Judge jails Knowledge House officials after blockbuster N.S. stock fraud
HALIFAX — Two of Nova Scotia’s most notorious white-collar criminals were sentenced to prison Wednesday after the longest criminal trial in the province’s history, a complex fraud and conspiracy case involving a blockbuster multimillion-dollar stock market manipulation scheme.
Daniel Potter, the 66-year-old former CEO of defunct tech firm Knowledge House, was sentenced to five years in prison, while the company’s 55-year-old former lawyer, Blois Colpitts, was sentenced to 4 1/2 years.
The jail terms come nearly 17 years after the e-learning company’s dramatic collapse, but the legal saga isn’t over yet.
A bail hearing will be held Thursday for Potter and Colpitts, who were taken into custody following the sentencing. The disgraced executives, found guilty in March of conspiracy to manipulate the firm’s share price and carrying out fraudulent activities in a regulated securities market, have appealed their conviction.

