It's not easy watching innocent people hand over millions of dollars to a con man.
For months in early 2009, trader Ty Schlobohm helped investigators get to the bottom of Trevor Cook's $190 million Ponzi scheme. Schlobohm secretly recorded seminars, meetings and cocktail parties at the Van Dusen mansion in Minneapolis as $25.9 million poured into Cook's bogus currency investment program -- mostly from retirees seeking shelter from the collapsing stock market.
While Schlobohm and the authorities gathered evidence, Cook and his pals burned through the money even faster than it came in. From March to mid-July 2009, when the scheme collapsed, Cook paid nearly $21.4 million of the incoming investors' funds to earlier investors and spent $10.6 million more on expenses, luxuries and other ventures.
"I was really confused and really wracked with guilt that I couldn't put the nail in this coffin when it seemed like a locked, solid case," Schlobohm said.
Cook has pleaded guilty to fraud and tax charges and was sentenced in August to 25 years in prison -- the only person to face criminal charges in the case to date.
Schlobohm wonders why it took so long. The 37-year-old from Orono said in a recent interview that he pestered the FBI and regulators to shut down Cook sooner, but he always got the same response: There were "procedures and protocols" to follow.
Assistant U.S. Attorney Joe Dixon, who is overseeing the government's ongoing criminal investigation, said in a recent interview that the government responded promptly when Schlobohm reported his suspicions.
He was quickly "wired up" and sent back to gather evidence, Dixon said. Once the evidence was in hand, Dixon added, the government subpoenaed Cook's records, a necessary prelude to freezing bank accounts and seizing assets.