The last criminal defendant tied to the $3.65 billion Ponzi scheme of Wayzata businessman turned felon Tom Petters was convicted Wednesday on federal charges that he misled investors in a business transaction that ultimately lost more than $100 million.
James Fry, a Twin Cities hedge fund manager, was found guilty on all 12 counts by a jury of eight women and four men who deliberated 13 ½ hours over three days. The jurors told U.S. District Judge Richard Kyle that their decision was unanimous.
Fry's conviction likely closes the book on the Petters saga, the largest criminal fraud in Minnesota history.
Wearing a dark gray suit with a white shirt and striped tie, Fry, 59, sat motionless as the jury's determination of guilty was repeated by Kyle for each of the counts.
Joe Friedberg, a member of Fry's defense team, said his client was "stunned" by the outcome.
"We tried as hard as we could. Now we go on to sentencing," Friedberg said outside the courtroom after the verdicts were announced. "We'll make a decision later about an appeal."
Assistant U.S. Attorney Tim Rank called the verdict "a just conclusion" for a "very complex case."
Fry is the 13th and last Petters-related person to acknowledge guilt or be convicted in the nearly five-year legal odyssey that dominated headlines as a fraud of grand proportions. The scheme was exposed by a Petters insider, Deanna Coleman, who went to the government in 2008 and spilled her insides about a 10-year operation that fooled investors into thinking they were buying and reselling consumer electronic goods when Petters and his cronies instead were using funds provided by new investors to pay off obligations to old investors.