School Equipment Scammers Sentenced to Prison

Article Tools




Interact With Us



Best of 2011

Top Stories of 2011

The most popular stories of 2011. Did your favorites make our list?

View our Top 12 list here

Resource Center

Buyers Guide

Find industry businesses by product or service categories, view company profiles and more.

View our Buyers Guide

Club Industry Trade Show

Club Industry Show and Conference, held each October, is the premier event for fitness and wellness professionals. Find out more about Exhibitors, Events, and Education.

View our Trade Show

Industry Events & Trade Shows

The industry-wide calendar features listings for educational events, trade shows and more.

View our Events Calendar

Classifieds

View classified ads for health club equipment and services, plus business opportunities and job postings.

View Classifieds

Current Issue

Read stories from the latest print issue of Club Industry magazine.

View the Current Issue

E-Newsletter Signup

Breaking news on the industry, people on the move, mergers and acquisitions and much more. Delivered weekly.

Minneapolis — A father and son who bilked school districts into acquiring “free” fitness equipment as part of a pyramid scheme were sentenced Dec. 7 to lengthy prison terms and will have to pay $39 million in restitution. U.S. District Judge Joan Erickson of Minneapolis sentenced Cameron J. Lewis, 36, to 17 years in prison and his father, J. Tyron Lewis, 65, to 5 years, 8 months.

Cameron Lewis was the CEO of the Utah-based nonprofit organization National School Fitness Foundation. Tyron Lewis was its chairman and helped finance the operation. A jury in Minneapolis convicted the Lewises a year ago on five counts of mail fraud, nine counts of wire fraud, one count of bank fraud and one count of money-laundering conspiracy.

The U.S. Attorney's Office says that more than 350 school districts and dozens of banks nationwide lost nearly $40 million in the scheme, in which schools purchased the equipment in anticipation of refunds the foundation said would be obtained through government grants and private donations. In reality, the schools that purchased the equipment in the early stages of the scheme were reimbursed with the payments from schools that signed up later.

The Lewises never disclosed to schools that they were personally profiting from the foundation and paid themselves$1.4 million on the eve of the company's collapse. The foundation went bankrupt in 2004, and the Lewises were convicted in 2006.

In related cases, Shanna L. Black, Cameron Lewis' sister, pleaded guilty in February 2006 to misdemeanor charges for her work with the foundation. Marion H. Markle, the foundation's former chief financial officer, pleaded guilty in April 2006 to a felony related to the scheme to defraud. Joseph Mont Beardall, the president of School Fitness Systems LLC, which supplied the equipment to the foundation, pleaded guilty to fraud charges in 2004.

Want to use this article? Click here for options!
© 2012 Penton Media Inc.

Sponsored Content

Cardio and Strength Trends
Sponsored by Life Fitness

Core Strength Conditioning
Sponsored by The AB Coaster Company

Group Exercise
Sponsored by LesMills

Technology Resource Center
Sponsored by ABC Financial

Videos

1st Annual Fitness Industry Summit 2011: Introduction

Jay Del Vecchio, World Instructor Training Schools President and CEO

Star Trac 2012 Photo Shoot: Behind the Scenes

Making of Star Trac Lifestyle Images Video.

Elevation Series iPod Compatibility

Watch the newest informative video from Life Fitness.



More Video

E-Newsletter

Newsbeat

Delivered once a week, this timely e-newsletter features breaking news, people on the move, mergers and acquisitions, supplier news, industry trends and more.

Subscribe

Most Popular

Most Recent

Insights into what high-level club executives think about their business and industry trends.

View Executive Insights

Practical Internet strategies to help you build customer relationships, increase revenues and lower costs.

View Web Savvy

In This Issue: May 2012 View All Past Issues

Cover Story

The Business of Corporate Fitness

Focusing on the corporate fitness market can present a revenue opportunity.



View the full issue
| View the digital edition

Subscribe To Club Industry Magazine

In Print and Online

Subscribe today to get the news you need and information you want from our print or digital edition as well as in our e-newsletters.

Subscribe Today!