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From: Glenn Petersen5/17/2012 11:15:44 PM
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The list:

sec.gov 

SEC Halts Trades in 379 Shell Companies in Fraud-Prevention Push

By Joshua Gallu
Bloomberg
May 14, 2012 9:31 AM CT

The U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission halted trading in 379 shell companies over concern that fraudsters could hijack stocks to steal investor money.

The trading suspensions, the most by the SEC in a single day, stem from the work of an agency task force that identified clearly dormant microcap stocks in 32 states and at least six countries, the SEC said today in a statement.

Microcap shares have long been used for frauds such as pump-and-dump schemes, in which a perpetrator buys stock in a thinly traded company and touts its value through false and misleading statements. Illicit profits are reaped when those behind the fraud dump their shares into the market after pumping the prices higher.

“Empty shell companies are to stock manipulators and pump-and-dump schemers what guns are to bank robbers -- the tools by which they ply their illegal trade,” SEC Enforcement Director Robert Khuzami said in the agency’s statement. “This massive trading suspension unmasks these empty shell companies and deprives unscrupulous scam artists of the opportunity to profit at the expense of unsuspecting retail investors.”

Regulators sharpened their focus on shell companies about two years ago amid complaints that issuers, many from China, were using them to enter U.S. markets through so-called reverse mergers. In a reverse merger, closely held firms buy shells that let them sell shares on exchanges without the scrutiny that would surround a public offering.

Several reverse-merger companies have seen their share prices plummet amid allegations that their financial statements were inaccurate.

To contact the reporter on this story: Joshua Gallu in Washington at jgallu@bloomberg.net

To contact the editor responsible for this story: Maura Reynolds at mreynolds34@bloomberg.net

bloomberg.com 

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From: StockDung5/19/2012 8:32:43 AM
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Facebook Sued for $15 Billion in Suit Over User Tracking Kit Chellel and Jeremy Hodges, ©2012 Bloomberg News

Friday, May 18, 2012

(Updates with Facebook comment in fifth paragraph.)


May 18 (Bloomberg) -- Facebook Inc., which is scheduled to begin trading today, was sued by users of its social network in an amended class-action case claiming the company invaded their privacy by tracking Internet usage and seeking $15 billion.

The lawsuit, filed in Federal Court in San Jose, California, combines 21 cases filed across the U.S., according to a statement by Stewarts Law US LLP, one of the firms leading the claim. It accuses Facebook of improperly tracking users even after they logged out of their accounts.

Facebook, which sold stock in an initial public offering valuing the company at about $104 billion, has been scrutinized by regulators in the U.S. and Europe over how it protects users' private data. Last year, a German data-protection agency said it may fine the company over facial-recognition software used for tagging photos.

"This is not just a damages action, but a groundbreaking digital-privacy rights case that could have wide and significant legal and business implications," David Straite, a Stewarts Law partner, said in the e-mailed statement.

Andrew Noyes, a Facebook spokesman, said in an e-mailed statement that the complaint is "without merit and we will fight it vigorously."

Lawsuits accusing the Menlo Park, California-based company of tracking user data, even when they are logged out, have been filed across the U.S. A California judicial panel ordered in February they be consolidated and heard in the company's home state.


Non-U.S. Residents


Straite said his firm is evaluating ways to add "non-U.S. residents" to the group of plaintiffs.

The U.S. Wiretap Act "provides statutory damages of the greater of $100 per violation per day, up to $10,000, per Facebook user," according to the lawsuit. The plaintiffs are therefore "each entitled to the greater of $100 of statutory damages per day, or $10,000 each for the ongoing violations," about $15 billion for all of Facebook's more than 800 million members.

Facebook sold 421.2 million shares, which will trade on the Nasdaq Stock Market, at $38 each to raise $16 billion, it said in a statement yesterday. That values the Menlo Park, California-based company at $104.2 billion, or 107 times trailing 12-month earnings, more than every S&P 500 member except Amazon.com Inc. and Equity Residential.

The case is In re: Facebook Internet Tracking Litigation, 5:12-md-02314-EJD, U.S. District Court for the Northern District of California (San Jose).




--With assistance from Aoife White in Brussels. Editors: Christopher Scinta, Anthony Aarons


To contact the reporter on this story: Kit Chellel in London at cchellel@bloomberg.net


To contact the editor responsible for this story: Anthony Aarons at aaarons@bloomberg.net

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From: Glenn Petersen5/19/2012 3:41:20 PM
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“Law-abiding citizens should not have to beg civil servants charged with law enforcement to do their jobs.”

Is Insider Trading Part of the Fabric?

By GRETCHEN MORGENSON
New York Times
May 19, 2012

EVEN before the news was official, it filtered out — unofficially — to Wall Street.

On a trading floor in Midtown Manhattan, the squawk boxes were set to relay a market-moving bulletin at 10 a.m. This was the news: An analyst at the investment house was raising his assessment of Amkor Technology, a big name in computer chips.

But it was only 9:30, and Amkor’s share price was already rising. By the time the announcement came, it was up 4 percent. “It was clear that my research had been leaked,” the analyst, Ted Parmigiani, recalls.

But leaked how, and by whom? To Mr. Parmigiani, there was only one explanation: someone inside his own research department had tipped off the firm’s traders, as well as some fast-money hedge funds.

Nearly seven years later, the events of that June day — and countless others like it, up and down Wall Street — still rankle him. The fallout effectively ended his career. The firm he worked for, Lehman Brothers, was eventually undone by greed and hubris, its spectacular collapse in September 2008 a symbol of an age of financial excess.

Against the sweeping morality tale of Lehman, the story of one analyst may seem trivial. But it’s a story central to post-crisis Wall Street, and to the regulators watching over it. Federal authorities today are trumpeting efforts to root out insider trading, and they’ve caught some big fish. Yet many on Wall Street suspect that the sort of chicanery that Mr. Parmigiani says he witnessed at Lehman may be as common as ever.

More worrying, from his perspective, is that he provided the Securities and Exchange Commission with evidence pointing to frequent insider trading involving analyst research at Lehman, but the S.E.C. ultimately did not bring a case. Mr. Parmigiani spent two and a half years giving information to the S.E.C. He produced materials indicating that Lehman sales representatives were tipped off to upcoming research changes; data showing suspicious trades in dozens of stocks; organizational charts and floor plans showing that some Lehman executives who were part of the research department were located near sales and trading desks. These departments are supposed to be separated.

