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|birth_place = New York
|birth_place = New York
|charges = Conspiracy to commit securities fraud, Conspiracy to commit wire fraud, Securities fraud, Wire fraud (2 counts)
|charges = Conspiracy to commit securities fraud, Conspiracy to commit wire fraud, Securities fraud, Wire fraud (2 counts)
|sentence = 84 months (commuted)
|conviction_date = August 1, 2024
|sentence = 84 months federal prison (commuted December 2025)
|sentencing_date = May 9, 2025
|judge = Hon. Rachel P. Kovner
|case_number = 1:21-cr-00054 (E.D.N.Y.)
|facility = Federal prison
|facility = Federal prison
|status = Released (sentence commuted December 2025)
|status = Released (sentence commuted)
|conviction_date = August 2024
|release_date = November 26, 2025 (commuted)
|release_date = December 1, 2025 (commuted)
}}
}}
'''David Gentile''' is an American businessman and former CEO and co-founder of GPB Capital Holdings, a private equity firm based in New York. In August 2024, Gentile was convicted by a federal jury of [[Securities Fraud|securities fraud]], [[Wire Fraud|wire fraud]], and conspiracy for his role in defrauding more than 10,000 investors out of approximately $1.6 billion.


Gentile was sentenced to seven years in federal prison in November 2024 and reported to custody on November 14, 2024. On December 1, 2025, President Donald Trump commuted his sentence. Gentile was released from prison on December 3, 2025, having served only 12 days of his seven-year sentence.
'''David Gentile''' is an American businessman. He founded GPB Capital Holdings in 2013 and served as its chief executive. GPB was a New York private equity firm. It raised more than $1.7 billion from over 17,000 investors.<ref name="doj-sentenced">{{cite web |title=Former Private Equity Executives Sentenced to Prison |url=https://www.justice.gov/usao-edny/pr/former-private-equity-executives-sentenced-prison |publisher=U.S. Department of Justice, Eastern District of New York |date=2025-05-09 |access-date=2026-06-03}}</ref>


== Summary ==
A federal jury in Brooklyn convicted Gentile on August 1, 2024. The verdict came after an eight-week trial. The jury found him guilty of securities fraud, conspiracy to commit securities fraud, conspiracy to commit wire fraud, and wire fraud.<ref name="doj-convicted">{{cite web |title=Founder of GPB Capital and CEO of Ascendant Capital Convicted of Fraud Charges |url=https://www.justice.gov/usao-edny/pr/founder-gpb-capital-and-ceo-ascendant-capital-convicted-fraud-charges |publisher=U.S. Department of Justice, Eastern District of New York |date=2024-08-01 |access-date=2026-06-03}}</ref> Prosecutors said GPB used new investor money to fund the monthly distribution payments it sent to existing investors. The firm told investors those payments came from portfolio company profits. They did not.<ref name="doj-sentenced"/>


GPB Capital Holdings raised $1.6 billion from investors between 2014 and 2018 to acquire companies in the auto dealership, retail, healthcare, and housing sectors. Gentile and his co-conspirators marketed GPB's funds to retail investors, many of whom invested retirement savings, promising consistent returns and professional portfolio management.
United States District Judge Rachel P. Kovner sentenced Gentile on May 9, 2025. The term was 84 months in federal prison, seven years. Co-defendant Jeffry Schneider, who ran GPB's placement agent Ascendant Capital, received 72 months.<ref name="doj-sentenced"/> Gentile reported to prison on November 14, 2025.<ref name="nbc-commute">{{cite news |last=Hillyard |first=Vaughn |title=Trump commutes 7-year prison sentence of former private equity CEO David Gentile days after his sentence began |url=https://www.nbcnews.com/politics/white-house/trump-commutes-7-year-prison-sentence-former-private-equity-ceo-david-rcna246744 |work=NBC News |date=2025-12-01 |access-date=2026-06-03}}</ref> President Donald Trump commuted the sentence less than two weeks later. Gentile was released on November 26, 2025. The conviction remains on his record.<ref name="bloomberg-commute">{{cite news |title=Trump Commutes Sentence of GPB Capital Founder David Gentile |url=https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2025-12-01/trump-commutes-sentence-of-gpb-capital-founder-david-gentile |work=Bloomberg |date=2025-12-01 |access-date=2026-06-03}}</ref>


