Paul A. Bilzerian ran cannabis company while owing government more than $180 million, feds allege

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A federal grand jury has indicted Paul A. Bilzerian, a corporate takeover specialist; Scott Rohleder, his longtime accountant; and Ignite, a cannabis firm in Canada, on charges of conspiracy and fraud.

Paul A. Bilzerian was indicted Thursday by a federal grand jury in California for allegedly dodging a decades-old judgment owed to the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission that now exceeds $180 million. Prosecutors say Bilzerian, described as a corporate takeover specialist, avoided paying the judgment even as he ran Ignite, a cannabis and lifestyle brand company purportedly helmed by his social media influencer son, Dan Bilzerian.

The latest charges trace to 1989, when Bilzerian was convicted of securities and tax-fraud violations related to three failed takeover attempts. He was sentenced to four years in federal prison, but ultimately served 13 months. The SEC then brought a civil action against Bilzerian and obtained judgments totaling more than $62 million in 1993. Since then, prosecutors say, Bilzerian has evaded enforcement.

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