of the bankruptcy court, ahead of the fbi. >> so when berg's time ran out and he pleaded guilty, darren bergarged with orchestrating washington state's largest ponzi scheme and was sentenced to 18 years for fleecing over 800 investors out of $140 million. berg spent the next six years doing time at various minimum security federal prisons in california. then he disappeared. berg hopped a prison fence that led to an airport where u.s. marshals say it's likely he boarded a private jet and started his new life as an international fugitive. >> i have little doubt that he probably is someplace where it's warm and doesn't have an extradition treaty to the united states. >> berg is a wanted man. investigators say he may have had help and named berg's ex-boyfriend as a person of interest. >> he's intelligent and cunning. there's no stopping to what he's capable of. >> joining us now with more perspective is former fbi agent bobby chacon. bobby, here's the question. how has berg been able to evade capture for this long? he can't be doing it by himself, can he? >> no, probably not. but the biggest iss