In reality, prosecutors proved that GPB Capital used new investor money to pay distributions to earlier investors—a hallmark of a Ponzi scheme. Gentile and co-defendant Jeffrey Schneider, GPB's chief compliance officer, misrepresented the performance of three private equity funds, concealing losses and fabricating returns to attract additional investment.
== Background and GPB Capital ==


The scheme collapsed when GPB stopped paying investor distributions in 2018 and the company came under investigation by multiple federal and state authorities. Thousands of investors—many of them retirees who invested through broker-dealers—lost substantial portions of their savings.
Gentile founded GPB Capital Holdings in 2013. The firm registered as an investment adviser and set up shop in New York. Its pitch was simple. GPB would buy income-producing private companies and pass the cash they generated back to investors as steady monthly distributions.<ref name="doj-convicted"/>


== Background ==
The funds bought into several industries. Auto dealerships were the largest holding, held through the GPB Automotive Portfolio fund. GPB also put money into waste management and other operating businesses. The firm marketed three main private equity funds to the public.<ref name="doj-sentenced"/>


=== GPB Capital Holdings ===
GPB did not sell to investors directly. It worked through a network of broker-dealers and a placement agent. That agent was Ascendant Capital, a Texas marketing firm run by Jeffry Schneider. Ascendant served as the exclusive placement agent for the GPB funds. Schneider's firm marketed the limited partnership interests to retail investors, many of them retirees.<ref name="doj-convicted"/>


GPB Capital Holdings was founded in 2013 as a private equity firm focused on acquiring income-producing operating companies. The firm marketed itself as an alternative investment opportunity for accredited investors seeking stable returns outside of traditional securities markets.
The money came in fast. Across the funds, GPB raised more than $1.7 billion. The investor count topped 17,000. The funds promised an annualized distribution of roughly 8 percent.<ref name="doj-sentenced"/>


GPB raised capital primarily through broker-dealers who sold limited partnership interests to retail investors. The firm's marketing emphasized its strategy of acquiring profitable businesses that would generate steady cash distributions for investors.
== The Fraud ==


GPB's largest investments were in auto dealerships, which it acquired through its GPB Automotive Portfolio fund. The company also invested in waste management, healthcare staffing, and mobile home parks through other funds.
The distributions were the center of the scheme. GPB told investors that the monthly payments came from the profits of the portfolio companies. That was the entire premise. Investors were buying a stream of income generated by real operating businesses.<ref name="doj-sentenced"/>


=== The Fraud Scheme ===
The portfolio companies were not generating enough to cover the payments. So GPB used investor capital instead. New money funded the distributions sent to older investors. This is the defining mechanic of a [[Ponzi scheme]], and prosecutors and the SEC described GPB's operation as Ponzi-like.<ref name="sec-litigation">{{cite web |title=SEC v. GPB Capital Holdings, LLC, et al. |url=https://www.sec.gov/enforcement-litigation/litigation-releases/lr-25909 |publisher=U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission |date=2021-02-04 |access-date=2026-06-03}}</ref>


According to federal prosecutors, Gentile and his co-conspirators:
GPB hid the gap. The firm manipulated the financial statements of its funds. The doctored figures made it look like fund income was close to covering the distributions. It was not. Operating partner Jeffrey Lash signed performance guarantees for certain dealerships owned by the funds. Those guarantees falsely represented that Lash had agreed to cover shortfalls in dealership profits.<ref name="sec-litigation"/>


* Misrepresented the financial performance of GPB's funds to investors
The scheme started to surface in 2018. GPB missed deadlines for audited financial statements. It then suspended investor distributions. Federal and state regulators opened investigations. Investors, many of whom had put retirement savings into the funds, were left holding interests they could not redeem.<ref name="doj-convicted"/>
* Used new investor capital to pay distributions to existing investors, rather than profits from operations
* Fabricated financial statements and investor communications
* Concealed mounting losses and operational failures
* Paid themselves excessive management fees regardless of fund performance


