When retired race car driver, Tommy Constantine, and financial advisor, Phillip Kenner, were convicted in a high-profile fraud case, they were sentenced to 10 and 17 years in prison respectively. The two were found guilty of scamming several National Hockey League (NHL) players, among other victims, out of millions of dollars through a series of deceptive real estate and business ventures.
Kenner, originally from Arizona, and Constantine, the founder of the Playboy Racing Team, were convicted of charges including wire fraud and money laundering conspiracy by a federal jury in Central Islip, New York, after a 10-week trial. The duo’s scheme, which spanned from 2002 to 2013, managed to net them $30 million.
Kenner appealed the 2015 conviction, and at the start of this week the US Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit has ruled that the financial advisor isn’t entitled to a new trial. The court ruled that erroneous jury instructions didn’t affect the outcome of the trial, as the case didn’t rise or fall on Kenner’s credibility.
Kenner gained access to NHL players via a college friend who had been drafted into the league. He convinced at least 13 players to invest $100,000 each in a Hawaiian real estate venture. However, instead of investing the funds as promised, Kenner and his clandestine partner Constantine siphoned off the money, causing losses amounting to $13 million.
In another ruse, the pair tricked many of the same NHL clients into investing $1.4 million in Constantine’s prepaid debit card venture, Eufora, in 2008 and 2009. Instead of investing these funds, they were diverted into accounts controlled by Kenner and Constantine.
When their earlier schemes started unraveling, the deceptive pair conceived a new fraud,
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