With that ammunition, the S.E.C. opened an investigation, case HO-10864. Officials told him that his evidence was credible.

Then the case died. And after Lehman’s collapse its employees have scattered across Wall Street.

Since the financial crisis, the S.E.C. has spent a lot of time and money trying to plug leaks. In a case worthy of “Law & Order,” prosecutors used wiretaps to ensnare Raj Rajaratnam, the billionaire Galleon hedge fund manager whose web of tipsters stretched from Wall Street to some of the mightiest corporations in the land. For his crimes, Mr. Rajaratnam, whom prosecutors called “the modern face of illegal insider trading,” was sentenced last October to 11 years in prison.

Mr. Rajaratnam’s conviction, in the largest insider-trading scandal in a generation, handed a much-needed win to the beleaguered S.E.C. Only two years earlier, the commission had been lambasted for missing glaring evidence of Bernard L. Madoff’s vast Ponzi scheme.

But Mr. Parmigiani and others suspect that the P.R. of the Galleon case glosses over risks that insider trading can and does occur regularly at many Wall Street firms. In their view, it has become institutionalized. The flow of information between a firm’s analysts, its traders and its clients — a lucrative heads-up on stock upgrades and downgrades, for instance — can bolster trading profits, brokerage commissions and, ultimately, Wall Street paydays. Those in the know can get rich before the rest of us know what happened.

“Prosecutors say insider trading won’t be tolerated, that this is justice,” Mr. Parmigiani says of the Galleon case. “But they refuse to acknowledge that their widespread net has a very big hole in it.”

What exactly happened at Lehman? Mr. Parmigiani says traders there were routinely advised of changes in analysts’ company ratings before those changes were made public. That way, Lehman could profit on subsequent market moves. Here is how he describes it: First, research officials tipped off the traders; then Lehman’s proprietary trading desk, which cast bets with the firm’s own money, positioned itself accordingly. Lehman salespeople also alerted favored hedge funds. Only later, he says, were ratings changes made public.

Blowing the whistle on any big corporation, as Mr. Parmigiani tried to do in the case of Lehman, is almost always perilous. Shortly after noting the suspicious trading in Amkor, Mr. Parmigiani says, he was fired for not being a team player. He has since been unable to find work on Wall Street.

John Nester, a spokesman for the S.E.C., said it conducted a careful, thorough investigation of Mr. Parmigiani’s allegations.

“Not only did we investigate the circumstances surrounding each of the research reports specifically identified by Mr. Parmigiani, we conducted a broader examination into the trading by Lehman clients in all companies in which there was a material change in the stock price following the issuance of a Lehman research report,” Mr. Nester said. “We also investigated the communications between 46 Lehman employees and 56 Lehman clients, including nearly 100,000 e-mails.”

The S.E.C. also analyzed voluminous trading data and interviewed numerous Lehman employees, he said. “After all that, there simply was not any evidence in this case to support the conclusion that Lehman, its employees or its clients had committed insider trading.”

Publicly, the S.E.C. is taking a strong stance against insider trading. Officials say the commission is not only going after insider traders but also taking action against firms. A recent case against Goldman Sachs suggests that the S.E.C. recognizes the potential for improprieties that can occur if traders receive special access to research analysts’ work.

In the case, the S.E.C. alleged that Goldman analysts had shared trading ideas and other information with select clients. Although the S.E.C. did not charge any individuals with insider trading or tipping, Goldman’s activities “created a serious and substantial risk that analysts would share material, nonpublic information concerning their published research,” the S.E.C. said. Goldman paid $22 million to settle the matter. As is common in such cases, it neither admitted nor denied wrongdoing.

In an interview with Reuters in late April, Robert S. Khuzami, the S.E.C. director of enforcement, said: “We have charged firms for having compliance failures even where there were no underlying violations. We want to send a message that businesses have to have controls in place in order to prevent fraud.”

Indeed, the S.E.C. filed roughly 60 insider-trading cases in its 2011 fiscal year alone. But aside from a few that sprang from the Rajaratnam case and a handful of other sizable cases, many involved minor players and small sums. Of the 93 people charged during that period, 37 had pocketed less than $100,000 on their inside trades, according to the S.E.C.; 19 made $50,000 or less; and one netted just $8,391.

Lewis D. Lowenfels, an expert in securities laws in New York, says the S.E.C. is wasting time and money by going after small fish.

“This raises questions about the allocation of resources at a time when there is a real hue and cry that the S.E.C. is not getting sufficient funds from Congress,” Mr. Lowenfels says. “When you see that such a disproportionate amount goes to this kind of insider trading, you really have to wonder if the S.E.C. is using this as a means to resuscitate their stature, post-Madoff.”

The real potential targets are much, much bigger. Many people, inside and outside financial circles, have long suspected that Wall Street firms alert favored clients to analyst research before the investing public.

Senator Charles E. Grassley, the Iowa Republican who works closely with whistle-blowers, examined the material that Mr. Parmigiani brought to the S.E.C. Expressing disappointment in its handling of the allegations, Mr. Grassley said: “This case emphasizes serious questions about the S.E.C.’s culture of deference to Wall Street and big players going back a long time. The S.E.C. obtained what appears to be clear evidence of, at a minimum, disregard for regulations designed to ensure that Wall Street firms can’t leak inside information to preferred clients prior to public announcements. Yet there appears to have been no consequences.”

A Rare Kind of Case

When most people think of insider trading, they probably think of Gordon Gekko, the corrupt financier played by Michael Douglas in the 1987 film “Wall Street.” In the movie, the hot tips were about corporate takeovers.

Mergers and acquisitions are big, market-moving news, but so are corporate earnings announcements. These statements are ripe for insider trading, particularly when results take analysts and investors by surprise.

But while insider trading commonly involves nonpublic corporate information, advance warning on research changes can also yield quick, illicit gains. The S.E.C. said as much in a rare research case it filed in 2007 involving an executive at the Swiss banking giant UBS. In that case, eight individuals and three hedge funds were charged with profiting on tips about coming analyst ratings changes — “valuable and material, nonpublic information,” the S.E.C. said. One executive went to jail, and others settled with the S.E.C.

Mr. Parmigiani says his experience at Lehman made him suspect that the firm was trying to profit by trading ahead of changes in analyst recommendations.