The scheme began unraveling in 2018 when GPB announced it would stop paying investor distributions and delay required financial filings. Investigations by the SEC, FBI, and state attorneys general followed.
== Charges and Trial ==


== Indictment, Prosecution, and Sentencing ==
The case was unsealed in February 2021. A grand jury in the Eastern District of New York returned an indictment against three men tied to GPB. The defendants were Gentile, Schneider, and Jeffrey Lash.<ref name="doj-indicted">{{cite web |title=GPB Capital Founder and CEO Among Three Individuals Indicted in Private Equity Investment Fraud Scheme |url=https://www.justice.gov/usao-edny/pr/gpb-capital-founder-and-ceo-among-three-individuals-indicted-private-equity-investment |publisher=U.S. Department of Justice, Eastern District of New York |date=2021-02-04 |access-date=2026-06-03}}</ref> The charges included securities fraud, wire fraud, and conspiracy.<ref name="doj-indicted"/>


=== SEC Charges (2021) ===
The SEC filed a parallel civil action the same day. The agency's complaint accused Gentile and Schneider of lying to investors about the source of the distribution money. The SEC characterized the operation as a Ponzi-like scheme.<ref name="sec-litigation"/>


In February 2021, the Securities and Exchange Commission charged Gentile, Schneider, and GPB Capital with securities fraud. The SEC described the scheme as "Ponzi-like" and alleged that GPB had misrepresented fund performance and improperly used investor funds.
Lash pleaded guilty to wire fraud in 2023. He cooperated and was scheduled for sentencing later.<ref name="doj-convicted"/>


=== Criminal Indictment ===
Gentile and Schneider went to trial in 2024. The trial ran eight weeks in federal court in Brooklyn. On August 1, 2024, the jury returned guilty verdicts against both men. Gentile was convicted on five counts: conspiracy to commit securities fraud, conspiracy to commit wire fraud, securities fraud, and two counts of wire fraud. Schneider was convicted of three counts, the two conspiracies and securities fraud.<ref name="doj-convicted"/>


In 2021, federal prosecutors in the Eastern District of New York indicted Gentile on charges including:
The convictions were later upheld on appeal.<ref name="altswire-appeal">{{cite web |title=Securities Fraud Convictions Upheld for GPB Capital Executives |url=https://altswire.com/securities-fraud-convictions-upheld-for-gpb-capital-executives/ |publisher=AltsWire |date=2025 |access-date=2026-06-03}}</ref>


* Conspiracy to commit [[Securities Fraud|securities fraud]]
== Sentencing ==
* Conspiracy to commit [[Wire Fraud|wire fraud]]
* Securities fraud
* Wire fraud (multiple counts)


=== Trial and Conviction ===
Judge Rachel P. Kovner sentenced Gentile on May 9, 2025. She imposed 84 months in the custody of the Federal Bureau of Prisons. That is seven years. Schneider received 72 months, six years.<ref name="doj-sentenced"/>


David Gentile's trial took place in federal court in Brooklyn. In August 2024, after a multi-week trial, the jury convicted Gentile on all counts:
The Justice Department framed the sentences around the scale of the loss. More than 17,000 investors had put money into the funds. The total raised exceeded $1.7 billion. A large share of the victims were retirees who had committed savings to the GPB funds on the promise of safe, steady income.<ref name="doj-sentenced"/>


* Conspiracy to commit securities fraud
Gentile reported to federal prison on November 14, 2025.<ref name="nbc-commute"/>
* Conspiracy to commit wire fraud
* Securities fraud
* Two counts of wire fraud


Co-defendant Jeffrey Schneider was convicted alongside Gentile.
He did not stay long. On December 1, 2025, President Donald Trump commuted Gentile's sentence. Gentile had been in custody for less than two weeks. He was released on November 26, 2025.<ref name="nbc-commute"/> A commutation ends prison time. It does not erase a conviction. Gentile's five felony convictions remained in place.<ref name="bloomberg-commute"/>


=== Sentencing ===
The commutation drew objections. A group of U.S. senators wrote to the White House to criticize the decision. They pointed to the size of the fraud and the number of victims who had not been made whole.<ref name="cnn-commute">{{cite news |title=Trump commutes sentence of private equity CEO convicted of fraud |url=https://www.cnn.com/2025/12/01/politics/david-gentile-trump-pardon |work=CNN |date=2025-12-01 |access-date=2026-06-03}}</ref>
 
In November 2024, Gentile was sentenced to seven years (84 months) in federal prison. The sentence reflected the severity of the fraud and its impact on more than 10,000 victims, many of whom lost retirement savings.
 
