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    See a sample reprint in PDF format. Order a reprint of this article now

    APRIL 15, 2009

    Dow Jones Reprints: This copy is for your personal, non-commercial use only. To order presentation-ready copies for distribution to your colleagues, clients orcustomers, use the Order Reprints tool at the bottom of any article or visit www.djreprints.com

    Highflying Financier Faces Questions Over Fund Empire

    By MARK MAREMONT

    LOS ANGELES -- At a charity gala in Los Angeles, a young private-equity executive named Danny Pang showed he had

    made it to the big time. Mr. Pang paid $100,000 to help stage the breast-cancer fund-raiser 18 months ago. Media

    mogul Sumner Redstone was one of his co-sponsors. Mr. Pang had his picture taken with actress Felicity Huffman of

    "Desperate Housewives."

    Mr. Pang's rsum depicts a glittering success story: a Taiwanese immigrant who earned an M.B.A., worked on Wall

    Street and now heads a $4 billion investment fund. He also became a partner in another fund firm with business

    luminaries such as Frank Carlucci, the former defense secretary and ex-Carlyle Group chairman, and former

    Lockheed Martin Chief Executive Norman Augustine.

    But both Mr. Pang's past and his business may not be quite as they appear. The university from which he says he has

    an M.B.A. and another degree says it has no record of either. Morgan Stanley, where Mr. Pang's bio says he was a

    senior vice president and senior high-tech merger adviser, says it can find no record it ever employed him.

    A former president of the firm Mr. Pang heads -- Private Equity Management Group Inc. in Irvine, Calif. -- says Mr.

    Pang told him in 2007 that part of the enterprise involved a Ponzi scheme. The executive also alleges that Mr. Pang

    improperly used some of investors' cash for the firm's benefit and once told him to deceive investors with a fakeinsurance policy.

    And at a venture-capital firm where Mr. Pang worked earlier, the CEO says he fired Mr. Pang for stealing $3 million

    from an escrow account in June 1997.

    That was a few weeks after a well-dressed man came to Mr. Pang's California home, confirmed that the woman who

    answered the door was Mr. Pang's wife, and shot her dead. The murder remains unsolved.

    Mr. Pang declined to be interviewed. Through a spokesman, he described almost every allegation about him as a

    fabrication. There is no claim of any impropriety at the private-equity firm where he was a partner with Messrs.

    Carlucci and Augustine. This week, after The Wall Street Journal had inquired about Mr. Pang's role at that firm,

    called Frontier Group, a representative of the firm said Mr. Pang was no longer a partner there.

    PEMGroup recently sought to get its ex-president to withdraw the allegations he had made. As part of an effort to settle

    a legal dispute, the firm asked him to tell the Journal that what he told it before was untrue. It also offered a $500,000

    initial payment that would be triggered by evidence the Journal wasn't doing an article. The ex-president refused the

    offer.

    A second accuser did retract one assertion. The venture-capital CEO who said Mr. Pang stole money and was fired later

    sent the Journal a letter saying Mr. Pang left voluntarily. He didn't address his theft allegation.

    Danny Pang was born Dec. 15, 1966, in Taiwan, where, according to people who know him, his mother's family was the

    wealthy owner of a furniture-making business. He came to the U.S. as a youth. Later, at the University of California,

    Irvine, he became a student leader, chairman of the Asian Pacific Student & Staff Association in 1988-89.

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    University records, however, show a "Danny Pang" with his Social Security number and birth date enrolled only for a

    single summer term, in 1986, and don't show that anyone with his name or Social Security number ever received the

    degrees he lists. Asked how someone unenrolled could be a student leader, a university spokeswoman said, "He could

    just walk on campus, be Mr. Personality and get elected chairman. How would they know if he was a student?"

    Mr. Pang said through PEMGroup's spokesman that he got his degrees under a Chinese name he won't disclose. He

    said several weeks ago he would provide proof of the degrees, but hasn't. He similarly said he would track down a

    former colleague at Morgan Stanley to verify his employment there, but hasn't.

    In the mid-1990s Mr. Pang became a partner at Sky Capital Partners, a venture-capital firm with offices in San Mateo,Calif., and Taiwan. Its president and CEO, Michael Hsu, said in an interview that Mr. Pang later "stole my personal

    money" by getting Mr. Hsu to set up a brokerage account and then using some of the cash in it himself.

    Later, in June 1997, as Sky Capital was about to close an investment in a Silicon Valley start-up, Mr. Hsu said in an

    email Mr. Pang "stole 3 million dollars from an investment escrow account by faking signature of mine and CEO of our

    investment target." When confronted, according to Mr. Hsu, Mr. Pang said he "just needed the money."

