Barton was sentenced to 6 years, 6 months in prison to be followed by 3 years of supervised release, and was ordered to pay $878,100 in restitution.
Barton was convicted of these charges upon his plea of guilty on March 25. He was previously sued by the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission, which obtained a judgment against Barton and his former investment firms for over $4 million in penalties and disgorgement of profits, as well as various injunctive and other relief.
According to the information presented in court: Barton, a registered broker and investment manager, defrauded several clients and investors of approximately $2 million dollars, including almost the entire life savings of a single, retired elderly woman in her 90's who was suffering from Alzheimer's disease. From at least 1995 through 2002, Barton was a manager at an Atlanta branch of a national brokerage firm. After he was terminated in 2002, he began his own investment advisory firms, "Barton Asset Management LLC" and "Twinspan Capital LLC," both based in Atlanta. On numerous occasions from at least 2001 through 2007, Barton fraudulently diverted to himself client funds that he was entrusted with investing.
In his victimization of the Alzheimer's patient, identified in Court by her initials, "RF," Barton first learned of her diagnosis in 2001. He had begun his fraud two years earlier in 1999, and it continued unabated through 2003. In all, Barton fraudulently diverted nearly $1 million of RF's assets to his own checking account, which he spent on personal lifestyle expenses and to fund the development of Twinspan Capital. Mainly as a result of these frauds, the balance in RF's investment and bank accounts fell from approximately $1.3 million in 1999 to less than $100 in 2004. Prior to the criminal prosecution, RF's estate sued Barton and his former employer, which repaid all but $200,000 of the improperly diverted funds.
In addition to diverting client money from RF and at least one other client, Barton committed securities fraud by selling shares in his new company, Twinspan, based on false pretenses. Specifically, he raised over $1 million in investments in Twinspan by claiming that he would use the proceeds to operate and grow the business. However, he instead diverted at least half of these supposed investments to himself, which he used to satisfy personal debts and pay personal lifestyle expenses.
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