Gentile was ordered to surrender to federal custody and reported to prison on November 14, 2024.
 
== Presidential Commutation ==
 
=== The Commutation ===
 
On December 1, 2025, President Donald Trump commuted David Gentile's sentence. Unlike a pardon, a commutation does not erase the conviction—it only reduces or eliminates the remaining sentence. Gentile's convictions remain on his record.
 
Gentile was released from federal prison on December 3, 2025, having served only 12 days of his seven-year sentence.
 
=== Alice Marie Johnson's Role ===
 
[[Alice Marie Johnson]], President Trump's informal "pardon czar," publicly supported Gentile's release. On Thanksgiving Day 2024, just weeks before the commutation, Johnson posted on social media that she was "deeply grateful to see David Gentile heading home to his young children."
 
Johnson, who was herself granted clemency by Trump in 2018 after serving 21 years on drug charges, has advocated for numerous clemency petitions during Trump's second term.
 
=== White House Justification ===
 
White House Press Secretary Karoline Leavitt stated that Gentile's prosecution was "another example of the weaponization of justice from the previous administration" and rejected characterizations of GPB Capital as a Ponzi scheme.
 
=== Criticism ===
 
The commutation drew criticism from legal observers and victim advocates who noted:
 
* Over 10,000 investors lost money in the GPB Capital fraud
* Many victims were retirees who invested retirement savings
* Gentile served only 12 days of a 7-year sentence
* The commutation was granted before any restitution was paid to victims
 
The New York Times reported that it was unclear whether Gentile had connections to Trump or Trump supporters that led to the commutation.
 
== Ongoing Civil Litigation ==
 
While the commutation ended Gentile's prison sentence, it did not affect civil litigation against him. New York Attorney General Letitia James filed a civil lawsuit against Gentile and other GPB defendants in 2021. That case continues.
 
A source familiar with the Attorney General's case told NBC News that the office is aware of Trump's commutation and that it does not change the merits of the civil case against Gentile.
 
== Terminology ==
 
* '''Ponzi Scheme''': A fraudulent investment operation where returns to earlier investors are paid using capital from newer investors, rather than from legitimate business profits.
 
* '''Commutation''': A reduction of a criminal sentence by executive action. Unlike a pardon, a commutation does not eliminate the conviction.
 
* '''Private Equity''': Investment funds that pool capital from investors to acquire ownership in companies not publicly traded on stock exchanges.
 
* '''Securities Fraud''': A type of white-collar crime involving deception in connection with the purchase or sale of securities.
 
== See also ==
 
* [[Securities Fraud]]
* [[Wire Fraud]]
* [[Presidential Clemency and Pardons]]
* [[Alice Marie Johnson]]


