Smog Credit Trader Held in Fraud Case
The suspect helped design a program to cut pollution. She allegedly used it to steal millions from energy firms.
By Miguel Bustillo and David Rosenzweig
Times Staff Writers
June 17, 2004
Federal authorities arrested an architect of one of Southern California's most ambitious clean air programs Wednesday, culminating an investigation into claims that she defrauded companies of tens of millions of dollars.
Federal agents apprehended Anne Sholtz, a former Caltech economist, at a Monrovia gym after she had left her home in the gated Bradbury community.
A decade ago, Sholtz helped the South Coast Air Quality Management District design a controversial pollution program called the Regional Clean Air Incentives Market, or RECLAIM. It allows more than 300 companies, including some of the region's largest businesses, to trade ''pollution credits'' among one another, while capping the overall amount of unhealthful exhaust they are allowed to emit from their factories and power plants.
The year the program was launched, 1993, Sholtz started a Pasadena-based auction house where companies could buy and sell the pollution credits. Federal prosecutors now allege that she made fraudulent trades and other illegal transactions while acting as a broker in the system she helped establish. According to investigators, the bogus transactions proved costly to dozens of large oil and power companies, including Sempra Energy and Reliant Energy.
Officials of the AQMD insisted that local air quality was not affected.
At a detention hearing in Los Angeles federal court after Sholtz's arrest, Assistant U.S. Atty. William Carter said the 39-year-old suspect ''ran what was essentially an $80-million Ponzi scheme.'' He added, ''We're not saying she pocketed all that money.''
However, Carter told U.S. Magistrate Judge Patrick Walsh that $13 million passed through Sholtz's personal bank account at Wells Fargo during 2002 alone. The magistrate ordered Sholtz held until she can post a $100,000 bond secured by property owned by a sister and brother-in-law in Minnesota.
(to be continued)
The suspect helped design a program to cut pollution. She allegedly used it to steal millions from energy firms.
By Miguel Bustillo and David Rosenzweig
Times Staff Writers
June 17, 2004
Federal authorities arrested an architect of one of Southern California's most ambitious clean air programs Wednesday, culminating an investigation into claims that she defrauded companies of tens of millions of dollars.
Federal agents apprehended Anne Sholtz, a former Caltech economist, at a Monrovia gym after she had left her home in the gated Bradbury community.
A decade ago, Sholtz helped the South Coast Air Quality Management District design a controversial pollution program called the Regional Clean Air Incentives Market, or RECLAIM. It allows more than 300 companies, including some of the region's largest businesses, to trade ''pollution credits'' among one another, while capping the overall amount of unhealthful exhaust they are allowed to emit from their factories and power plants.
The year the program was launched, 1993, Sholtz started a Pasadena-based auction house where companies could buy and sell the pollution credits. Federal prosecutors now allege that she made fraudulent trades and other illegal transactions while acting as a broker in the system she helped establish. According to investigators, the bogus transactions proved costly to dozens of large oil and power companies, including Sempra Energy and Reliant Energy.
Officials of the AQMD insisted that local air quality was not affected.
At a detention hearing in Los Angeles federal court after Sholtz's arrest, Assistant U.S. Atty. William Carter said the 39-year-old suspect ''ran what was essentially an $80-million Ponzi scheme.'' He added, ''We're not saying she pocketed all that money.''
However, Carter told U.S. Magistrate Judge Patrick Walsh that $13 million passed through Sholtz's personal bank account at Wells Fargo during 2002 alone. The magistrate ordered Sholtz held until she can post a $100,000 bond secured by property owned by a sister and brother-in-law in Minnesota.
(to be continued)