Former Courtenay House contractor sentenced

Athan Papoulias of Brighton Le Sands, NSW, a former contractor to and promoter of Courtenay House investments, has been sentenced to two years’ imprisonment, to be served by way of an intensive corrections order for his role in the unlicensed financial services business. As part of his sentence, Mr Papoulias was ordered to complete 120 hours of community service.

Mr Papoulias pleaded guilty to one charge of carrying on an unlicensed financial services business between 2 November 2017 and 21 April 2017, reckless about the fact that the business did not have the required licence and one charge of dealing in the proceeds of crime worth $100,000 or more, reckless as to it being derived from the carrying on of an unlicensed financial services business.

During this period, Mr Papoulias received commissions totalling $670,860 for promoting investments in Courtenay House.

In May 2017, liquidators were appointed to the Courtenay House companies and the director, Tony Iervasi, was restricted from leaving Australia. On 8 November 2022, Mr Iervasi pleaded guilty to five criminal charges (22-307MR). Four of those charges included engaging in dishonest conduct between 13 December 2010 and 21 April 2017 in relation to $180 million raised by the Courtenay House companies from around 585 investors.

The Courtenay House companies represented to investors that their funds would be traded in the Forex and Futures markets when only a small proportion of funds were traded. Instead, a Ponzi scheme was being run, with monthly amounts paid to investors from the capital invested by other investors, with Courtenay House falsely representing that these amounts were returns from trading. Mr Papoulias was not aware that the funds were used to fuel a Ponzi scheme.

ASIC Deputy Chair Sarah Court said ‘ASIC has taken civil action to freeze assets, assisted liquidators and is now seeing justice for investors through the criminal court. To ensure a fair and strong financial system, and to protect consumers, financial services businesses need to be licenced. Those promoting unlicenced businesses should not assume they are immune from criminal consequences.’

When handing down the sentence, Judge McHugh SC remarked that Mr Papoulias’ actions had undermined public confidence in the regulatory regime of the financial services industry. The Judge also took into consideration Mr Papoulias’ guilty plea.

The matter was prosecuted by the Commonwealth Director of Public Prosecutions after an investigation and referral by ASIC.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *