—Josh Wander Charged in $500M Sports Investment Fraud
News
Josh Wander, co-founder of 777 Partners, is charged with orchestrating a $500 million fraud scheme involving fake financial statements and football club assets, affecting investors globally
New York/Miami in October 2025 The U.S. Department of Justice has charged Josh Wander, co-founder of Miami-based investment firm 777 Partners, in one of the most shocking financial scandals to hit the global sports investing business.
Federal officials said that Wander orchestrated a $500 million fraud operation by lying to investors, putting up bogus financial papers, and promising assets he didn't have, like ownership in well-known European and South American football clubs.
Wander has been charged with wire fraud, securities fraud, and conspiracy by the Southern District of New York. A person who commits any of these acts could spend up to 20 years in jail.
(From the Associated Press, October 2025)
⚽ Global Footprint: How 777 Partners Built an Empire of Clubs
777 Partners started off as a private investment firm in 2015. It grew swiftly and now manages more than $10 billion in assets. The group focused mostly on sports, aviation finance, insurance, and fintech.
The firm has bought a number of famous football clubs around the world in the previous four years:
In 2021, Genoa C.F.C. (Italy) bought 99.9% of the company for around €150 million.
Hertha Berlin (Germany) obtained a 64.7% share in the company.
Even the supporters were quite disappointed, Standard Liège (Belgium) bought most of the team in 2022.
In 2023, Vasco do Gama (Brazil) bought 70% of the company for $137 million.
Sevilla FC from Spain owns a little part of the company.
Wander and co-founder Steven Pasko called 777 Partners a "new model" of multi-club ownership that could pool players' resources, make operations run more smoothly, and offer the organisation more media influence around the world.
But court documents show that a lot of this business was built on fictitious or double-counted assets. To make it look like the company was doing well and could pay its debts, investor money was shifted through shell companies.
The Fraud: Assets that are not real and collateral that does not exist
The DOJ argues that Wander:
To secure loans and new investors, they guaranteed the same assets over and over again in different financing transactions.
Made fake bank statements that showed "cash reserves" of hundreds of millions of dollars that weren't there.
Used fake firms to shift money between 777's businesses so it looked like they were making money.
Used "asset-backed securities" that were said to be connected to ownership shares in football clubs that had already been sold or were in debt to collect more money from investors.
Investigators believe that more than $500 million of investors' money was stolen or not properly accounted for. This money came from pension funds, institutional investors, and family offices in Europe.
Damian Williams, the U.S. Attorney, said, "This case is a dangerous mix of sports passion and financial fraud." He also said that 777 Partners' deception "hurt investor confidence in cross-border private equity."
([Source: DOJ Southern District of New York, Indictment Statement, October 2025])
PUBLISHED: October 24, 2025
Jeffrey E. Byrd connects the dots that most people don't even see on the same map. As the founder of Financial-Journal, his reporting focuses on the powerful currents of technology and geopolitics that are quietly reshaping global systems, influence, and power structures.
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