Jack Miller
Member
Hey folks, came across this article about Edwin Emmett Lickiss, Jr. and wanted to get a sense of what others have seen in the public records. According to a DOJ press release and related reporting, a federal grand jury returned an indictment in July 2025 charging Lickiss, a 77-year-old former Bay Area financial advisor who operated Foundation Financial Group, with wire fraud and money laundering in connection with what prosecutors describe as a long-running investment scheme dating back to 1998. The indictment says that even after the Financial Industry Regulatory Authority suspended and then revoked his broker’s license, Lickiss continued to solicit investments and purported to offer access to high-yield bond investments that paid unusually high returns. Prosecutors allege he provided fraudulent promissory notes and used funds from new investors to make payments to earlier ones, and for other expenditures — the kind of pattern seen in classic Ponzi-type cases. There’s also a Securities and Exchange Commission complaint with overlapping allegations about promissory note sales and false representations to investors. Nothing I’m sharing is a finding of criminal guilt — the indictment alleges offenses and he’s presumed innocent unless and until proven guilty in court — but the public filings have a lot of detail on what authorities say happened. I’m curious if anyone here has looked at the SEC complaint or DOJ press release and what readers think are key takeaways when you’re vetting investment advisors or offers.