    Mr. Hsu says he didn't report the theft to police because it was an embarrassing internal scandal and he was asked not

    to by Mr. Pang's family, a big investor in Sky Capital. Mr. Hsu says Mr. Pang traveled to Taiwan and confessed the theft

    to Sky Capital's board. Mr. Hsu also says he recovered about two-thirds of the stolen money, in part by seizing Mr.

    Pang's share of the venture-capital firm. In a March interview and in his email, Mr. Hsu said Sky Capital fired Mr.

    Pang.

    Through his spokesman, Mr. Pang denied either stealing or being fired, and provided a letter from Mr. Hsu, dated

    April 8, that didn't address his theft allegations but that called Mr. Pang's departure voluntary. Asked about the letter,

    Mr. Hsu said he wrote it because he didn't want to "get involved into a dispute."

    PEMGroup took shape several years later. A local entrepreneur named Hiep Trinh says he met Mr. Pang and floated

    the idea of a fund that would buy life-insurance policies from elderly people and collect when they died. The two men

    and five others formed PEMGroup.

    "We started talking to [Mr. Pang] because we thought he had a lot of money," says Mr. Trinh. He says he later realized

    his new partner was in debt. He also says he was disturbed when Mr. Pang would make improbable claims about his

    wealth and falsely tell outsiders the partners knew each other from college. "He was a consummate liar," Mr. Trinh

    says. "He could lie about anything with a straight face."

    Mr. Trinh says he concluded Mr. Pang was a big gambler, because "I would hear him on the phone making bets all the

    time," and tough-looking men kept dropping by to see him. The PEMGroup spokesman said Mr. Pang visits Las Vegas

    about three times a year and has no idea what the reference to tough-looking men is about.

    Mr. Trinh, one of several partners who resigned in 2003, is involved in a lawsuit with PEMGroup, which has accused

    him of improperly using a similar firm name to raise money for other ventures. He denies doing so.

    Starting with its first fund in 2004, PEMGroup has raised hundreds of millions of dollars through Taiwanese banks. It

    offers them notes that pay above-market interest, notes the banks can reoffer to individual clients. (PEMGroup says it

    doesn't raise money in the U.S.) The Asian banks include SinoPac Financial Holdings Co., Taichung Commercial Bank

    Co., Hua Nan Financial Holdings Co. and a unit ofStandard Chartered PLC.

    One way PEMGroup has used cash it raises is to invest in debt of U.S. companies. For instance, it lent money to Emrise

    Corp., an electronics concern in Rancho Cucamonga, Calif. That firm's chief financial officer, John Donovan, calls Mr.

    Pang "a very sharp guy." PEMGroup also invests in U.S. time-share properties and buys the rights to payouts on

    life-insurance policies.

    Several associates describe Mr. Pang, who speaks in heavily accented English, as a shrewd judge of character, adept at

    discerning what motivates people. They say he wins trust in part by projecting an air of success -- wearing expensive

    suits, staying in top hotels and reciting career accomplishments. "He's very, very convincing in the beginning," says

    Nasar Aboubakare, a California entrepreneur who put up most of PEMGroup's initial capital, became its president --

    and now is a detractor.

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    Mr. Aboubakare, 42 years old, who says he and Mr. Pang were once like brothers, was fired in 2007 and is embroiled

    in a bitter battle with Mr. Pang and PEMGroup, both in California state court and in an arbitration action.

    PEMGroup's spokesman says Mr. Aboubakare was fired for taking $3 million in kickbacks from a vendor and for

    sexual misconduct. Mr. Aboubakare admits taking the kickbacks, which he says he returned, and notes that he wasn't

    fired until many months later. He says he had an affair with an employee but denies that it constituted misconduct.

    In turn, he makes numerous allegations. As PEMGroup's No. 2 executive, he says, he participated in, and heard about,

    instances of improper conduct.

    Mr. Pang made frequent trips to Taiwan to recruit bank investors and would stay in the presidential suite at the Grand

    Formosa Regent Taipei. There, according to Mr. Aboubakare, to Mr. Trinh and to one other ex-partner, Mr. Pang

    frequently entertained prostitutes. The PEMGroup spokesman called the allegation false.

    In 2006, according to Mr. Aboubakare, PEMGroup raised a fund that was supposed to be invested in time-share

    resorts in the U.S. But when PEMGroup couldn't find enough properties to invest in, he says, Mr. Pang decided to use

    about $15 million of the money to buy the firm a Gulfstream IV jet. Mr. Aboubakare said Mr. Pang often used it for

    personal travel; he called the purchase a misuse of investor funds.

    The PEMGroup spokesman denied any misuse of money, saying the fund's prospectus permitted investing unused

    proceeds in "other instruments." The spokesman said this was done by making a secured loan to an affiliated firm that

    used the cash to buy the jet, a loan that was repaid in six months.

