets. Company officials declined to comment on the lawsuit.

The Union-Tribune reported last month that an untold number of investors, including San Diego County residents, began receiving unsolicited letters from Equity Trust earlier this year alerting them that the Oxford Gold Group had not deposited the gold with Equity Trust that the investors were promised .