WASHINGTON — The government said Friday it obtained a court order to halt an alleged $34 million Ponzi scheme targeting federal employees and law enforcement agents nationwide with promises of safe investments in a nonexistent bond fund.
The Securities and Exchange Commission said the order issued Thursday by a federal judge in Miami also froze the assets of the estate of the late Kenneth Wayne McLeod, his consulting firm Federal Employee Benefits Group of Jacksonville, Fla., and an affiliated investment firm. The SEC alleged that McLeod and the firms defrauded an estimated 260 investors starting in 1988.
McLeod used their retirement savings to enrich himself and pay for lavish entertainment including yearly trips to the Super Bowl for himself and 40 friends, the SEC said in a civil complaint filed Thursday in federal court in Miami.
McLeod’s estate, the retirement benefits consulting firm and the investment firm, F&S Asset Management Group, don’t appear to be represented by an attorney, the SEC said. Representatives of the firms couldn’t immediately be located for comment Friday.
McLeod, who was 48 and lived in Jacksonville, died Tuesday. His body reportedly was found in a Jacksonville park with an apparent self-inflicted gunshot wound. Following his death, it is unclear who, if anyone, is in control of the two firms, the SEC said.
The SEC alleged that McLeod lured many of the active and retired federal employees through retirement planning seminars he put on at government agencies around the country. The agencies paid Federal Employee Benefits Group as much as $15,000 for each seminar.
McLeod promoted the security of the government bond fund but in fact never bought any bonds and used the money to run a Ponzi scheme, with new investors’ money going to pay earlier investors, according to the SEC.



