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Petters Admits Horrible Mess Seeks Shorter Sentence

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While all eyes are on the criminal trial of the former employees of the biggest Ponzi-scheme operator of all time, Bernard Madoff, the operator of another fraud is quietly — and tearfully — fighting to avoid dying in prison, the Wall Street Journal reported yesterday. Tom Petters maintained his innocence following his 2009 conviction for running Minnesota’s biggest Ponzi scheme, even trying to take his battle to the Supreme Court. But in court Wednesday to seek a shorter prison sentence, he has finally conceded his guilt. “This is my only chance to clear my conscience and soul,” Petters said. “I made a horrible mess of things.” News reports say Petters cried as he apologized to U.S. District Judge Richard Kyle for lying in his courtroom when he denied his guilt for his role in the Ponzi scheme. Petters, who was convicted more than three years ago and sentenced to 50 years in prison, says he was never told that he could have cut a plea deal with prosecutors that would have put him behind bars for 30 years. Prosecutors deny this and accuse Petters of lying to win the shorter sentence. Petters was a well-known Minnesota businessman whose empire once encompassed Polaroid and Sun Country Airlines. He was arrested in 2008 and later found guilty of running a multibillion-dollar Ponzi scheme. His businesses have since gone into bankruptcy liquidation.