SEC Charges Felon and Six Others in Oil-and-Gas Offering Fraud

b'Washington, D.C.--(Newsfile Corp. - April 14, 2021) - The Securities and Exchange Commission today charged seven individuals, including criminal recidivist Richard Dale Sterritt,\xc2\xa0Jr., with defrauding investors through a multimillion dollar oil-and-gas offering fraud and related market manipulation scheme.\nThe SEC\'s complaint alleges that, between March 2018 and at least November 2020, Sterritt \xe2\x80\x93 who used the pseudonym "Richard Richman"\xc2\xa0\xe2\x80\x93 Michael Greer, Deanna Looney, Robert Magness, Jr., Katie Mathews, James Christopher Pittman, and Mark Ross raised more than $16 million from more than 300 investors through an unregistered private placement of the common stock of Zona Energy\xc2\xa0Inc., a Dallas-based company that claimed to be focused on the oil and gas industry.\xc2\xa0According to the complaint, the defendants made various false and misleading statements verbally and in offering materials to solicit investors, including that their funds would be used to support Zona\'s operations, namely to develop the mineral rights on a West Texas cattle ranch.\xc2\xa0The complaint further alleges that instead of using investors\'\xc2\xa0money to capitalize Zona, Sterritt and his co-defendants misappropriated millions of dollars raised in the offering, using the funds to pay for luxury goods, rental apartments, a car, and to make cash payments to friends, family members, and Sterritt\'s girlfriends.\xc2\xa0Also, according to the complaint, the offering materials falsely claimed that Zona had no debt when the company actually owed millions of dollars in demand notes to various Sterritt-controlled companies.\nThe complaint alleges that Sterritt, Magness, and Ross also conducted a manipulative trading scheme in the securities of OrgHarvest\xc2\xa0Inc., a Sterritt-controlled public issuer, in an attempt to inflate the price of the stock so that they could sell their shares to unsuspecting investors for a profit.\n"Investors should be wary of individuals using aggressive sales tactics to pitch unregistered offerings that promise high investment returns with little or no risk,"\xc2\xa0said Richard R. Best, Director of the SEC\'s New York Regional Office.