The bottom fell out of the precious metals market Thursday for Tory Hughes.
U.S. District Judge Richard Kyle banned the 45-year-old former coin and bullion dealer from the industry and ordered him to serve just shy of six years in federal prison. Hughes took more than $753,204 from 15 mostly older investors who sought a safe haven for their savings, only to find they'd been had by a con man who's been committing crimes for more than 20 years.
Hughes thrived in the corrupt netherworld of Twin Cities boiler rooms that pitched gold and silver by phone to investors nationwide. That came crashing down around him in 2011 when the Minnesota attorney general won an $882,505 judgment against him and his Roseville business, Reputable Rare Coins.
Hughes personally stole more than $600,000 from nine investors in Minnesota. His crimes came to a halt when he spent 15 months in state prison on an unrelated crime. But after he got out, he set up a new bullion telemarketing operation in Gilbert, Ariz., where he stole more than $100,000 from six other clients before the feds shut him down. "I did wrong," Hughes told the judge Thursday in St. Paul. "I regret it."
His lawyer, Paul Edlund, argued for a sentence of 57 months, which he said was enough time to serve as punishment and a deterrence to other fraudsters. He said Hughes has cleaned up his act since he first met him three years earlier, when his client was still gambling, drinking and doing drugs.
"To a certain extent I think he feels a weight lifted now that this life of fraud is behind him" Edlund said.
Assistant U.S. Attorney Karen Schommer countered that Hughes showed no concern for his victims, who were in their 60s, 70s and 80s. "Mr. Hughes has been committing crimes since he was 22 years old," she said.
Schommer asked that Hughes get 71 months, which she had calculated as the top of the federal guidelines range when he agreed to plead guilty.