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Home News

$4.5m fraud sees former Victorian adviser jailed

A former financial adviser has been sentenced after defrauding clients, family and friends to the tune of almost $4.5 million to feed his gambling addiction.

by Laura Dew
April 16, 2025
in News
Reading Time: 2 mins read
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Anthony Del Vecchio pleaded guilty to 24 charges of obtaining financial advantage by deception in March, resulting in the County Court of Victoria handing down a sentence on Wednesday of seven years and six months’ imprisonment with a non-parole period of four years.

He was employed as an adviser at Freedom Finance Australia from November 2016 until October 2023 when his employment was terminated.

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Between February 2020 and December 2023, he used his position as a financial adviser to convince members of family, friends and clients to transfer money to him under the pretext of investing their funds in various investments, such as term deposits, bonds and shares.

In some cases, he provided documents using the Freedom Finance letterhead to purport the terms of their investment although no financial product was ever purchased.

This came to a total of $4.48 million from the victims which was deposited into his Commonwealth Bank of Australia accounts.

Following his arrest in February 2024, Del Vecchio said he was “in too deep and the stress was incomprehensible”, and that he was “trying to win enough money to pay everyone back”.

He had transactions with 52 different betting companies and lost over $1 million with one specific company, MintBet.

In sentencing on 16 April at the County Court of Victoria, Judge Gabriele Cannon sentenced him to seven years and six months’ imprisonment with a non-parole period of four years.

“You breached the trust that the victims placed in you as a financial adviser and in many instances, as a friend and/or family member, callously taking advantage of such relationships to commit the offences.

“The significant breach of trust is an aggravating feature of your offending. Further, the offending was planned and had a level of sophistication to it in a number of instances, especially where you used false documents and manufactured investment schemes and the like in order to defraud the victims.

“Further, in a number of instances, the offending went beyond opportunistic, as you actively sought out your victims, knowing full well they could ill afford to part with such significant sums of money, which, in a number of cases, were their life savings.”

If not for his guilty plea, he would have been sentenced to nine years and six months with a non-parole period of six years and six months.

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Comments 5

  1. Anonymous says:
    1 month ago

    I don’t understand why they didn’t go after the professional indemnity insurance he would have to have

    Reply
  2. Mr G says:
    7 months ago

    Surely the ethics exam should prevent this lol.

    Reply
  3. Been there, seen that says:
    7 months ago

    Pure criminal fraud on family. Jail him! Caddock rides again.

    Where was the AFSL supervision

    Reply
  4. Gambling curse says:
    7 months ago

    Gambling wrecks everywhere… yet, no Government will ban their parasitic ads.

    Reply
  5. Anonymous says:
    7 months ago

    Lucky he didn’t go over the non concessional cap as the penalty might have been worse

    Reply

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