
"He stole my life savings," Gary Liebschner Carroll, Ohio, told ABC News.
Financial regulators have discovered that bales are "engaged in fraud, breach of fiduciary duty, churning, unauthorized trading and inadequate investment," says the report filed in 2003 on the balls. Bales and his associates were sentenced to pay $ 1.274 million in compensatory damages and Liebschner penalty, but still do it, according to Liebschner.
"We do not know where he was," said ABC News Liebschner. "We have heard, the Bahamas, and all sorts of places."
Liebschner Bales said he admitted after the news was appointed as a U.S. soldier accused of killing 16 Afghan citizens in a shootout.
Liebschner complained bales in May 2000, claiming Bales took his savings of $ 852,000 on AT & T shares and through a series of trade reduces its value to anything.
The retired Ohio Bales recalled as a "talker." Responding to a question, if he believes that crook Bales, Liebschner said, "You hit the nail on the head."
While Bales worked in a brokerage firm in Ohio, MPI.
In accordance with Federal records, the bales did not appear at the arbitration hearing to resolve a complaint Liebschner.
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