Schrenker, who runs Heritage Wealth Management Inc , fakes death and heads for Israel




Jewish bankers getting desperate ,Executive Stages Plane Crash, Fails
To Fake Death ,and plan to hide in Israel

Through his Heritage Wealth Management Inc., Heritage Insurance
Services Inc. and Icon Wealth Management, he was responsible for
providing financial advice and managing portfolios worth millions.

And by outward appearances, he was doing quite well.

Luxury autos, airplanes
He collected luxury automobiles, owned two airplanes and lived in a
10,000-square-foot house in an upscale neighborhood
..

All scammed from gullible fools who trusted a jew , they have no
obligation to honor promises to non jews and any scam that helps
Israel , is lawful in Israel
By Ryan Tate, 6:54 AM on Tue Jan 13 2009,

Marcus Schrenker is surely one of the most memorable villains to
emerge in the financial crisis: The "wealth management" advisor is
believed to have crashed an airplane to fake his own death.

Schrenker, who runs Heritage Wealth Management Inc., Heritage
Insurance Services Inc. and Icon Wealth Management, radioed in to air
traffic controllers Sunday night that his windshield had "imploded"
amid turbulence and that he was "bleeding profusely." Controllers
tried to divert him to an airfield near his location over Huntsville,
Alabama.

But the radio went silent. Military jets were scrambled. By dropping
flares, their pilots observed the door to Schrenker's plane, still in
flight, was open, and the cockpit was dark. The plane crashed into a
swamp. In the wreckage, investigators observed the windshield was
still intact. No blood was found in the cabin. It was later revealed
that Schrenker was a respected pilot with a background in aerobatics.

Then the story gets even more bizarre.

Two hundred twenty five miles from the crash site (or 30, according to
the Times), a man wet from the knees down with "goggles that looked
like they were made for flying" approached police officers Monday
morning in a store and said he'd been in a canoeing accident.

When asked to produce identification, the man, apparently
Schrenker, showed his real Indiana driver's license, for some reason.
He was then driven to a hotel, where he checked in under an assumed
name.



Schrenker, shown in the promotional photo above, had plenty of
problems. His wife Michelle, pictured next to him, filed for divorce
the day before investigators examined his books. His father ? "died"
Friday. He was ordered to pay half a million dollars after skipping a
court hearing with a company upset over problems with "insurance or
annuity plans" one of his companies sold, according to AP. And state
insurance regulators charged him with misappropriating customers'
money, according to the Indianapolis Star Tribune.

Schrenker continues to evade the authorities, and his antics might
produce a page-turning thriller. The advance on such a book would
hardly cover the $1.5 million-ish cost of his Piper Meridian, or the
$1.5 million suit National Western Life Insurance has out against him.
But then there's always bankruptcy, white-collar jail and
redemption.



http://gawker.com/5130043/executive-stages-plane-crash-fails-to-fake-death

updated 5:28 p.m. ET Jan. 13, 2009

HARPERSVILLE, Ala. - With his personal and financial worlds crumbling
around him, investment adviser Marcus Schrenker opted for a bailout.
In a feat reminiscent of a James Bond movie, the 38-year-old
businessman and amateur daredevil pilot apparently tried to fake his
death in a plane crash, secretly parachuting to the ground and
speeding away on a motorcycle he had stashed away in the pine barrens
of central Alabama.

Now the search is on for Schrenker, who is running not only from the
law but from divorce, a state investigation of his businesses and
angry investors who accuse him of stealing potentially millions in
savings they entrusted to him.

"We've learned over time that he's a pathological liar ― you don't
believe a single word that comes out of his mouth," said Charles
Kinney, a 49-year-old airline pilot from Atlanta who alleges Schrenker
pocketed at least $135,000 of his parents' retirement fund.
Story continues below ↓advertisement | your ad here

Radio went silent
The events of the past few days appear to be a last, desperate gambit
by a man who had fallen from great heights and was about to hit
bottom.

On Sunday ― two days after burying his beloved stepfather and
suffering a half-million-dollar loss in federal court same day ―
Schrenker was flying his single-engine Piper Malibu to Florida from
his Indiana home when he radioed from 2,000 feet that he was in
trouble. He told the tower the windshield had imploded, and that his
face was plastered with blood.

Then his radio went silent.

Military jets tried to intercept the plane and found the door open,
the cockpit dark. The pilots followed until it crashed in a Florida
Panhandle bayou surrounded by homes. There was no sign of Schrenker's
body. They now know they should never have expected to find one.

Image: Marc Schrenker
atGeist.com
Marc Schrenker
More than 220 miles to the north, at a convenience store in
Childersburg, Ala., police picked up a man using Schrenker's Indiana
driver's license and carrying a pair of what appeared to be pilot's
goggles. The man, who was wet from the knees down, told the officers
he'd been in a canoe accident.

After officers gave him a lift to a nearby motel, Schrenker made his
way to a storage unit he'd rented just the day before his flight. He
climbed aboard a red racing motorcycle with full saddlebags, and sped
off into the countryside.

Now, a search that began in the air and continued across land and sea
has been turned over to the U.S. Marshals.

"I believe he's out of the U.S.," Harpersville Police Chief David
Latimer said Tuesday. "He's already shown a mentality that's
interesting to police. He jumped out an airplane and left it to crash
who knows where. He's shown a total disregard for human life. I think
he'd do anything to get away."

At 38, Schrenker was at the head of an impressive slate of businesses.
Through his Heritage Wealth Management Inc., Heritage Insurance
Services Inc. and Icon Wealth Management, he was responsible for
providing financial advice and managing portfolios worth millions.

And by outward appearances, he was doing quite well.

Luxury autos, airplanes
He collected luxury automobiles, owned two airplanes and lived in a
10,000-square-foot house in an upscale neighborhood known as "Cocktail
Cove," where affluent boaters often socialize with cocktails in hand.
In May 2000, he wowed onlookers by flying a special airplane at 270
mph, 10 feet above the water and under two bridges in Nassau, Bahamas.
.



Relevant Pages