“ ‘We’re trying to monetize the research,’ is what they would tell me when they asked for advance warning of rating changes,” Mr. Parmigiani says. “They would say: ‘Just let me know. We’ve got to relay a heads-up to trading. We’ve got to protect the house.’ ”

Clash With Superiors

Ted Parmigiani didn’t take the usual road to Wall Street. In 1986, at the age of 17, he dropped out of high school to join the Navy. He served on the U.S.S. Midway and gained expertise in accounting and supply-chain aspects of technology.

Paul Dublino, who lives near Orlando, Fla., enlisted at the same time and considers Mr. Parmigiani a friend. Mr. Dublino says his old Navy buddy impressed him with his intelligence and honesty. “No matter what he ever did, he excelled at it,” Mr. Dublino says. “I don’t think he has any type of fabrication of any sort in him. He tells it how it is.”

Mr. Parmigiani resigned from active duty in 1990, went to college on the G.I. Bill and then collected a master’s degree in finance. He joined Lehman in 2002.

At that time, Wall Street research was under a microscope. Eliot Spitzer, then the New York attorney general, had exposed how analysts routinely slanted research to win lucrative investment banking business. In 2003, Lehman was among 10 firms that reached a $1.4 billion settlement. They all promised to wall off research operations from other parts of their business.

But Mr. Parmigiani says he was asked to break those new rules. Lehman bosses, he contends, told him to write research that would support investment banking business — a violation of the Spitzer settlement. He says he was warned not to make negative comments about companies, even when he thought they were merited, lest he antagonize corporate executives. In 2003, he says, he was chastised for downgrading a company that was a corporate finance client of Lehman’s.

Most alarming, Mr. Parmigiani says, was that Lehman had created a system that gave its stock trading desks access to its analysts’ research recommendations before those recommendations were made public. The Product Management Group, as this business unit was known, scheduled analysts’ calls on the firm-wide squawk box system and was part of the research department.

Mr. Parmigiani says the Product Management Group often delayed the announcements of recommendation changes for no apparent reason. He says he began to suspect that the delays were meant to allow Lehman’s traders to put on positions ahead of the news and to give the firm’s top sales representatives time to alert favored clients.

On March 30, 2005, Mr. Parmigiani had been scheduled to meet with a series of hedge fund clients, including Moore Capital, to discuss his research. At the last minute, Jared Demark, a vice president in Lehman’s institutional equity sales who covered the hedge funds and had planned to accompany him, bowed out. In an e-mail to Mr. Parmigiani, Mr. Demark wrote: “Go to the Moore meeting without me, we have big ratings change looming ... ”

While Mr. Parmigiani did not learn precisely what Mr. Demark meant by that e-mail, it fueled Mr. Parmigiani’s concern that Lehman was alerting hedge funds to analysts’ pending changes.

Chris Boehning, a lawyer at Paul Weiss, said his client, Mr. Demark, would not comment.

he S.E.C. staff “conducted a careful investigation beginning in the fall of 2008 and concluded that there was no basis to recommend an enforcement action,” Mr. Boehning said. “We were very pleased with the thorough way the S.E.C. went about its work.”

That same day of the e-mail, Mr. Parmigiani said, another salesman told him that he had received a message about an imminent industrywide downgrade and had to start alerting clients.

Even though the Product Management Group was part of the research department, it was on the second floor, next to the stock trading desks and close to the firm’s top institutional sales representatives covering hedge funds.

Before long, Mr. Parmigiani and his superiors butted heads. In 2004, he says, he was asked to vet a company he had properly referred to Lehman’s investment bankers for a securities offering. He recalled Stuart Linde, then director of United States equity research, prodding him to be positive in his analysis, to help ensure that the deal got done. When he questioned whether this followed the rules handed down in the Spitzer settlement, Mr. Linde took offense, he said. But he says he stood his ground.

“One of the things I took out of the military is the one rule and duty you have is a duty to disobey an unlawful order,” Mr. Parmigiani says.

Mr. Linde, now director of United States equity research at Barclays Capital, declined to comment. A Barclays spokesman said Mr. Linde had never received a subpoena from the S.E.C. about the matter.

For Mr. Parmigiani, the final straw came on June 1, 2005, when he decided to change his rating on Amkor from “sell” to “neutral.” He had submitted his change to the Product Management Group that day, but then was told the switch wouldn’t be announced until the following day.

The next morning, he sent his upgrade to the research committee, which agreed that he should discuss Amkor on the squawk box at 10 a.m. But before he could speak, Amkor stock jumped in unusually heavy trading. He accused firm officials of distributing his upgrade ahead of time.

About two weeks later, Lehman fired him, with two weeks’ salary and no severance. On his permanent employee record filed with regulators, Lehman said he had been dismissed because he had “failed to meet performance expectations.” Those words effectively ended his Wall Street career, he says.

He filed a wrongful-termination case in May 2006, which was eventually settled for an undisclosed sum. The check was signed by Richard S. Fuld Jr., who, as chief executive, would later preside over Lehman’s collapse.

Waning Interest at the S.E.C.

Unable to find work on Wall Street, Mr. Parmigiani took his story to the S.E.C. On a Friday in late April 2008, he left a message for Linda Chatman Thomsen, then the commission’s director of enforcement. The next Monday, an enforcement attorney called back and invited him to conduct a conference call with S.E.C. officials. A two-hour conversation ensued, during which he described his experiences at Lehman.

Then, that April, S.E.C. officials asked him to come to Washington from his home in the San Francisco Bay Area. He spent a day with four enforcement lawyers. “They copied all my stuff and we sat there for six hours,” Mr. Parmigiani says. “They asked me questions, they took notes. They were shocked.”

He says the S.E.C. lawyers told him they would get back to him.

But then, as the financial crisis flared that summer, the S.E.C.’s interest waned. After Lehman failed, Mr. Parmigiani got a call from two of the lawyers, signaling that the S.E.C. was probably not going to pursue the matter. The S.E.C. spokesman said the lawyers would not comment.

Mr. Parmigiani took his brief to Senator Grassley’s office. Officials there sent a letter to the S.E.C., inquiring about the status of the investigation. By then, however, Ms. Thomsen, the enforcement director, had left the agency for private practice. Messages left for Ms. Thomsen were not returned.

Eventually, Mr. Parmigiani had another meeting with the S.E.C., in September 2010, and presented an analysis by Steven P. Feinstein, an associate professor of finance at Babson College. Relying on public information, Mr. Feinstein had analyzed the price movements of stocks in 361 downgrades by Lehman analysts between 2004 and 2008. The sample excluded any stocks that had been the subject of market-moving news — like earnings reports or other announcements — as well as shares that had been downgraded recently by other Wall Street firms.

Mr. Feinstein concluded that the stocks “exhibited significantly different price behavior on the two trading days preceding a rating downgrade by Lehman Brothers than they did on other days.” The results, Mr. Feinstein said, indicated that Lehman Brothers “apparently engaged in tipping,” and that stock prices were affected and that investors suffered damages as a result.

Mr. Parmigiani says the S.E.C. seemed impressed with the study. One lawyer, he says, told him that the commission “really liked the case” but that they did not have enough to go forward.

But Mr. Nester of the S.E.C. said a report connecting analyst actions with stock moves does not make an insider-trading case. “Fortunately, our staff can and does interrogate witnesses, review contemporaneous documents, including e-mails, and scrutinize trading records,” he said. “That is evidence, and that is what determines whether insider trading has occurred.”Frustrated, Mr. Parmigiani called investigators for Preet Bharara, United States attorney for the Southern District of New York. These were the prosecutors bringing the Galleon cases.

“I told them that Galleon was one of the spokes of the wheel but that it was not the wheel itself,” Mr. Parmigiani says, but his discussions led nowhere as well. Mr. Bharara’s office declined to comment.

At his last meeting with the S.E.C., Mr. Parmigiani recalled, one of the officials said, “We never doubted your credibility.”

Today, Mr. Parmigiani spends much more time with his two young children; his wife has become the family’s breadwinner. He has paid a price for trying to blow the whistle on Lehman, but says he has no regrets. Still, he says, his experience suggests that the authorities are reluctant to go after high-level executives on Wall Street.

As he puts it: “Law-abiding citizens should not have to beg civil servants charged with law enforcement to do their jobs.”

nytimes.com 

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From: scion5/21/2012 2:28:14 PM
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UPDATE: Nasdaq Confronts Liability On Traders' Losses In Facebook IPO

--Brokers and traders to seek compensation from Nasdaq for losses in Facebook IPO

--Glitches affected millions of shares' worth of trading, says Nasdaq

--Total losses sustained by brokers could reach $100 million, Knight Capital CEO

--Finra to handle arbitration, distribution of compensation, sources say

(Updates to include detail on Finra role.)

May 21, 2012, 11:04 a.m. ET
By Jacob Bunge
Of DOW JONES NEWSWIRES
online.wsj.com 

Nasdaq OMX Group Inc. (NDAQ) on Monday faces demands from irate brokers and traders that want the exchange group to make up losses driven by its mishandling of Friday's initial public offering of Facebook Inc. (FB).

The exchange operator hopes to earmark at least $13 million to resolve bad trades, according to a spokesman for the company, but this may undershoot total losses sustained by brokers who made up losses for retail and institutional investors that had trades affected by the Facebook IPO glitches.

The Financial Industry Regulatory Authority, or Finra, is expected to oversee the process of arbitrating and distributing the money to firms, according to persons familiar with the matter.

Tom Joyce, chief executive of market-making firm Knight Capital Group Inc. (KCG), in a CNBC interview Monday estimated that total losses from the episode may hit $100 million across all impacted firms.

"Dozens of firms lost money," said Joyce, whose staff worked over the weekend to address millions of mismatched Facebook shares following Friday's glitches.

About 30 million shares' worth of trading were affected during the pre-IPO period, according to Eric Noll, head of transaction services for Nasdaq OMX. He said on a call with reporters on Sunday that around half of those shares would "have some level of dispute."

Senior Nasdaq OMX executives said Sunday that they aimed to use $10 million in proceeds from the exchange's own position in Facebook shares--acquired by the exchange Friday as its staff worked to resolve the delay in Facebook's stock opening--to augment a standing $3 million cap on payouts to customers that demonstrate losses as a result of failures in Nasdaq OMX's systems.

Shares in Nasdaq OMX were flat at $22.00 in early trading Monday after closing 4.4% lower Friday.

Bob Greifeld, chief executive of Nasdaq OMX, told reporters Sunday that brokers couldn't expect every single trade to be made good because in some instances there weren't enough shares available at the prices sought. He also defended Nasdaq's handling of the matter.

"Our outreach to investors and customers was at an all-time high level," said Greifeld. "What you're hearing is some basic frustration with the message."

Pain borne by brokers and traders due to the mishandled IPO comes at a time when many Wall Street firms already have been struggling to make profits from dealing in equities. Investors this year have continued to pull money out of mutual funds and overall stock-trading activity in the first quarter fell to its lowest level since 2007.

On Friday, problems with the Nasdaq Stock Market's IPO mechanism played into a 30-minute delay of the offering and led to an approximate 20-minute period in which the exchange stopped confirming new orders in Facebook shares, as well as cancellations or changes to standing orders.

Brokers and traders who entered orders on behalf of institutions and retail investors didn't learn the results of the trading until more than two hours later--and then the results were in many cases not what the firms expected.

That put the onus on brokers to determine whether or not to make customers good on trades they thought had been completed hours earlier. Wholesale market makers, the major electronic order-handling operations that handle the trading of individual investors, were seen among the worst-hit by Nasdaq's glitches due to the large number of orders that needed to be fixed for customers eager to trade in Facebook's debut.

After an attempted after-hours auction on Friday to resolve the disputed trades resulted in "nothing done," according to a notice sent to traders, Nasdaq OMX officials told clients they would have to seek "accommodation" through the exchange's rules for handling disputed transactions. In such situations, brokers can petition the exchange to get compensation for losses proven to be the result of Nasdaq OMX systems failures.

Such accommodations must be sought by 12 p.m. EDT Monday. Under exchange rules, Nasdaq's total payout to affected customers tops out at $3 million in one calendar month.

To this figure Nasdaq seeks to add the $10 million the exchange made from trading out of a position in Facebook shares that Nasdaq took on Friday morning in order to resolve the technical issue that delayed the IPO. The Securities and Exchange Commission will have to sign off on the plan, Nasdaq OMX executives said Sunday.

-By Jacob Bunge, Dow Jones Newswires; 312 750 4117; jacob.bunge@dowjones.com; Twitter: @jacobbunge

online.wsj.com 

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To: scion who wrote (114776)5/21/2012 2:34:25 PM
From: scion   of 116430
 
Facebook Shares Sink on Day Two

Updated May 21, 2012, 1:14 p.m. ET
By DREW FITZGERALD And MATT JARZEMSKY
online.wsj.com 

NEW YORK—Facebook Inc. shares plunged on their second day on the stock market, a black eye for all those involved with the social networking company going public.