    On July 12, 2007, Mr. Pang used the jet to take a group of women from PEMGroup's California offices to Las Vegas for

    a party. Mr. Aboubakare says that on the return flight the next day, Mr. Pang, having won at a casino, "had a briefcase

    stuffed with cash and he started throwing money to the girls, stacks of $10,000. I thought it wasn't right to treat the

    girls from the office that way, like we were pimps and gamblers."

    PEMGroup's spokesman confirmed the firm took the women to Las Vegas -- "as a reward for good work" -- and said

    Mr. Pang "did show them his winnings."

    To reassure investors, PEMGroup often purchased insurance on its investments. Mr. Aboubakare says some of this

    coverage was fake.

    In early 2007, he says, a PEMGroup affiliate called GVEC Resource IV bought a $31.6 million policy from a unit ofHCC Insurance Holdings Inc. to cover investments in time-share properties. But because the policy wasn't large

    enough, Mr. Aboubakare says, Mr. Pang directed him and another executive to create a phony document raising the

    covered amount to $108 million. Mr. Aboubakare says he personally showed this fake policy to investors and sent it to

    PEMGroup's Taiwan office.

    HCC, shown documents, confirmed that the $31.6 million policy was genuine but said the $108 million policy was not.

    "It looks to me like a forgery," an HCC official said.

    The spokesman for PEMGroup said the firm and Mr. Pang never authorized any forgery and didn't discover the

    insurance document until after Mr. Aboubakare left, adding that to the firm's knowledge, the document wasn't shown

    to investors or sent to Taiwan.

    Part of PEMGroup's business is buying life-insurance policies from older people at a discount, collecting after they die.

    But a problem arose in 2007, Mr. Aboubakare says, when policies weren't paying off at the projected rate -- "everybody

    lived a long time."

    According to him, the remedy was a Ponzi scheme, an arrangement in which existing investors are paid with money

    from new ones. Mr. Aboubakare says that to meet the above-market interest due investors in Taiwan, PEMGroup used

    cash from a new fund to "pay earlier life settlements that were nonperforming. That's when the whole Ponzi scheme

    started." One day in mid-2007, he says, Mr. Pang came into his office and said: "Nasar, I want you to know we are in a

    Ponzi scheme." He adds that Mr. Pang stated he would fix the problem by doing well on another investment.

    Mr. Aboubakare says when he persisted in asking questions about the arrangement, he was "kept out of the loop" and

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    Printed in The Wall Street Journal, page A1

    Copyright 2008 Dow Jones & Company, Inc. All Rights Reserved

    This copy is for your personal, non-commercial use only. Distribution and use of this material are governed by our Subscriber Agreement and by copyright law.For non-personal use or to order multiple copies, please contact Dow Jones Reprints at 1-800-843-0008 or visit

    www.djreprints.com

    then in September 2007 was fired. He made his Ponzi-scheme allegation both in interviews and in the arbitration

    action that followed his firing.

    The PEMGroup spokesman, Mike Sitrick, called the idea of a Ponzi scheme a "total fabrication." He said the firm set

    aside all the money needed to pay investors. Several investors say the firm has always met its interest and principal

    obligations.

    The arbitration action after Mr. Aboubakare's firing involved, among other things, the value of his 27% share of

    PEMGroup. Settlement talks began a few months ago. They intensified after PEMGroup learned Mr. Aboubakare was

    in touch with the Journal and Barry Minkow. Mr. Minkow is a onetime teenage investment whiz who went to prison forthe ZZZZ Best affair, a prominent 1980s scandal,and now is a pastor who seeks to expose frauds.

    A lawyer for PEMGroup, Charles Schmerler of Fulbright & Jaworski, proposed on March 17 that PEMGroup would pay

    Mr. Aboubakare at least $500,000 to settle the dispute. The letter states that the $500,000 payment would be

    triggered by evidence the Journal had dropped plans for an article. The lawyer drafted a letter for Mr. Aboubakare to

    send the Journal. In it, he was to say that his statements to the Journal and to Mr. Minkow were false and that he had

    made them partly because stress "affected my judgment and mental well-being."

    PEMGroup said this draft letter was part of lengthy settlement negotiations. It said the language was suggested by Mr.

    Aboubakare's attorney, who denies this. Mr. Schmerler declined to comment.

    Mr. Aboubakare acknowledges that he would have been willing to stop talking to the Journal to obtain a settlement,

    and that he initially talked to the paper to put pressure on his former company. But Mr. Aboubakare says he "was

    flabbergasted" by the proposal and rejected the idea out of hand. He says he stands by his allegations.

    Last week, PEMGroup took down its extensive Web site, which included Mr. Pang's biography, leaving a message that a

    new site was being developed.

    John Hechinger in Boston and Ting-I Tsai in Taipei, Taiwan, contributed to this article.

    Wr ite to Mark Maremont at [email protected]

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