== Frequently Asked Questions ==
== Frequently Asked Questions ==


{{FAQSection/Start}}
{{FAQSection/Start}}
{{FAQ|question=What did David Gentile do?|answer=David Gentile was CEO of GPB Capital Holdings, a private equity firm that raised $1.6 billion from more than 10,000 investors. He was convicted of securities fraud and wire fraud for misrepresenting fund performance and using new investor money to pay returns to earlier investors in a Ponzi-like scheme.}}
{{FAQ|question=What did David Gentile do?|answer=Gentile founded and ran GPB Capital Holdings, a New York private equity firm. GPB raised more than $1.7 billion from over 17,000 investors. A federal jury convicted him in August 2024 of securities fraud, wire fraud, and conspiracy. Prosecutors said GPB used new investor money to pay distributions to existing investors while telling investors those payments came from portfolio company profits.}}
{{FAQ|question=How long was David Gentile's prison sentence?|answer=David Gentile was sentenced to 7 years in federal prison in November 2024. However, he served only 12 days before President Trump commuted his sentence on December 1, 2025.}}
{{FAQ|question=How much money did GPB Capital raise?|answer=GPB Capital raised more than $1.7 billion from over 17,000 investors. Many of the investors were retirees. The funds promised steady monthly distributions of around 8 percent annually, which prosecutors said were partly funded with investor capital rather than business profits.}}
{{FAQ|question=Did David Gentile receive a pardon?|answer=No, David Gentile received a commutation, not a pardon. A commutation reduces or ends the prison sentence but does not erase the conviction. Gentile's federal convictions remain on his record, and he continues to face civil litigation.}}
{{FAQ|question=Was GPB Capital a Ponzi scheme?|answer=Federal prosecutors and the SEC described GPB's operation as Ponzi-like. The firm used money from new investors to pay distributions to earlier investors while representing that those payments came from portfolio company profits. Using new investor money to pay existing investors is the defining feature of a Ponzi scheme.}}
{{FAQ|question=How much money did GPB Capital's fraud involve?|answer=GPB Capital raised approximately $1.6 billion from more than 10,000 investors, many of whom were retirees investing retirement savings. The company claimed to invest in auto dealerships, healthcare, and housing, but used new investor money to pay existing investors.}}
{{FAQ|question=How long was David Gentile's sentence?|answer=U.S. District Judge Rachel P. Kovner sentenced Gentile on May 9, 2025, to 84 months, or seven years, in federal prison. He reported to prison on November 14, 2025. President Trump commuted the sentence, and Gentile was released on November 26, 2025.}}
{{FAQ|question=Does David Gentile still face legal consequences?|answer=Yes, while the commutation ended his prison sentence, Gentile still faces ongoing civil litigation. New York Attorney General Letitia James sued Gentile in 2021, and that case continues. He may still be liable for damages to defrauded investors.}}
{{FAQ|question=Who was Jeffry Schneider?|answer=Jeffry Schneider was Gentile's co-defendant. He ran Ascendant Capital, the marketing firm that served as the exclusive placement agent for GPB's funds. A jury convicted Schneider in August 2024 on three counts. Judge Kovner sentenced him to 72 months, or six years, in federal prison.}}
{{FAQ|question=Did David Gentile receive a pardon?|answer=No. Gentile received a commutation, not a pardon. President Trump commuted his sentence on December 1, 2025, after Gentile had served less than two weeks. A commutation ends prison time but does not erase the conviction. His five felony convictions remain on his record.}}
{{FAQSection/End}}
{{FAQSection/End}}


== References ==
== References ==


* [https://www.nbcnews.com/politics/white-house/trump-commutes-7-year-prison-sentence-former-private-equity-ceo-david-rcna246744 NBC News - Trump commutes 7-year prison sentence of David Gentile]
<references />
* [https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2025-12-01/trump-commutes-sentence-of-gpb-capital-founder-david-gentile Bloomberg - Trump Commutes Sentence of GPB Capital Founder David Gentile]
* [https://www.cnn.com/2025/12/01/politics/david-gentile-trump-pardon CNN - Trump commutes sentence of private equity CEO convicted of fraud]
* [https://fortune.com/2025/11/30/trump-prison-sentence-commutation-private-equity-david-dentile-ponzi-scheme-fraud-conviction/ Fortune - Trump commutes 7-year prison sentence for private equity exec]


{{DEFAULTSORT:Gentile, David}}
[[Category:High-Profile_Federal_Offenders]]
[[Category:High-Profile_Federal_Offenders]]
[[Category:Securities_Fraud]]
[[Category:Ponzi_Schemes]]
[[Category:White_Collar_Crime]]
[[Category:White_Collar_Crime]]
[[Category:Securities_Fraud]]
[[Category:Commuted]]
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Latest revision as of 13:41, 3 June 2026

David Gentile
Born:
New York
Charges: Conspiracy to commit securities fraud, Conspiracy to commit wire fraud, Securities fraud, Wire fraud (2 counts)
Sentence: 84 months federal prison (commuted December 2025)
Facility: Federal prison
Status: Released (sentence commuted)