The shares fell 13.7% early Monday to well below the $38 price for the initial public offering, before pulling off the low.

"The underwriters completely screwed this up," said Michael Pachter, analyst at Wedbush Securities. "This thing should have been half as big as it was, and it would have closed at $45."

A spokesman for Morgan Stanley, the IPO's lead underwriter, didn't immediately respond to a request for comment.

Falling below the offer price so quickly is considered disappointing for a new stock, especially in the case of the most heavily traded IPO of all time. The reasons cited for the decline include an overly aggressive IPO price, the increased number of shares offered and concerns about Facebook's slowing revenue growth.

While investor enthusiasm early on was high for Facebook shares and while bankers on the deal increased the stock price and number of shares ahead of the offering, many observers questioned the valuation of more than $100 billion that was placed on the social network, where revenue and earnings growth were already beginning to slow.

"Facebook's IPO priced at a level well above where we foresaw compelling 12-month returns," BTIG analyst Richard Greenfield said in a research note Monday. With revenue and earnings growth decelerating in 2012, "we find Facebook's current valuation unappealing."

The drop Monday has dealt Facebook Chairman and Chief Executive Mark Zuckerberg about $2.2 billion of paper losses, though his stake was still worth more than $17 billion Monday morning. The social network's founder also retains almost 56% of Facebook's voting power.

The slump is likely to turn up the heat on Facebook to boost its performance by generating more revenue from its massive user base, which includes more than 900 million active users. The company's earnings fell 12% in the first quarter amid surging expenses.

Revenue slipped compared with the fourth quarter, a decline the company blamed on "seasonal trends" in the advertising business and growth in markets where Facebook generates less revenue per user, according to a regulatory filing last month.

Rob Enderle, a principal analyst at San Jose Calif.-based Enderle Group, said Facebook's earnings and revenue don't justify the high price of its stock.

"The insiders made a ton of cash, but the investors who are probably Facebook users lost a lot of money, and it's going to affect their impression of the company," he said.

He said he targets a "conservative" price between $18 and $20 based on the company's earnings and risk.

On Friday, Facebook's shares repeatedly tested the $38 IPO price, but lead underwriter Morgan Stanley reportedly moved to prop up Facebook's stock price then. A Morgan Stanley spokesman wouldn't confirm or deny the bank's role in keeping the stock above $38 on the first day. Shares closed just 23 cents higher—far short of the kind of first-day pop that signals a healthy offering.

Although the lead investment bank is under no legal obligation to prevent a company from declining below its IPO price, it will step in and start buying shares on most major offerings to keep the stock price at least flat with the IPO price at the close of trading. That support can continue beyond the first day, depending on the deal and the bank.

However, Facebook's total shares sold—421.2 million—combined with heavy first-day trading volume–means that bankers' ability to buy had a limit.

Dave Lutz, managing director at Stifel Nicolaus, said Facebook's underwriters might have stopped supporting the stock's price to thwart short-term traders counting on the underwriters buying at $38.

"We think this could just be a technique of Morgan Stanley trying to shake out some of the weaker hands," he said. "What a lot of people will do [when the underwriters continue to step in] is say, 'If the underwriter's not going to let it break through, I'll just sit there and day trade right in front of it.'"

"In theory, [letting the price fall below $38] is a smart idea as long as there's not broader institutional selling," he said. "Where Facebook closes today is going to be very important."

As the stabilization agent on the deal, Morgan Stanley fills the role of ensuring an orderly market in the stock in its first days of trading.

Technical glitches marred Facebook's debut on Nasdaq Friday as the exchange struggled to deal with a flood of orders. Brokers and investors were unable to cancel or alter trades that had been placed early Friday morning, prompting Nasdaq to delay Facebook's open for 30 minutes.

Facebook's weak debut dragged down other newly issued online stocks on Friday, such as Zynga Inc., LinkedIn Corp., Groupon Inc. and Pandora Media Inc. GSV Capital Corp., a Woodside, Calif.-based fund that invests in venture-backed private companies, also posted big declines. GSV has invested in Facebook, Groupon and Zynga, as well as the social-networking company Twitter Inc.

They generally continued to slide on Monday.

Many not participating in Facebook's IPO are relieved to be on the sidelines.

"From my standpoint, I'm very happy not to be involved," said Adam Sarhan, head of New York-based fund Sarhan Capital. "There's a lot of hype and hysteria revolving around Facebook."
—Lynn Cowan and George Stahl contributed to this article.

Write to Drew FitzGerald at andrew.fitzgerald@dowjones.com

online.wsj.com 

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To: scion who wrote (114772)5/21/2012 3:36:49 PM
From: Lahcim Leinad   of 116430
 
Google pays $10M for TeraHop patents: Sale to help investors in fraud case recoup cash - GeekWire

Big technology companies are searching everywhere for patents, looking to protect themselves from future litigation. Now, Google has emerged as the buyer of a patent portfolio in a complex fraud case involving 57-year-old Seattle investment professional Mark Spangler.

Spangler, who was indicted last week on 23 counts of fraud and money laundering, allegedly funneled some $46 million of investors’ funds into two startup companies in which he held interests: Seattle-based Tamarac and Georgia-based TeraHop.

TeraHop flopped last year, filing for bankruptcy protection in September. A court-appointed receivership was established shortly thereafter to manage the assets, hiring Tangible IP to sell the portfolio. Now, GeekWire has learned that Google recently paid $10 million for dozens of TeraHop’s patents, many of them related to tracking technologies associated with shipping containers and RFID technologies, according to public records.

That’s a hefty sum, especially given that TeraHop’s business didn’t take off. The funds from the patent purchase could be used to return cash to investors who lost money in the deal. Court records show that the sale would yield about $8 million for the receivership estate, enough money to discharge secured debt from TeraHop, pay creditor claims and possibly deliver leftover cash to equity owners.

Patents in the portfolio include: Antenna in cargo container monitoring and security system; Visually capturing and montioring contents and events of cargo container; Radio frequency identification based sensor and others. In total, more than 115 patents and patent applications were transferred to Google as part of the purchase.

[ Mark Spangler is not an unknown on SI.]

