Geoffrey S. Berman, the United States Attorney for the
Southern District of New York, announced today that ELIZABETH ANN PIERCE, the
former chief executive officer (“CEO”) of Quintillion, a telecommunications
company in Alaska, was sentenced today in Manhattan federal court to 60 months
in prison for defrauding investors in New York of more than $270 million during
her time as CEO. PIERCE previously pled
guilty before U.S. District Judge Edgardo Ramos, who imposed today’s sentence.
U.S. Attorney Geoffrey S. Berman said: “Elizabeth Ann Pierce, the then-CEO of
Quintillion, placed her ambition above the law.
In order to raise over $270 million to build a fiber optic cable system
in northern Alaska, she repeatedly lied to her investors and forged the
signatures of her customers’ executives on fake revenue contracts. When her scheme started to unravel, she tried
to delay exposure with yet more lies and forged documents. She will now serve five years in prison for
her crime.”
According to the Complaint, the Indictment, statements made
in court, and publicly available documents:
Until July 2017, PIERCE was the chief executive officer of
Quintillion, a telecommunications company based in Anchorage, Alaska, that
built, operates, and markets a high-speed fiber optic cable system (the
“Quintillion System”). The Quintillion
System consists of three segments: a subsea segment that spans the Alaskan
Arctic, a terrestrial segment that runs north to south along the Dalton
Highway, and a land-based network of fibers that connects the subsea and
terrestrial segments. The Quintillion
System is connected to the lower 48 states through other existing networks.
Between May 2015 and July 2017, PIERCE engaged in a scheme
to induce two New York-based investment companies to provide more than $270
million to construct the Quintillion System by providing them with eight forged
broadband capacity sales contracts and related order forms under which
Quintillion would obtain guaranteed revenue once the Quintillion System was
built (the “Fake Revenue Agreements”).
Under the Fake Revenue Agreements, four telecommunications services
companies appeared to have made binding commitments to purchase specific
wholesale quantities of capacity from Quintillion at specified prices. The cumulative value of the Fake Revenue
Agreements was approximately $1 billion over the life of the Fake Revenue
Agreements. In reality, the Fake Revenue
Agreements were completely worthless because PIERCE had forged the
counterparties’ signatures.
Certain of the Fake Revenue Agreements never existed at all,
while others were falsified versions of genuine revenue agreements. PIERCE fabricated the terms of the false
versions of the agreements to make them more favorable to Quintillion and,
therefore, more appealing to investors than the genuine agreements. For example, under one of the Fake Revenue
Agreements, the customer purportedly agreed to buy from Quintillion increasing
quantities of gigabits per second of capacity over a period of 20 years. That agreement, if genuine, would have
assured Quintillion hundreds of millions of dollars in future revenue. In reality, negotiations over that deal had
ended unsuccessfully, a fact that PIERCE never disclosed to the investors. Under another Fake Revenue Agreement, the
customer purportedly agreed to buy a fixed, predetermined amount of capacity
from Quintillion regardless of subsequent market conditions. In truth, that customer was not obligated to
buy any capacity.
Over the course of the scheme, PIERCE tried to cover up her
fraud, by continuing to negotiate with the telecommunications companies in
hopes of reaching agreements identical to the ones she forged. Her efforts were mostly unsuccessful. PIERCE completely failed to secure any revenue
contract with one of those telecommunications companies, and the agreements she
reached with the other three companies contained less favorable terms for
Quintillion than the Fake Revenue Agreements, such as a smaller mandatory
capacity purchase commitment, or no commitment at all. PIERCE hid these genuine, but inferior, contracts
from the investment companies and her own staff. When Quintillion and the investment companies
ultimately discovered the fraud in mid-2017, they learned that the real
contracts PIERCE actually negotiated would generate only a fraction of the
anticipated guaranteed revenue of the Fake Revenue Agreements she forged.
As part of PIERCE’s overall scheme, she also swindled two
individual investors (together, the “Individual Victims”) out of a total of
$365,000. PIERCE led these individuals
to believe that they would acquire ownership interests in Quintillion when, in
fact, she used half of one victim’s money and all of the other victim’s
investment for her own personal benefit.
These individuals have received no shares and none of their money back
from PIERCE.
After the terrestrial system was built, PIERCE attempted to
prevent the discovery of the Fake Revenue Agreements by accelerating the timing
of incoming payments under certain genuine agreements to make those payments
appear to be based on the Fake Revenue Agreements. PIERCE also sought to prevent Quintillion
from invoicing one of the customers that had no real contract with Quintillion
by fabricating email correspondence that gave the impression she was
terminating a contractual relationship, when in fact no such relationship
existed. PIERCE’s scheme started to
unravel when another customer disputed invoices that it received from
Quintillion pursuant to one of the Fake Revenue Agreements. Shortly thereafter, in the midst of
Quintillion’s internal investigation, PIERCE abruptly resigned. Quintillion self-reported PIERCE’s conduct to
the Department of Justice.
*
* *
In addition to her term of imprisonment, PIERCE, age 55, now
of Austin, Texas, was sentenced to three years of supervised release, and was
ordered to forfeit $896,698.00 and all of her interests in Quintillion and a
property in Texas. PIERCE will also be
subject to a restitution order to her victims to be entered at a later date.
Mr. Berman praised the outstanding work of the Federal
Bureau of Investigation.
This case is prosecuted by the Office’s Complex Frauds and
Cybercrime Unit. Assistant U.S.
Attorneys Sarah Lai and Vladislav Vainberg are in charge of the
prosecution.
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