A Twin Cities financial planner has admitted to swindling more than 50 people in several states out of at least $10 million, using some of the money on gambling and sex-oriented entertainment in Minnesota and Las Vegas.
Sean Meadows, 41, of Eden Prairie, pleaded guilty Wednesday in federal court in St. Paul to mail fraud, wire fraud and money laundering as part of his years-long scheme through his financial planning and asset management firm, Meadows Financial Group (MFG).
Hearings in this case have brought out reactions so emotionally charged from some of Meadows' victims that armed security guards were needed to protect the defendant and his attorney as they left court after Wednesday's plea.
Unlike earlier proceedings, the plea hearing came off with "no threats that I heard, and no one approached Mr. Meadows in a threatening or intimidating manner," said defense attorney Mark Larsen, who noticed some of his client's victims in attendance.
Afterward, Larsen said, "we were escorted out and downstairs by court security," a precaution that he said is rare.
The earlier proceedings were "marred on every occasion by comments, hissing and threats directed against Mr. Meadows by victims in courthouse hallways and also within courtrooms," Larsen told the court in a case filing Monday.
Immediately after one hearing convened in early October, Larsen's filing continued, "Mr. Meadows was approached in the courtroom and threatened in an overt and menacing manner. The court security officer gently persuaded the threatening individual to leave the courtroom."
While acknowledging the damage that Meadows inflicted on the duped investors, Larsen pointed out Thursday that people need to realize "they are in a court of law, not in a court of sidewalk justice."