• Who Is The Bigger Crook: Maddof Or Amway/Scamway/Quixtar?

    From Anonymous@21:1/5 to All on Sun May 27 17:51:57 2018
    While the alleged Ponzi scheme of New York investment manager Bernie
    Madoff has claimed significant parts of the fortunes of celebrities,
    B-list millionaires, charities, and foundations, another outfit has
    left a trail of a slightly different sort over the years: the broken
    dreams of middle- class wannabe entrepreneurs left only with garages
    full of products, motivational tapes, and get-rich-quick books doing
    little but gathering dust.

    If you've watched any television at all since the holidays, you might
    have wondered why a company called Amway Global ran so many
    commercials. Were these ads for the same company that has, over the
    years, been widely accused of running a pyramid scheme, paid nearly
    $20 million in fines in a Canadian criminal fraud case, and whose
    image with the public in recent years soured faster than a carton of
    cottage cheese in the sun?

    More recently, two former Quixtar distributors filed a class-action
    suit in the US District Court (Northern District of California),
    charging Quixtar and several of its high-level distributors with fraud
    and racketeering. According to a report at CaseWatch ("Your Guide to
    Health Fraud- and Quackery-Related Legal Matters"), the allegations of
    the complaint include:

    "Quixtar is an illegal pyramid scheme because most of its sales are to distributors rather than to retail customers."

    "The defendants recruit distributors by making false or misleading
    statements."

    "Quixtar products would be difficult to sell to unaffiliated consumers
    because they cost much more than similar products at retail outlets."

    "Quixtar's lowest-level distributors are instructed not to waste time
    on marketing and retailing the products, but instead to focus on
    consuming the products themselves and recruiting others to be
    distributors."

    "Most products are purchased by Quixtar distributors for their own
    use, and any profit is eliminated by the costs of buying instructional materials."

    "Quixtar has 'unconscionable' arbitration policies that prevent most distributors from recovering their losses if problems arise."

    Despite these controversies, and after virtually dropping out of sight
    in the United States around the turn of the last century, Amway--
    currently known as "Amway Global"-- appears to be heading back home.
    Can the company, which celebrates its fiftieth anniversary this year,
    stage a successful comeback in the U.S., or are they throwing a very
    desperate Hail Mary?

    "Heart-Wrenching Testimonials"

    Eric Scheibeler, author of Merchants of Deception: An Insider's Look
    at the Worldwide, Systematic, Conspiracy of Lies That is Amway/Quixtar
    and their Motivational Organizations--available free on the author's
    Web site--told me that the controversies stalking the company continue
    to this day. Scheibeler said that he had "worked with local victims
    and initiated a UK government investigation in which the DTI/BERR
    (Department of Trade and Industry/Business, Enterprise & Regulatory
    Reform) took legal action against Amway and is waiting for an appeals
    court decision to potentially ban them from the country."

    According to Scheibeler (a high-level "Emerald" Amway member who
    uncovered fraud and deception within the company and was ostracized
    for it):

    UK Justice Norris found in 2008 that out of an IBO [Independent
    Business Owners] population of 33,000, "only about 90 made sufficient
    incomes to cover the costs of actively building their business."
    That's a 99.7% loss rate for investors. The scheme appears to be
    falling apart in the US, UK, and Australia hence the beefed up prime-
    time ads in the US.

    Many of [Amway's] highest-level distributors have left to join other
    multilevel marketing groups, and I now have an internal management
    document detailing a five year 96% dropout rate. Thousands of Amway
    victims from countless nations have sent me heart-wrenching
    testimonials. Quite a few involve losses in excess of $10,000.

    Through his time selling Amway products, Scheibeler, who had developed
    a business that extended from North America to Europe, South America,
    and the Philippines, met a number of politically powerful Republican politicians and conservative religious leaders, including former House
    Speaker Newt Gingrich, former Iran/Contra figure Oliver North, and
    then- Senator Rick Santorum. Religious leaders like Charles Stanley (a
    former distributor), Dr. Robert Schuller and the late Dr. D. James
    Kennedy of Florida's Coral Ridge Ministries--a multimedia,
    multimillion dollar ministry--gave the company and its founders a
    credibility that seemed to be beyond reproach. Former US presidents
    Ronald Reagan, Gerald Ford, and George H.W. Bush also spoke to Amway distributors.