David Gentile is an American businessman. He founded GPB Capital Holdings in 2013 and served as its chief executive. GPB was a New York private equity firm. It raised more than $1.7 billion from over 17,000 investors.[1]

A federal jury in Brooklyn convicted Gentile on August 1, 2024. The verdict came after an eight-week trial. The jury found him guilty of securities fraud, conspiracy to commit securities fraud, conspiracy to commit wire fraud, and wire fraud.[2] Prosecutors said GPB used new investor money to fund the monthly distribution payments it sent to existing investors. The firm told investors those payments came from portfolio company profits. They did not.[1]

United States District Judge Rachel P. Kovner sentenced Gentile on May 9, 2025. The term was 84 months in federal prison, seven years. Co-defendant Jeffry Schneider, who ran GPB's placement agent Ascendant Capital, received 72 months.[1] Gentile reported to prison on November 14, 2025.[3] President Donald Trump commuted the sentence less than two weeks later. Gentile was released on November 26, 2025. The conviction remains on his record.[4]

Background and GPB Capital

Gentile founded GPB Capital Holdings in 2013. The firm registered as an investment adviser and set up shop in New York. Its pitch was simple. GPB would buy income-producing private companies and pass the cash they generated back to investors as steady monthly distributions.[2]

The funds bought into several industries. Auto dealerships were the largest holding, held through the GPB Automotive Portfolio fund. GPB also put money into waste management and other operating businesses. The firm marketed three main private equity funds to the public.[1]

GPB did not sell to investors directly. It worked through a network of broker-dealers and a placement agent. That agent was Ascendant Capital, a Texas marketing firm run by Jeffry Schneider. Ascendant served as the exclusive placement agent for the GPB funds. Schneider's firm marketed the limited partnership interests to retail investors, many of them retirees.[2]

The money came in fast. Across the funds, GPB raised more than $1.7 billion. The investor count topped 17,000. The funds promised an annualized distribution of roughly 8 percent.[1]

The Fraud

The distributions were the center of the scheme. GPB told investors that the monthly payments came from the profits of the portfolio companies. That was the entire premise. Investors were buying a stream of income generated by real operating businesses.[1]

The portfolio companies were not generating enough to cover the payments. So GPB used investor capital instead. New money funded the distributions sent to older investors. This is the defining mechanic of a Ponzi scheme, and prosecutors and the SEC described GPB's operation as Ponzi-like.[5]

GPB hid the gap. The firm manipulated the financial statements of its funds. The doctored figures made it look like fund income was close to covering the distributions. It was not. Operating partner Jeffrey Lash signed performance guarantees for certain dealerships owned by the funds. Those guarantees falsely represented that Lash had agreed to cover shortfalls in dealership profits.[5]

The scheme started to surface in 2018. GPB missed deadlines for audited financial statements. It then suspended investor distributions. Federal and state regulators opened investigations. Investors, many of whom had put retirement savings into the funds, were left holding interests they could not redeem.[2]

Charges and Trial

The case was unsealed in February 2021. A grand jury in the Eastern District of New York returned an indictment against three men tied to GPB. The defendants were Gentile, Schneider, and Jeffrey Lash.[6] The charges included securities fraud, wire fraud, and conspiracy.[6]

The SEC filed a parallel civil action the same day. The agency's complaint accused Gentile and Schneider of lying to investors about the source of the distribution money. The SEC characterized the operation as a Ponzi-like scheme.[5]

Lash pleaded guilty to wire fraud in 2023. He cooperated and was scheduled for sentencing later.[2]

Gentile and Schneider went to trial in 2024. The trial ran eight weeks in federal court in Brooklyn. On August 1, 2024, the jury returned guilty verdicts against both men. Gentile was convicted on five counts: conspiracy to commit securities fraud, conspiracy to commit wire fraud, securities fraud, and two counts of wire fraud. Schneider was convicted of three counts, the two conspiracies and securities fraud.[2]

The convictions were later upheld on appeal.[7]

Sentencing

Judge Rachel P. Kovner sentenced Gentile on May 9, 2025. She imposed 84 months in the custody of the Federal Bureau of Prisons. That is seven years. Schneider received 72 months, six years.[1]

