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Forbes Topline

Inside A $46 Million Renewable Energy Swindle

Forbes Topline

Forbes

News, Entrepreneurship, Business, Business News

4.86 Ratings

🗓️ 27 April 2024

⏱️ 16 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

Rhino Onward International, or ROI as it called itself, launched in 2022 with some big promises. The renewables development firm claimed that its “proprietary process and technology” put it in position “to assume the leading role in Green Hydrogen production.” The company said it was building a green hydrogen plant in Arizona that would be worth about $530 million within 5 years, according to marketing materials it shared with investors. ROI raised $31 million from over 200 investors but apparently only invested $200,000 in the business; the firm’s promoters Paul Croft and J.D. Frost diverted the rest of the investors’ money to themselves and entities they control, according to an investor lawsuit filed in Illinois last month, which cited bank records obtained through subpoenas. Beginning in 2021 until last year, Croft, a 42-year-old entrepreneur living in Chicago, and Frost, a 40-year-old accountant based in Chattanooga, Tennessee, raised approximately $46 million from a series of phony renewables investment schemes, which the pair used to live extravagantly, pay employees at their tax advisory business, pay down short-term loans and even lend money to embattled professional hockey player Robin Lehner, according to allegations in lawsuits, bankruptcy filings, former investors and ex-employees of Croft’s and Frost’s businesses who spoke with Forbes on the record, and others with knowledge of the matter who spoke on the condition of anonymity in order to speak about sensitive information. See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

Transcript

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0:00.0

Rhino Onward International launched in 2022, claiming that its cutting edge tech would make it a major player in green hydrogen.

0:07.0

Instead, investors claim the founders used their funds to collect luxury cars, pay off bills, and otherwise fuel their extravagant lifestyles.

0:16.0

Hi everybody, I'm Brittany Lewis, a reporter here at Forbes.

0:22.0

Joining me now as my colleague Forbes Staff Friday. I'm Brittany Lewis a reporter here at Forbes.

0:22.7

Joining me now as my colleague Forbes Staff Writer John Hyatt.

0:25.9

John, thanks for coming in.

0:27.0

Thanks for having me, Brittany.

0:28.2

You reported a really interesting piece.

0:31.6

Two founders Paul Croft and JD Frost said their

0:35.1

startup would be the next big thing when it comes to the green hydrogen space.

0:38.6

Turns out that wasn't really the case. Instead they bamboozled investors took their money to fund their

0:44.4

lavish lifestyle. Take us back to the beginning here in 2022 when ROI Rhino Onward International

0:52.2

launched.

0:53.2

Take us back there.

0:54.2

Sure.

0:55.2

So Paul Croft and JD Frost became business partners in 2019.

1:00.6

They combined businesses.

1:02.8

So Croft, his background is an insurance and Frost is an accountant.

1:08.0

So these were two guys who are running a small but moderately successful tax advisory firm helping their clients

1:15.3

typically doctors lawyers small business owners get more money back in their

1:20.4

tax refunds and in 2022 they created this entity called Rhino Onward International short for ROI and as you said they claimed it was going to be the next big thing in green hydrogen, that they possess

1:34.8

proprietary technologies to create this next generation plant in Arizona on tribal land

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