Money | hedge fund Hedge Fund Fraud Gets 20 Years Samuel Israel denied leniency in $400M investor 'ponzi scheme' By Nick McMaster Posted Apr 14, 2008 4:45 PM CDT Copied Samuel Israel III, right, arrives at the United States Courthouse in New York, Monday, April 14, 2008. (AP Photo/Craig Ruttle) The founder of defunct hedge fund Bayou Group was given a 20-year prison term today for bilking investors out of more than $400 million, Bloomberg reports. Samuel Israel must also pay $300 million in restitution for masterminding a “ponzi scheme” in which investment returns were paid with new investors’ money. His sentence is the longest for a white-collar crime since Enron litigation. "You were, in every meaning of the sense, a career criminal … you ruined lives," US District Judge Colleen McMahon told Israel at sentencing. "Financial fraud, white-collar crimes are every bit as heinous as every other type of crime and they will be punished severely." Read These Next A White House press briefing got pretty heated Thursday. Liam Neeson's reps have some PR spin to do over an anti-vax film. Democratic leaders sit out bid to impeach Trump. Newly released Epstein photos feature Trump, Bill Clinton. Report an error