    In 1959, the Ada, Michigan-based Amway--an abbreviation of American
    Way--was founded by two high school buddies from Grand Rapids,
    Michigan, Richard DeVos and the late Jay Van Andel. In 2000, it became
    part of an umbrella company called Alticor Inc., which does business
    as Quixtar in the United States and Canada and as Amway Corp.
    throughout the rest of the world. Whatever name it goes by, Amway is
    in the process of launching a major comeback in the United States.

    A Scam by Any Other Name

    Over the last four decades of the 20th century, Amway became a
    phenomenally successful company, and is now the second- largest direct
    sales company in the world. In 2007, Amway Global and other companies
    under the Alticor umbrella reported sales of $7.2 billion, marking the company's sixth straight year of growth.

    Van Andel and DeVos used a portion of their wealth as a de facto
    insurance policy, becoming major financiers of Republican Party
    candidates and religious right causes. According to Progress for
    America, Amway's founders contributed $4,000,000 to conservative 527
    groups during the 2004 election cycle. In April 2005, Rolling Stone
    reported that Amway CEO and co-founder Richard DeVos was connected
    with the Dominionist political movement in the United States and that
    DeVos had given more than $5 million to Coral Ridge Ministries.

    Despite the controversies and legal challenges the company continues
    to face, it never went out of business; it merely shifted the bulk of
    its efforts to overseas markets. These days, the company's three
    hotspots are Russia, China, and India. "In the late 1980s, about
    three-quarters of our business was here in the U.S.," Steve Van Andel, Alticor's co-chief executive (and son of one of its founders),
    recently told the AP. "Now about 80 percent of it is outside the
    country."

    According to the Associated Press, Alticor is "shelving the inert
    Quixtar label and pouring millions of dollars into reviving the Amway
    brand in North America with market research, national television
    commercials, and ads in newspapers, magazines, and online."

    The privately-owned company, which is called Amway Global-- though it
    intends to revert back to Amway in about a year-- has several goals.
    Not least among them, the corporation seeks to refurbish its tarnished
    image and to reacquaint the public with the company's extensive
    product line of health and beauty items, home care products, jewelry,
    and water purifiers.

    "We thought, well, if we're going to build a brand, build the brand
    that everybody knows already," Alticor president and co-CEO Doug DeVos
    said in an interview with the AP. "It's going to be much more
    successful and cost a lot less and happen a lot faster."

    While times may be tough economically for a sustained rebirth, company officials "hope to repeat in the United States the kind of growth
    they've seen abroad in the past-- and to revive the mystique that
    helped the company spread throughout the Midwest and, by the mid-
    1960s, the rest of the United States. Amway's hundreds of thousands of distributors dreamed of getting rich by selling cleaning products and
    by recruiting their acquaintances to join the fold," the AP reported.

    According to the AP, the company is still "operating on that basic
    model, including prices that tend to be higher than those of their
    competitors, Amway saw global sales revenue top $7.1 billion in its
    2007 financial year. The company predicts another $1 billion increase
    this year. And most of its recent growth, in such developing Asian
    markets as China, India, and Russia, has been under the Amway name."

    Despite hiring marketing executives to help revitalize the relaunch--
    and despite the fact that an FTC examination into Amway's business
    practices concluded in 1979 that it was not an illegal pyramid scheme
    (because compensation is based on retail sales to consumers, and
    because salespeople are not paid for recruiting new colleagues)--
    government investigations are still underway in England, India, and
    China.

    Political Kingmakers

    There is no question that the Amway story is a unique Horatio Alger-
    like American success story. What makes it even more fascinating is
    that the company's founders--and their progeny--have become political kingmakers along the way.

    In October, former Amway Corp. chief Dick DeVos held a private
    benefit, featuring President George W. Bush, to raise money for the
    National Republican Congressional Committee and the Republican
    National Committee. For nearly 40 years, the DeVos family has been a
    major benefactor to both the religious right and the Republican Party.
    Shortly before the 1994 election, the Amway Corporation gave the GOP
    $2.5 million which, at the time, was "the largest political donation
    in recent American history," according to the Washington Post. And, in
    1996, the company donated $1.3 million to the San Diego Convention and Visitor's Bureau "to help fund a Republican cable TV show to be aired
    during the party's national convention," the Associated Press
    reported. The program featured "rising GOP stars as 'reporters,'" and
    aired on the Pat Robertson-owned Family Channel.

