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Arizona Shuts Down Firm in Alleged Penis Pill
Scam
PHOENIX (Reuters) - Authorities have shut down a local company
and seized $30 million of its assets for allegedly selling bogus penile
enlargement pills over the Internet, state officials said on Wednesday.
C.P. Direct, based in Scottsdale, Arizona, was put out of business and its Web sites closed
following complaints about the company and its product that promised results
within months of taking its supposedly potent yet costly
"Longitude" pill, officials said.
Among the items seized
were luxury cars, including a Lamborghini, Rolls Royce, Ferrari and Bentley,
$20 million in bank accounts, $3 million in cash and a bounty of luxury
jewelry, according to a list of the items.
Company officials could
not be reached for comment.
The initial cost of the
pills was $59.99, plus shipping and handling for a month's supply and $39.99
a month thereafter. Records showed the pills cost $2.50 per bottle to
manufacture.
The company also
allegedly sold pills that supposedly guaranteed height increases and bigger
breasts, officials said.
"It's going to take
time to find out how many people bought the pills," said Pati Urias, a
state Attorney General's spokeswoman. "It appears they did quite a bit
of volume."
Named in the civil
forfeiture action was Michael A. Consoli, 44, and his mother, Geraldine
Consoli, 76, and Vincent J. Passafiume, 28.
The three were warned by
the state in 1996 about fraudulent practices when they operated a business
that sold computers and other electronic equipment. In 1999, the Consolis and
Passafiume were barred from doing business in Arizona through the mail, Internet or using other
telecommunication devices.
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