==========================================START OF PAGE 1====== SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION Washington, D.C. Litigation Release No. 14897 / May 1, 1996 IN RE ROBERT N. TAYLOR, United States District Court for the District of Columbia, Misc. No. 96-149 (TFH). On May 1, 1996, the United States Attorney for the District of Columbia commenced criminal contempt proceedings in the United States District Court for the District of Columbia against Robert N. Taylor. The Government alleges that Taylor willfully and flagrantly violated an asset freeze order and other orders entered in a separate civil securities enforcement action brought by the Commission against Taylor and the Better Life Club of America, Inc., a corporation founded and controlled by Taylor. Securities and Exchange Commission v. The Better Life Club of America, Inc., and Robert N. Taylor, Civil Action No. 95-1679 (TFH) (D.D.C.). The contempt proceedings have been assigned to United States District Judge Thomas F. Hogan, who also presides over the Commission's related enforcement action. Upon conviction of the contempt charge, Taylor would face up to six months' imprisonment or a fine of up to $5,000. In the contempt proceedings, the Government alleges: Beginning moments after the freeze order was entered in the Commission's action on September 1, 1995, and continuing for a period of seven months, Taylor used concealed bank accounts to engage in at least 232 prohibited banking transactions, including $246,000 in withdrawals and $344,000 in deposits. The deposits included at least 172 investor checks totaling over $188,000, which Taylor failed to turn over to the SEC or the court- appointed special administrator as directed by Judge Hogan. In addition, Taylor failed to disclose at least 15 bank accounts when ordered to do so by the Court, and went on to open -- and conceal -- six new accounts, in further violation of Judge Hogan's orders. In the underlying civil enforcement action, the Commission alleges that Taylor and the Better Life Club operated a $47 million Ponzi scheme in violation of the antifraud and registration requirements of the federal securities laws. According to the Commission's complaint, defendants promised to double investors' money in 60 or 90 days allegedly through investments in advertising for the Club's "900" telephone numbers and other profitable businesses, when in fact defendants used the investors' funds almost exclusively to pay off earlier investors and to enrich Taylor, his children, and his live-in companion. The scheme was halted by the Court pending a final determination of the Commission's action. See SEC Lit. Rel. No. 14624 (Sept. ==========================================START OF PAGE 2====== 5, 1995).