General
Victims of horse racing Ponzi scheme search for their missing millions

From the start, the offer seemed too good to be true.
Key points:
- Seven years after a horse-racing gambling syndicate collapsed, investors still don’t know where all their money went
- A court has found the syndicate was actually a Ponzi scheme
- Police have declined to prosecute the scam’s middlemen
In 2012, a workmate in the oil industry invited Peter to join “The Edge”, a secret punting club promising unheard-of returns.
He told Peter the mastermind behind the plan, well-known horse racing identity Bill Vlahos, had a magic formula for picking winners.
Looking back now, Peter knows he should have trusted his instincts when he first learned how the system worked.
“I said, ‘That sounds like a Ponzi scheme,'” Peter recalls.
But, like the 1,800…
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