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From: Glenn Petersen5/21/2012 6:19:59 PM
   of 116430
 
With New Firepower, S.E.C. Tracks Bigger Game

By BEN PROTESS and AZAM AHMED
DealBook
New York Times
May 21, 2012, 5:47 pm

A corporate lawyer, a professional trader and an anonymous middleman carried out a lucrative insider trading scheme for nearly two decades, baffling federal authorities who were trying to unravel the mystery. Like characters in a crime novel, the three men evaded arrest by dumping cellphones, using code names and rendezvousing in Atlantic City to divvy up their bounty.

Then last year, authorities found the culprits. Relying on new tools, investigators at the Securities and Exchange Commission traced the conspiracy to Matthew H. Kluger, Garrett D. Bauer and Kenneth T. Robinson. In April, the three men, who have all pleaded guilty to criminal charges, agreed to pay the S.E.C. roughly $32 million.

Embarrassed after missing the warning signs of the financial crisis and the Ponzi scheme of Bernard L. Madoff, the agency’s enforcement division has adopted several new — if somewhat unconventional — strategies to restore its credibility. The S.E.C. is taking its cue from criminal authorities, studying statistical formulas to trace connections, creating a powerful unit to cull tips and assign cases and even striking a deal with the Federal Bureau of Investigation to have agents embedded with the regulator.

“We were given a once-and-a-lifetime opportunity to rethink what we do and how we do it,” said Robert Khuzami, the agency’s enforcement chief since 2009 and a former federal prosecutor who once was the general counsel of Deutsche Bank.

In one of the agency’s first efforts, Mr. Khuzami and his boss, Mary L. Schapiro, the agency’s new chairwoman, sought to tear down the agency’s bureaucratic barriers. The S.E.C. had more than 70 tip lines, including e-mail and voice mail, but no central repository. To consolidate the tip system, Ms. Schapiro dispatched a top lieutenant, Stephen L. Cohen, to help create a database from scratch.

Now, all tips and referrals — regardless of the source — are centralized in a single database. Under the new procedures, S.E.C. employees are required to to put a tip into the system within three days of receiving it.


The agency also created an office to analyze and manage the tips, resembling the F.B.I.’s terrorist review center. Called the Office of Market Intelligence, the unit serves as a “point guard” for the agency — harvesting investigative tips, conducting preliminary investigation and passing on cases to enforcement lawyers.

To lead the effort, the S.E.C. selected one of its rising stars, Thomas A. Sporkin, whose father was the agency’s enforcement director in the 1970s. Mr. Sporkin has built a team of more than 40 former traders, exchange experts, accountants and securities lawyers to sift through roughly 200 pieces of intelligence a day, distilling the hottest tips into a daily “intelligence report.”

“It’s the central intelligence office for the whole agency,” Mr. Sporkin said.

The overhaul came with an upgrade in technology. The hub of Mr. Sporkin’s outfit is a “market watch room,” replete with Bloomberg terminals and real-time stock pricing monitors that keep an eye on the markets.

In a less conventional move, the group is working closely with the Justice Department to share data and connect investigative dots. An F.B.I. agent is assigned to assist Mr. Sporkin’s team, sorting through potential cases to weed out bogus tips. The current agent, Bryan Smith, a former business consultant who specializes in white-collar fraud, can also tap into the F.B.I. database to see whether a suspect has drawn past scrutiny.

As part of the shake-up, the S.E.C. has adopted several other Justice Department techniques. Following the lead of criminal authorities, the S.E.C. now offers leniency for cooperating witnesses who agree to give evidence against their co-conspirators, a strategy that Mr. Khuzami has called a potential “game changer.”

The F.B.I. has reaped benefits, too. Mr. Smith has access to all S.E.C. databases, offering a wealth of information about potential suspects. Using tips from Mr. Sporkin’s office, the bureau recently located a fugitive and has identified cooperating witnesses.

The two organizations walk a fine legal line. Federal law prohibits the F.B.I. from sharing certain information with civil regulators, including evidence from a grand jury. On occasion, embedded agents will use the S.E.C. database for their own classified investigations, without telling Mr. Sporkin the identity of the suspect.

Mr. Sporkin said the agency had to be careful navigating the relationship, mindful that it was sharing proprietary data with another federal agency. “Given that the other agency is the F.B.I., we’re willing to take that risk — we’re more concerned with getting the bad guys,” he said.

The new tactics appear to be bearing fruit. The S.E.C. filed a record 735 enforcement actions last fiscal year. One of the biggest wins was a $93 million insider trading sanction against the former hedge fund titan Raj Rajaratnam, the founder of the Galleon Group who was also convicted of related criminal charges.

But the new firepower does not always yield big game. One recent action involved a paralegal and her father who were accused of earning about $67,000 by trading on inside information.

Some critics also question whether the agency’s intense focus on insider trading distracts from cases of greater significance to the economy and the financial system. Since the crisis, the agency has filed actions against several big banks but almost none against top executives running the firms.

“There are a lot of things that cause more harm to investors than insider trading,” said James D. Cox, a professor at Duke Law School. “On the scale of abuses to investors, I put it at a 3.”

The S.E.C. said that it created five units to track not only market abuse like insider trading, but complex corners of Wall Street like hedge funds and derivatives. The agency also defends its emphasis on insider trading, saying that the crime destroys confidence in public markets, giving an upper hand to Wall Street’s well-connected elite and putting average investors at a disadvantage.

As with much of the enforcement division, the market abuse unit, headed by Daniel M. Hawke, has taken a novel approach to insider trading cases. Rather than examining questionable trades in specific stocks, Mr. Hawke and his team now analyze suspicious traders and their network of connections on Wall Street. The investigators have turned to statistics, using tools like “cluster analysis” and “fuzzy matching,” to identify relationships and trading patterns that sometimes go undetected.

“We are taking a more intelligent and proactive approach,” said Mr. Hawke, a senior enforcement official who led the investigation into the $32 million insider trading scheme, one of the first significant actions to stem from the overhaul.

The new efforts paid off last year for the investigation, which started in the late 1990s, when Garrett Bauer popped up on the S.E.C.’s radar. But the agency, unable to find the source of the tips, hit a wall. In 2010, when the S.E.C. switched gears to use the trader-centered approach, the cold case began to heat up. The agency found that many of Mr. Bauer’s trades had come ahead of mergers that were advised by Wilson Sonsini, the law firm of Matthew Kluger.

