California Man Indicted on Mail Fraud and Other Charges
San Diego, CA—United States Attorney Karen P. Hewitt announced that today a federal grand jury
sitting in San Diego handed up a fifteen-count indictment charging Richard M. Hersch with Mail Fraud and
Conspiracy to Structure Financial Transactions. Hersch was arrested by federal agents from the Federal
Bureau of Investigation and Internal Revenue Service on April 16, 2009, at his residence in Rancho Santa
Fe, California, pursuant to a criminal complaint charging him with one count of mail fraud. He remains in
custody pending a detention hearing scheduled for April 30, 2009, before U.S. Magistrate Judge Ruben B.
Brooks.
According to the indictment, Hersch operated an investment scheme in which he recruited investors
by promising returns of two to six percent per week on investments into his company, All States ATM, Inc.
Hersch told investors that All States ATM had contracts with major horse racing tracks in California and
around the country to operate Automated Teller Machines (ATMs) on the “backside” of the racetrack, an area
used by employees of the racetrack, horse owners, horse trainers and others, and not accessible to the general
public. According to the indictment, Hersch also claimed that the contracts his company had with the
racetracks allowed him to operate a check-cashing or loan service on the back side of the track for the
exclusive use of those with access to the backside of the tracks. Hersch claimed that he had 160 employees
and hundreds of ATM, and that his company was in its eighth year of business. The horse racing tracks
identified by Hersch report having no contracts with him or All States ATM to provide financial services of
any sort. Hersch and others recruited approximately 100 investors to invest approximately $20 million in All
States ATM.
Hersch is scheduled to be arraigned on the indictment on April 30, 2009.
DEFENDANT
CASE NUMBER: 09CR1672-JAH
Richard M. Hersch Age: 72
Rancho Santa Fe, California
SUMMARY OF CHARGES
Count 1-14: Mail Fraud - Title 18, United States Code, Section 1341
Count 15: Conspiracy to Structure Financial Transaction - Title 18, United States Code, Section 371
INVESTIGATING AGENCIES
Federal Bureau of Investigation
Internal Revenue Service - Criminal Investigation
An indictment itself is not evidence that the defendant committed the crimes charged. The defendant
is presumed innocent until the Government meets its burden in court of proving guilt beyond a
reasonable doubt.
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