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Investment advisor on the run found in Florida

Pilot, motorcyclist, financial planner Shrenker is having a memorable week. UPDATE: U.S. Marshals apprehended Marcus Shrenker in a northern Florida campground this morning (14 January 2009), according to media reports. He is said to have been found with one wrist badly cut, muttering the word "die," as he was apparently slipping into unconsciousness. His seemingly self-inflicted wound bound, he was airlifted to a hospital in Tallahassee, Fla. In addition to legal troubles with several of the companies whose investment and insurance platforms he used for his businesses, Indiana authorities' compliant that he unlawfully represented himself as a state-registered investment advisor, divorce proceedings, and a growing list of clients coming forward to say he's ripped them off, Shrenker faces federal charges related to calling in a false emergency from his airplane and for deliberately crashing that plane.
The following article was originally published on 13 January 2009.
Authorities in three states are beating the bushes for financial
advisor Marcus Shrenker, who is believed to have attempted to
fake his death in a bid to escape his legal and financial
troubles.
Shrenker, CEO of Indianapolis-based Heritage Wealth Management
until his Indiana registration as an investment advisor
representative was revoked on 31 December, and an experienced
pilot, called air-traffic authorities while en route from Indiana
to Florida the other day to say that his windscreen had caved in,
that he was bloody from broken glass and that he was losing
control of the plane.
When Shrenker didn't respond to further queries from air-traffic
control, military jets were sent up. The military pilots, who
reported that the pilot-side door of Shrenker's single-engine
Piper was ajar and the cockpit apparently empty, tracked the
aircraft until it crashed into a swamp in the Florida panhandle
near Alabama. No body was found at the crash. In addition, the
plane's windshield wasn't damaged as Shrenker had described and
there was no blood in evidence.
The great escape
Still, authorities mounted a search for Shrenker in the woods and
bogs around the crash site.
Meanwhile, about 200 miles north of the Piper crash scene, police
in Childersburg, Ala., came across a fellow who showed them
Shrenker's I.D. as his own and said he'd been in a canoeing
accident. The cops, who knew nothing of the search for Shrenker,
took the stranger to a local hotel and left him. He booked into
the hotel, paying by cash and using a name other than Marcus
Shrenker. By the time Childersburg police figured out they might
have a line on the guy their colleagues were looking for in
Florida, the supposed canoeist had lit into the woods on foot,
according to witnesses at the hotel.
Authorities are still looking for him in Florida, Alabama and
Indiana. They now figure he parachuted from his plane shortly
after making a bogus distress call. But they don't think he's
still lurking in the woods. It seems he had a motorcycle stashed
in a self-storage shed near Childersburg.
Last week a federal court in Maryland ordered Shrenker's Heritage
Wealth Management to pay $533,564 to a cBaltimore-based insurance
subsidiary of Old Mutual for "unjust enrichment" for not
re-paying "unearned" commissions. Another insurance company is
suing him for $1.4 million in a similar case.
In light of Shrenker's presumed flight, a judge in Indiana's
Hamilton county yesterday ordered that Shrenker's assets and
those of his wife Michelle Shrenker be frozen for 10 days pending
a hearing.
Shrenker's wife filed to divorce him on 30 December.
The next day, Indiana state authorities raided Shrenker's home
and business offices in connection with an investigation into
possible securities fraud.
And now the criminal charges are coming in. As of today, Shrenker
faces two charges in Indiana -- for conducting business as an
investment advisor representative after his registration had been
revoked. -FWR
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