Investigators also noticed that Kenneth Robinson, who had been the go-between for decades, was trading in some of the same stocks as Mr. Bauer. And then the S.E.C. caught a crucial break: Mr. Robinson traded in two stocks linked to Wilson Sonsini.

Armed with the S.E.C.’s intelligence and other evidence, the F.B.I. raided Mr. Robinson’s home. After that, Mr. Robinson began wearing a wire to ensnare his partners. The men spoke freely on tape, recorded by the F.B.I., under the impression that they had outsmarted federal authorities.

“It’s going to kill them that they don’t have enough,” Mr. Kluger said on the recordings, referencing federal authorities. “They don’t like to go to court without phone calls.”

With the tapes, the three men confessed — and the government never had to go to trial. They are scheduled to be sentenced in the coming weeks.

dealbook.nytimes.com 

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From: scion5/21/2012 6:31:09 PM
   of 116430
 
SEC Charges Former Yahoo Executive and Former Ameriprise Manager with Insider Trading

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
2012-99

Washington, D.C., May 21, 2012 — The Securities and Exchange Commission today charged a former executive at Yahoo! Inc. and a former mutual fund manager at a subsidiary of Ameriprise Financial Inc. with insider trading on confidential information about a search engine partnership between Yahoo and Microsoft Corporation.

Additional Materials
SEC Complaint
sec.gov 

The SEC alleges that Robert W. Kwok, who was Yahoo's senior director of business management, breached his duty to the company when he told Reema D. Shah in July 2009 that a deal between Yahoo and Microsoft would be announced soon. Shah had reached out to Kwok amid market rumors of an impending partnership between the two companies, and Kwok told her the information was kept quiet at Yahoo and only a few people knew of the coming announcement. Based on Kwok's illegal tip, Shah prompted the mutual funds she managed to buy more than 700,000 shares of Yahoo stock that were later sold for profits of approximately $389,000.

The SEC further alleges that a year earlier, the roles were reversed. Shah tipped Kwok with material nonpublic information about an impending acquisition announcement between two other companies. Kwok traded in a personal account based on the confidential information for profits of $4,754.

Kwok and Shah, who each live in California, have agreed to settle the SEC's charges. Financial penalties and disgorgement will be determined by the court at a later date. Under the settlements, Shah will be permanently barred from the securities industry and Kwok will be permanently barred from serving as an officer or director of a public company.

"Kwok and Shah played a game of you scratch my back and I'll scratch yours," said Scott W. Friestad, Associate Director in the SEC's Division of Enforcement. "When corporate executives and mutual fund professionals misuse their access to confidential information, they undermine the integrity of our markets and violate the trust placed in them by investors."

In a parallel criminal case announced today by the U.S. Attorney's Office for the Southern District of New York, Kwok has pled guilty to conspiracy to commit securities fraud, and Shah has pled guilty to both a primary and conspiracy charge. Both are awaiting sentencing.

According to the SEC's complaint filed in U.S. District Court for the Southern District of New York, Shah and Kwok first met in January 2008 when Shah was attending a real estate conference in California at the same facility where Yahoo was holding a meeting. The two met in a hallway and began discussing their respective businesses, and thereafter they spoke frequently by phone or in person. Kwok provided Shah with information about Yahoo, including whether Yahoo's quarterly financial performance was expected to be in line with market estimates. In return, Shah provided Kwok with information she learned in the course of her work, and he used it to help make his personal investment decisions. Both Shah and Kwok benefitted from this exchange of information.

The SEC alleges that in early 2008, shortly after their initial meeting, Shah told Kwok that she had learned through an inside source at Autodesk Inc. that it intended to acquire Moldflow Corporation. Based on this illegal tip that Kwok received from Shah, he purchased 1,500 shares of Moldflow in a personal account from April 7 to April 25. Autodesk and Moldflow announced the acquisition on May 1, and the price of Moldflow stock increased 11 percent. Kwok then sold his shares for a profit.

According to the SEC's complaint, Shah followed Yahoo closely as a portfolio manager at Ameriprise subsidiary RiverSource Investments LLC and previously at J. & W. Seligman & Co. She believed that the announcement of a partnership between Yahoo and Microsoft would have a positive impact on Yahoo's stock. In July 2009, when certain media began reporting that a deal could be forthcoming with Microsoft making a large up-front payment to Yahoo, Shah reached out to Kwok for inside information. Both Kwok and Shah knew that Kwok was tipping Shah in breach of his duty to Yahoo. Based on the confidential information she received from Kwok, Shah prompted certain RiverSource funds she helped managed to purchase 700,300 shares of Yahoo on July 16. The largest purchase was made in the Seligman Communications and Information Fund, which alone added approximately 450,000 shares of Yahoo to its holdings. On July 28, the shares were sold and a profit was realized.

The SEC's complaint charges Kwok and Shah with violating Section 10(b) of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 and Rule 10b-5 thereunder. In the settlements that are subject to court approval, Kwok and Shah acknowledged the facts to which they pled guilty and consented to judgments that impose permanent injunctions. The settlements also include the bars and to-be-determined financial sanctions.

The SEC's investigation, which is continuing, has been conducted by Brian O. Quinn and Brian D. Vann in the SEC's Division of Enforcement. The SEC thanks the U.S. Attorney's Office for the Southern District of New York and the Federal Bureau of Investigation for their assistance in this matter.

# # #


sec.gov 

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To: scion who wrote (114384)5/21/2012 8:07:50 PM
From: scion   of 116430
 
Miami’s Greenberg Traurig law firm apologizes, admits mistakes in Rothstein-related investment trial

By Jay Weaver
The Miami Herald
Posted: 10:02 a.m. Saturday, May 19, 2012
palmbeachpost.com 

The head of Miami’s powerful Greenberg Traurig law firm, embarrassed over its failure to turn over key financial records to investors who sued one of the firm’s clients, said he was sorry to a federal judge Friday.

“I want to apologize. Obviously, mistakes were made,” Cesar Alvarez, executive director of the 1,800-lawyer Greenberg Traurig firm, told U.S. District Judge Marcia Cooke near the end of a two-day contempt hearing. “I am very saddened for the firm and for the lawyers.”

But Alvarez told the judge “there was no conspiracy” and “nothing intentionally done” to withhold documents from Ponzi schemer Scott Rothstein’s fleeced investors in their recent trial against Greenberg’s client, Toronto-Dominion Bank, which stands accused of hiding and doctoring records for the trial.

