Hollywood actor sentenced to 20 years for multimillion-dollar Ponzi scheme
Zachary Horwitz, 35, flanked by attorneys Ryan Hedges, left, and Anthony Pacheco, was sentenced to a maximum of 20-years by a federal judge.
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Zachary Horwitz, a small-time actor who
admitted to operating a multimillion-dollar Ponzi scheme, was sentenced to 20
years in federal prison on Monday.
The Department of Justice said in a news release that Horowitz "raised at
least $650 million with bogus claims that investor money would be used to
acquire licensing rights to films that HBO and Netflix purportedly had agreed
to distribute abroad."
In October, Horowitz pleaded guilty to a federal securities fraud charge and
admitted to running the Ponzi scheme.
He received a 240 month sentence, according to Monday's release, and must pay more than $230
million in restitution. CNN has reached out to Horwitz's attorney for comment.
Horwitz, 35, was accused of putting some of the money in his personal
accounts and using the money for purchasing a personal residence for
approximately $5.7 million in cash, taking trips to Las Vegas and flying on
chartered jets, according to a complaint
filed by the Securities and Exchange Commission.
Horwitz — better known by his stage name "Zach Avery" — spent the past decade acting in around a dozen mostly low-budget films, including "Trespassers" and "The White Crow," according to his IMDb profile. He also had a minor uncredited role in "Fury," which starred Brad Pitt.

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