Before the fraud scandal occurred, he was known for his generosity and had built a stadium and largely financed a mosque for his hometown of
Maaroub, Lebanon.
Fraud Ezzedine's close ties to
Hezbollah led many
Lebanese Shiite investors to invest with him, even though he did not show them any paperwork. He named two of his businesses after the son of the Hezbollah leader,
Hassan Nasrallah. Hundreds of Lebanese sold land or took money out of their retirement savings, joined by well-off investors, to invest hundreds of millions of dollars with him, as he promised annual returns of as much as 80%. In the ensuing debacle, financial downfall and declaring of his bankruptcy, Lebanese investors, mostly from the Shia community, lost hundreds of million dollars. Amounts involved vary between
$700 million to 1.2 billion dollars was lost by Lebanese investors Hezbollah security officers arrested Ezzedine on his way to the airport as he attempted to flee and made him transfer his remaining assets to Hezbollah before they turned him over to the Lebanese authorities. Bankers said it was the largest fraud of its kind that Lebanon had ever seen. ==References==