The Justice Department framed the sentences around the scale of the loss. More than 17,000 investors had put money into the funds. The total raised exceeded $1.7 billion. A large share of the victims were retirees who had committed savings to the GPB funds on the promise of safe, steady income.[1]

Gentile reported to federal prison on November 14, 2025.[3]

He did not stay long. On December 1, 2025, President Donald Trump commuted Gentile's sentence. Gentile had been in custody for less than two weeks. He was released on November 26, 2025.[3] A commutation ends prison time. It does not erase a conviction. Gentile's five felony convictions remained in place.[4]

The commutation drew objections. A group of U.S. senators wrote to the White House to criticize the decision. They pointed to the size of the fraud and the number of victims who had not been made whole.[8]

Frequently Asked Questions

Q: What did David Gentile do?

Gentile founded and ran GPB Capital Holdings, a New York private equity firm. GPB raised more than $1.7 billion from over 17,000 investors. A federal jury convicted him in August 2024 of securities fraud, wire fraud, and conspiracy. Prosecutors said GPB used new investor money to pay distributions to existing investors while telling investors those payments came from portfolio company profits.


Q: How much money did GPB Capital raise?

GPB Capital raised more than $1.7 billion from over 17,000 investors. Many of the investors were retirees. The funds promised steady monthly distributions of around 8 percent annually, which prosecutors said were partly funded with investor capital rather than business profits.


Q: Was GPB Capital a Ponzi scheme?

Federal prosecutors and the SEC described GPB's operation as Ponzi-like. The firm used money from new investors to pay distributions to earlier investors while representing that those payments came from portfolio company profits. Using new investor money to pay existing investors is the defining feature of a Ponzi scheme.


Q: How long was David Gentile's sentence?

U.S. District Judge Rachel P. Kovner sentenced Gentile on May 9, 2025, to 84 months, or seven years, in federal prison. He reported to prison on November 14, 2025. President Trump commuted the sentence, and Gentile was released on November 26, 2025.


Q: Who was Jeffry Schneider?

Jeffry Schneider was Gentile's co-defendant. He ran Ascendant Capital, the marketing firm that served as the exclusive placement agent for GPB's funds. A jury convicted Schneider in August 2024 on three counts. Judge Kovner sentenced him to 72 months, or six years, in federal prison.


Q: Did David Gentile receive a pardon?

No. Gentile received a commutation, not a pardon. President Trump commuted his sentence on December 1, 2025, after Gentile had served less than two weeks. A commutation ends prison time but does not erase the conviction. His five felony convictions remain on his record.


References

  1. 1.0 1.1 1.2 1.3 1.4 1.5 1.6 1.7 "Former Private Equity Executives Sentenced to Prison". U.S. Department of Justice, Eastern District of New York. Retrieved 2026-06-03.
  2. 2.0 2.1 2.2 2.3 2.4 2.5 "Founder of GPB Capital and CEO of Ascendant Capital Convicted of Fraud Charges". U.S. Department of Justice, Eastern District of New York. Retrieved 2026-06-03.
  3. 3.0 3.1 3.2 "Trump commutes 7-year prison sentence of former private equity CEO David Gentile days after his sentence began".Hillyard, Vaughn.NBC News.2025-12-01.Retrieved 2026-06-03.
  4. 4.0 4.1 "Trump Commutes Sentence of GPB Capital Founder David Gentile".Bloomberg.2025-12-01.Retrieved 2026-06-03.
  5. 5.0 5.1 5.2 "SEC v. GPB Capital Holdings, LLC, et al.". U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission. Retrieved 2026-06-03.
  6. 6.0 6.1 "GPB Capital Founder and CEO Among Three Individuals Indicted in Private Equity Investment Fraud Scheme". U.S. Department of Justice, Eastern District of New York. Retrieved 2026-06-03.
  7. "Securities Fraud Convictions Upheld for GPB Capital Executives". AltsWire. Retrieved 2026-06-03.
  8. "Trump commutes sentence of private equity CEO convicted of fraud".CNN.2025-12-01.Retrieved 2026-06-03.