A New Zealand First candidate and former chief executive who lost $200,000 in an investment scam has described the anguish of realising he’d been defrauded and the “worst phone call of my life” telling his wife their retirement savings were gone.
A phone recording shows Kiwibank confirmed the mule account used to receive the stolen money was a “legitimate” or valid account six weeks before a detective told David Wilson it was a scam.
Wilson, 64, who is next on the NZ First list to enter Parliament, is a former chief executive of Northland’s economic development agency and an economic development consultant. He has a masters in public policy and a PhD.
He is speaking publicly about the case to highlight the slick tactics used by criminals, the lack of protections for victims and what he describes as “inept and inadequate” regulatory systems policing the country’s banks.
Systemic failures were enabling criminals to steal hundreds of millions of dollars from ordinary Kiwis through a deficient bank payment network, while banks made enormous profits and victims shouldered the blame, Wilson said.
“This is endemic. This is our system which is failing on all fronts.”
Wilson was contacted in late 2022 by an investment adviser calling himself Jack Levy, who convinced the Kumeu businessman to invest in renewable energy “green bonds”, purportedly with Australian company Macquarie Asset Management.
After conducting due diligence on the company and completing anti-money laundering checks for the scammers, Wilson sent two $100,000 payments in November 2022 to what he thought was a Kiwibank “holding account” for Macquarie Bank.
Concerned it might be a scam, he called Kiwibank two weeks later, on December 13, to check he had sent his money to the intended recipient. The bank refused to provide information, citing privacy obligations to its customer.
That customer was Aimee Chantelle Rodda, who was paid about $20,000 by an organised crime group to set up “mule” accounts at three banks that received more than $1 million in stolen money under her company’s name, CEB Holdings Ltd.
Police now believe Rodda was “deceived” by a Nigerian scammer into thinking it was a legitimate cryptocurrency venture and say she won’t face charges. Furious victims are preparing a complaint to the Independent Police Conduct Authority and considering a private prosecution.
The recorded phone call
The Herald has obtained a recording of Wilson’s phone call in which he repeatedly asks Kiwibank for assurances that the recipient account is linked to Macquarie and that his money hasn’t gone to scammers.
The bank worker refuses to confirm the payee’s identity, telling Wilson he should contact the investment company or Serious Fraud Office.
“So there’s no real protection for me ... to ensure the account I’m paying it into is actually them,” Wilson says in the call. “You can’t tell me.
“I just want to make sure my money’s gone to the right place.”
The staffer repeatedly tells Wilson “that’s a legitimate account and that’s all I can say”.
“We’re an intermediary. We connect people that have money with people who want to borrow money, so we’re just sitting in the middle.”
Wilson responds: “So if this comes back to bite me in two weeks’ time, I’ve got no comeback.
“[I’m] reading all about these people who are masquerading as banks and asking you to invest in things like green bonds. You go through all the process, put the money in the bank ... and you think, ‘Ok, have I been dealing with the right person or is this a front?’”
Two days later, the Financial Markets Authority posted a public warning about a fake Macquarie Asset Management green bonds investment scheme.
Six weeks later, Wilson received a phone call from Detective John Nicholls in Nelson saying: “I’ve got some bad news. I’m sorry to tell you you’ve been the victim of fraud.”
Wilson was stunned.
“The worst phone call of my life was ringing my wife to inform her that we’d lost that money.
“She immediately said, ‘It’s not your fault’ and jumped behind me right away.
“It was terrible. It is a big blow. You can feel it in your gut. You feel like an idiot and you feel like you’re to blame.”
‘Slow, deliberative, inept and inadequate’
After landing in the Kiwibank account, Wilson’s money was immediately transferred overseas in November 2022. Nothing was recovered.
Wilson believes Kiwibank was unaware of the fraud or that it was “harbouring” a mule account, until being contacted by police in February 2023.
He filed a Banking Ombudsman’s complaint about Kiwibank’s response, citing its refusal to confirm the recipient’s identity. He also questioned what action staff took after the phone call to check whether his payments were subject to fraud or the account was being used for “mule” activity.
Had Kiwibank properly monitored Rodda’s account or escalated his concerns, he felt the fraud could have been identified sooner, preventing other potential victims and increasing the likelihood of recovering his lost money.
However, his complaint was dismissed. The Banking Ombudsman said its terms of reference prevented it from investigating Kiwibank’s actions when setting up Rodda’s account, monitoring its activity or its actions after the phone call because Wilson was not a Kiwibank customer.
It suggested Wilson raise his concerns with the Reserve Bank, which oversees banks’ compliance with anti-money laundering and counter-terrorism laws.
The Banking Ombudsman said it could investigate only the services provided to Wilson by Kiwibank, which was limited to information it gave during the phone call.
An investigator found Kiwibank was not obliged to reveal the account holder’s name or affiliation with Macquarie. The bank’s response was “reasonable” and it was not liable for compensation.
“We cannot conclude the bank misled you or otherwise breached any obligation owed to you,” the decision said.
‘We felt let down’
Wilson feels the Banking Ombudsman scheme is toothless, ineffective and weighted heavily in favour of banks.