    The Richard and Helen DeVos Foundation, which was founded in 1970, has
    provided major funding for such right-wing groups as Concerned Women
    for America, the late Paul Weyrich's Free Congress Foundation,
    Michigan Right to Life, Dr. James Dobson's Focus on the Family, and
    Tony Perkins' DC-based lobbying group the Family Research Council.
    Foundations with the DeVos family name attached to it now include the
    Dick and Betsy DeVos Foundation (1990), the Daniel and Pamela DeVos
    Foundation (1992), and the Douglas and Maria DeVos Foundation (1992).

    There is also a DeVos connection to Blackwater USA, the world's most
    powerful mercenary army, and the largest contractor providing security
    in Iraq. That company too is currently up to its neck in Iraq-related
    legal problems. Blackwater was founded by former Navy SEAL Erik
    Prince, the son of Edgar Prince, a wealthy Michigan auto-parts
    supplier. The elder Prince is described by Jeremy Scahill, in his
    bestselling book Blackwater: The Rise of the World's Most Powerful
    Mercenary Army, as a "radical right-wing Christian mega-millionaire"
    who was a strong financial backer of President George W. Bush, as well
    as a donor to a host of conservative Christian political causes.

    In the 1980s, the Prince family merged with the DeVos family as Eric's
    older sister Betsy married Dick DeVos, whose father Richard was a co-
    founder of Amway, according to Scahill. Together, the two families
    became one of the "greatest bankrollers of far-right causes in US
    history, and with their money they propelled extremist Christian
    politicians and activists to positions of prominence."

    In 2006, former Amway President Dick DeVos decided to run for governor
    of Michigan. Running as a Republican against Michigan Governor
    Jennifer Granholm, DeVos was soundly defeated by 56 to 42 percent of
    the popular vote. He recently announced that he would not run again in
    2010.

    "Although Bernard Madoff allegedly swindled $50 billion from about
    8,000 victims, he seems to be an amateur in comparison to Amway," Eric Scheibeler noted. "Amway has brought in far in excess of that amount
    from tens of millions of consumers who invested in 'their own Amway
    business' and it seems nearly all did so and continue to do so at a
    loss. The difference is that the Madoff pipeline is shut down, while
    you may be recruited to an Amway meeting tomorrow."

    * * *

    Note: We contacted Amway Global with several questions, including ones
    about the UK suit and its political donations. A public-relations
    spokesperson answered a few general questions and said that he would
    pass the rest on to other company officials. We have not heard from
    any other company officials. _______

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Anonymous Remailer (austria)@21:1/5 to All on Mon May 28 18:10:27 2018
    While the alleged Ponzi scheme of New York investment manager Bernie
    Madoff has claimed significant parts of the fortunes of celebrities,
    B-list millionaires, charities, and foundations, another outfit has
    left a trail of a slightly different sort over the years: the broken
    dreams of middle- class wannabe entrepreneurs left only with garages
    full of products, motivational tapes, and get-rich-quick books doing
    little but gathering dust.

    If you've watched any television at all since the holidays, you might
    have wondered why a company called Amway Global ran so many
    commercials. Were these ads for the same company that has, over the
    years, been widely accused of running a pyramid scheme, paid nearly
    $20 million in fines in a Canadian criminal fraud case, and whose
    image with the public in recent years soured faster than a carton of
    cottage cheese in the sun?

    More recently, two former Quixtar distributors filed a class-action
    suit in the US District Court (Northern District of California),
    charging Quixtar and several of its high-level distributors with fraud
    and racketeering. According to a report at CaseWatch ("Your Guide to
    Health Fraud- and Quackery-Related Legal Matters"), the allegations of
    the complaint include:

    "Quixtar is an illegal pyramid scheme because most of its sales are to distributors rather than to retail customers."

    "The defendants recruit distributors by making false or misleading
    statements."

    "Quixtar products would be difficult to sell to unaffiliated consumers
    because they cost much more than similar products at retail outlets."

    "Quixtar's lowest-level distributors are instructed not to waste time
    on marketing and retailing the products, but instead to focus on
    consuming the products themselves and recruiting others to be
    distributors."

    "Most products are purchased by Quixtar distributors for their own
    use, and any profit is eliminated by the costs of buying instructional materials."

    "Quixtar has 'unconscionable' arbitration policies that prevent most distributors from recovering their losses if problems arise."

    Despite these controversies, and after virtually dropping out of sight
    in the United States around the turn of the last century, Amway--
    currently known as "Amway Global"-- appears to be heading back home.
    Can the company, which celebrates its fiftieth anniversary this year,
    stage a successful comeback in the U.S., or are they throwing a very
    desperate Hail Mary?