The investors, known as the Coquina Group, won a $67 million judgment in January against the behemoth bank, which admitted “mistakes” were made but did not issue any apology to the judge. TD Bank fired Greenberg in April and hired another prominent law firm, McGuireWoods. Rothstein was a TD Bank customer while he carried out his massive investment scam.

Friday’s hearing featured the unusual public admission and apology from Alvarez and the lawyer who handled the case for his firm, Donna Evans. Two other prominent Greenberg lawyers, Mark Schnapp and Holly Skolnick, took the stand to testify about how they learned the law firm had misrepresented the truth during the contentious litigation.


Cooke, who presided over the trial, will likely decide this summer whether TD Bank and Greenberg lawyers violated so-called discovery rules — the exchange of evidence between the two sides — and whether they should be sanctioned, fined or held in contempt of court. A related dispute, regarding TD Bank’s alleged failure to turn over voluminous records showing Rothstein had been flagged as a potential money launderer, must also be addressed.

Coquina’s attorney David Mandel — assisted by one of the nation’s top appellate lawyers, Miguel Estrada — has asked the judge to strike every pleading and objection made by Greenberg’s lawyers at trial to stop TD Bank’s appeal of the $67 million verdict.

Mandel accused TD Bank and Greenberg of withholding incriminating financial documents on the bank’s anti-money laundering policy. He also alleged they produced a “doctored’’ bank profile of Rothstein, an attorney who ran a 70-lawyer firm, that made him look like a “low-risk” instead of a “high-risk” customer who did not require scrutiny. TD Bank’s new lawyers said mislabeling on the paperwork, known as a “due-diligence’’ form, was a “copying error.”

“We have repeated misconduct again, and again, and again,” Mandel told the judge.

The landmark Coquina case marked the nation’s first civil jury verdict against a bank for “aiding and abetting fraud,” by assisting Rothstein as he laundered millions of dollars in law firm’s trust accounts kept at TD Bank. The disbarred Fort Lauderdale lawyer is serving a 50-year sentence for orchestrating a $1.2 billion investment scam involving the sale of fabricated legal settlements.

Cooke decided to hold the contempt hearing this week after Greenberg’s lawyers “self-reported” a discovery violation.

On April 24, Greenberg lawyers Schnapp and Skolnick disclosed to the judge that TD Bank possessed a key financial document on its anti-money laundering policy that the bank and its attorneys had said did not exist during the trial. The document, called a “Standard Investigative Protocol,” spelled out the steps TD Bank must take under federal law to know its customers and prevent money-laundering activities.

On Friday, Schnapp and Skolnick took the witness stand and told Cooke that they learned of the document’s existence in mid-April from fellow Greenberg attorney Evans. Based in Boston, she was mainly responsible for coordinating the bank’s evidence for trial.

Evans, who left Greenberg in late April amid the controversy, also took the stand and answered questions about the document.

Evans first told the judge that she had received an email a year ago from a TD Bank anti-money laundering officer that contained attachments of the missing document. But she said: “I don’t know if I looked at the emails.”

Evans then said she asked another TD Bank officer in January, during the Coquina trial, about the document. She said the officer had a “draft” of it, but the bank “never used” it. She said she found the actual document in mid-April while preparing for another Rothstein-related investment case and reported it to her colleagues.

On Friday, she apologized for arguing at trial there was “no document” and that the plaintiff’s attorney, Mandel, had “created it.”

“It turns out both those statements are incorrect,” Evans told the judge. “I owe the court an apology, and I owe Mr. Mandel an apology.”

palmbeachpost.com 

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From: scion5/21/2012 8:12:54 PM
   of 116430
 
N.Y. AG alleges securities fraud

MONDAY, MAY 21, 2012 7:00:00 AM
BY BRYAN COHEN
legalnewsline.com 

NEW YORK (Legal Newsline) - New York Attorney General Eric Schneiderman announced a civil lawsuit on Thursday against a tax preparer for allegedly abusing his knowledge of his clients' finances to lure unsophisticated investors into high-risk bets.

"Money laundering and securities fraud are serious crimes, and when people abuse trust built upon longstanding relationships to steal investors' life savings, our office will prosecute civilly and criminally to the fullest extent of the law," Schneiderman said.

"My office is committed to rooting out these kinds of scams, and bringing justice to defrauded investors."

Schneiderman's Investor Protection Bureau suspected securities fraud by Robert H. "Bob" Van Zandt and other defendants in 2011 and froze some of their assets while continuing its inquiry that led to the legal action. Van Zandt allegedly perpetrated a scheme to defraud more than 250 investors out of more than $35 million.

Also named in the lawsuit are Kimmarie Gervasi Van Zandt, 20 companies under Van Zandt's control that were allegedly involved in the scheme, including R.S. Enterprises of New York Inc., Rockwell Consulting of NY Inc., MIG of Westchester Inc., Empire Builders of New York Corp., Burke & Grace Avenue Corp. and Van Zandt Agency Inc., and two relief defendants who allegedly received funds that were fraudulently transferred from companies Van Zandt controlled.

Van Zandt allegedly frequently promised investors seven to 12 percent returns or a quick return of principal, claimed that funds would be used to finance construction secured by mortgage or to invest in securities when they were not, and misappropriated investor funds for personal use.

Van Zandt and Gervasi Van Zandt allegedly failed to maintain and file necessary registrations for their companies with Schneiderman's IPB as securities salesman or security issuers, as is required by the state's Martin Act. The defendants allegedly made materially false or misleading representations under state securities law statutes, engaged in common law fraud and the Martin Act, engaged in persistent fraud and illegality under the executive law, and engaged in failure to register.

Schneiderman is seeking restitution on behalf of the investors of more than $35 million, including $4.6 million in the criminal prosecution of Van Zandt. All criminal charges are accusations and the defendant is presumed innocent until and unless proven guilty in a court of law.

Van Zandt also faces up to 25 years in prison for a separate criminal indictment that alleges two counts of money laundering, two counts of securities fraud under the Martin Act, two counts of scheme to defraud and 29 counts of grand larceny. Van Zandt is currently in custody after being indicted on May 14 by a Bronx County Grand Jury on multiple charges for an alleged multi-million dollar Ponzi scheme. Van Zandt allegedly lured investors into contributing to purported development ventures he controlled or owned, in addition to stocks.

legalnewsline.com 

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