Stanford clients in Venezuela sue Willis Group

NEW YORK, (Reuters) – A group of Venezuelan clients  of Stanford Financial Group have sued the insurance broker  Willis Group Holdings Ltd, accusing it of contributing to a $7  billion Ponzi scheme at the Texas-based investment company  founded by Allen Stanford.

The lawsuit filed in federal court in Dallas seeks  class-action status on behalf of more than 1,200 depositors,  and seeks the recovery about $1.6 billion of actual and  punitive damages from Willis.

It follows a similar lawsuit last month in the same court  by the same law firms seeking $1 billion of damages on behalf  of Mexican clients of Stanford. Another Venezuelan investor  filed a similar lawsuit in July in Miami federal court. Willis did not return a call seeking comment. Last month,  the company said it would defend against the earlier claims,  and that it did not suspect any of its workers knew of fraud at  Stanford.

According to yesterday’s 49-page lawsuit, Willis agreed to  Stanford’s request to provide “safety and soundness” letters,  and that “the clear intention” was for the letters to be used  in Stanford’s marketing to help retain and attract clients.

As a result, the lawsuit said, “Willis “crossed the line  from being mere insurance brokers for the Stanford Financial  group, to joining the Stanford Financial/ Stanford International  Bank sales force.” It said this made Willis a “willing”  participant in Stanford’s fraud.

Allen Stanford, who reached billionaire status, faces  criminal and civil charges related to what U.S. prosecutors  have called a $7 billion fraud involving high-yielding  certificates of deposit issued by his bank in Antigua.     Many of Stanford’s customers lived in Latin America. A  court-appointed receiver took control of Stanford Financial in  February. Willis is based in London and domiciled in Bermuda.