    "Heart-Wrenching Testimonials"

    Eric Scheibeler, author of Merchants of Deception: An Insider's Look
    at the Worldwide, Systematic, Conspiracy of Lies That is Amway/Quixtar
    and their Motivational Organizations--available free on the author's
    Web site--told me that the controversies stalking the company continue
    to this day. Scheibeler said that he had "worked with local victims
    and initiated a UK government investigation in which the DTI/BERR
    (Department of Trade and Industry/Business, Enterprise & Regulatory
    Reform) took legal action against Amway and is waiting for an appeals
    court decision to potentially ban them from the country."

    According to Scheibeler (a high-level "Emerald" Amway member who
    uncovered fraud and deception within the company and was ostracized
    for it):

    UK Justice Norris found in 2008 that out of an IBO [Independent
    Business Owners] population of 33,000, "only about 90 made sufficient
    incomes to cover the costs of actively building their business."
    That's a 99.7% loss rate for investors. The scheme appears to be
    falling apart in the US, UK, and Australia hence the beefed up prime-
    time ads in the US.

    Many of [Amway's] highest-level distributors have left to join other
    multilevel marketing groups, and I now have an internal management
    document detailing a five year 96% dropout rate. Thousands of Amway
    victims from countless nations have sent me heart-wrenching
    testimonials. Quite a few involve losses in excess of $10,000.

    Through his time selling Amway products, Scheibeler, who had developed
    a business that extended from North America to Europe, South America,
    and the Philippines, met a number of politically powerful Republican politicians and conservative religious leaders, including former House
    Speaker Newt Gingrich, former Iran/Contra figure Oliver North, and
    then- Senator Rick Santorum. Religious leaders like Charles Stanley (a
    former distributor), Dr. Robert Schuller and the late Dr. D. James
    Kennedy of Florida's Coral Ridge Ministries--a multimedia,
    multimillion dollar ministry--gave the company and its founders a
    credibility that seemed to be beyond reproach. Former US presidents
    Ronald Reagan, Gerald Ford, and George H.W. Bush also spoke to Amway distributors.

    In 1959, the Ada, Michigan-based Amway--an abbreviation of American
    Way--was founded by two high school buddies from Grand Rapids,
    Michigan, Richard DeVos and the late Jay Van Andel. In 2000, it became
    part of an umbrella company called Alticor Inc., which does business
    as Quixtar in the United States and Canada and as Amway Corp.
    throughout the rest of the world. Whatever name it goes by, Amway is
    in the process of launching a major comeback in the United States.

    A Scam by Any Other Name

    Over the last four decades of the 20th century, Amway became a
    phenomenally successful company, and is now the second- largest direct
    sales company in the world. In 2007, Amway Global and other companies
    under the Alticor umbrella reported sales of $7.2 billion, marking the company's sixth straight year of growth.

    Van Andel and DeVos used a portion of their wealth as a de facto
    insurance policy, becoming major financiers of Republican Party
    candidates and religious right causes. According to Progress for
    America, Amway's founders contributed $4,000,000 to conservative 527
    groups during the 2004 election cycle. In April 2005, Rolling Stone
    reported that Amway CEO and co-founder Richard DeVos was connected
    with the Dominionist political movement in the United States and that
    DeVos had given more than $5 million to Coral Ridge Ministries.

    Despite the controversies and legal challenges the company continues
    to face, it never went out of business; it merely shifted the bulk of
    its efforts to overseas markets. These days, the company's three
    hotspots are Russia, China, and India. "In the late 1980s, about
    three-quarters of our business was here in the U.S.," Steve Van Andel, Alticor's co-chief executive (and son of one of its founders),
    recently told the AP. "Now about 80 percent of it is outside the
    country."

    According to the Associated Press, Alticor is "shelving the inert
    Quixtar label and pouring millions of dollars into reviving the Amway
    brand in North America with market research, national television
    commercials, and ads in newspapers, magazines, and online."

    The privately-owned company, which is called Amway Global-- though it
    intends to revert back to Amway in about a year-- has several goals.
    Not least among them, the corporation seeks to refurbish its tarnished
    image and to reacquaint the public with the company's extensive
    product line of health and beauty items, home care products, jewelry,
    and water purifiers.

    "We thought, well, if we're going to build a brand, build the brand
    that everybody knows already," Alticor president and co-CEO Doug DeVos
    said in an interview with the AP. "It's going to be much more
    successful and cost a lot less and happen a lot faster."

    While times may be tough economically for a sustained rebirth, company officials "hope to repeat in the United States the kind of growth
    they've seen abroad in the past-- and to revive the mystique that
    helped the company spread throughout the Midwest and, by the mid-
    1960s, the rest of the United States. Amway's hundreds of thousands of distributors dreamed of getting rich by selling cleaning products and
    by recruiting their acquaintances to join the fold," the AP reported.

    According to the AP, the company is still "operating on that basic
    model, including prices that tend to be higher than those of their
    competitors, Amway saw global sales revenue top $7.1 billion in its
    2007 financial year. The company predicts another $1 billion increase
    this year. And most of its recent growth, in such developing Asian
    markets as China, India, and Russia, has been under the Amway name."

    Despite hiring marketing executives to help revitalize the relaunch--
    and despite the fact that an FTC examination into Amway's business
    practices concluded in 1979 that it was not an illegal pyramid scheme
    (because compensation is based on retail sales to consumers, and
    because salespeople are not paid for recruiting new colleagues)--
    government investigations are still underway in England, India, and
    China.

    Political Kingmakers

    There is no question that the Amway story is a unique Horatio Alger-
    like American success story. What makes it even more fascinating is
    that the company's founders--and their progeny--have become political kingmakers along the way.

    In October, former Amway Corp. chief Dick DeVos held a private
    benefit, featuring President George W. Bush, to raise money for the
    National Republican Congressional Committee and the Republican
    National Committee. For nearly 40 years, the DeVos family has been a
    major benefactor to both the religious right and the Republican Party.
    Shortly before the 1994 election, the Amway Corporation gave the GOP
    $2.5 million which, at the time, was "the largest political donation
    in recent American history," according to the Washington Post. And, in
    1996, the company donated $1.3 million to the San Diego Convention and Visitor's Bureau "to help fund a Republican cable TV show to be aired
    during the party's national convention," the Associated Press
    reported. The program featured "rising GOP stars as 'reporters,'" and
    aired on the Pat Robertson-owned Family Channel.

    The Richard and Helen DeVos Foundation, which was founded in 1970, has
    provided major funding for such right-wing groups as Concerned Women
    for America, the late Paul Weyrich's Free Congress Foundation,
    Michigan Right to Life, Dr. James Dobson's Focus on the Family, and
    Tony Perkins' DC-based lobbying group the Family Research Council.
    Foundations with the DeVos family name attached to it now include the
    Dick and Betsy DeVos Foundation (1990), the Daniel and Pamela DeVos
    Foundation (1992), and the Douglas and Maria DeVos Foundation (1992).

    There is also a DeVos connection to Blackwater USA, the world's most
    powerful mercenary army, and the largest contractor providing security
    in Iraq. That company too is currently up to its neck in Iraq-related
    legal problems. Blackwater was founded by former Navy SEAL Erik
    Prince, the son of Edgar Prince, a wealthy Michigan auto-parts
    supplier. The elder Prince is described by Jeremy Scahill, in his
    bestselling book Blackwater: The Rise of the World's Most Powerful
    Mercenary Army, as a "radical right-wing Christian mega-millionaire"
    who was a strong financial backer of President George W. Bush, as well
    as a donor to a host of conservative Christian political causes.

    In the 1980s, the Prince family merged with the DeVos family as Eric's
    older sister Betsy married Dick DeVos, whose father Richard was a co-
    founder of Amway, according to Scahill. Together, the two families
    became one of the "greatest bankrollers of far-right causes in US
    history, and with their money they propelled extremist Christian
    politicians and activists to positions of prominence."

    In 2006, former Amway President Dick DeVos decided to run for governor
    of Michigan. Running as a Republican against Michigan Governor
    Jennifer Granholm, DeVos was soundly defeated by 56 to 42 percent of
    the popular vote. He recently announced that he would not run again in
    2010.

    "Although Bernard Madoff allegedly swindled $50 billion from about
    8,000 victims, he seems to be an amateur in comparison to Amway," Eric Scheibeler noted. "Amway has brought in far in excess of that amount
    from tens of millions of consumers who invested in 'their own Amway
    business' and it seems nearly all did so and continue to do so at a
    loss. The difference is that the Madoff pipeline is shut down, while
    you may be recruited to an Amway meeting tomorrow."

    * * *

    Note: We contacted Amway Global with several questions, including ones
    about the UK suit and its political donations. A public-relations
    spokesperson answered a few general questions and said that he would
    pass the rest on to other company officials. We have not heard from
    any other company officials. _______

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)