« October 2004 | Main | December 2004 »

Daily Posts

March 2009
Sun Mon Tue Wed Thu Fri Sat
1 2 3 4 5 6 7
8 9 10 11 12 13 14
15 16 17 18 19 20 21
22 23 24 25 26 27 28
29 30 31

About SLW

Events

Subscribe

Email Alerts

Subscribe and receive email alerts when new articles are published!

Enter Your Email Address

U.S. Code

Code of Federal Regulations

November 30, 2004

"Carrot and the Stick" at the SEC

Compliance Week has this excellent article entitled "Carrot and Stick: Understanding the SEC's Agenda" by lawyers at White and Case that posits that "recent developments indicate that the Commission is conducting investigations of corporate fraud, not simply to punish wrong-doers, but also as a way of completely re-engineering the ethical code by which public companies, their managers and the directors abide."  Focusing on the SEC's recent settlement with Royal Ahold, which involved no monetary payment whatsoever, the article observes that:

In announcing its settlement with Ahold, the SEC cited the company’s extraordinary cooperation and extensive remediation as the reason why it decided not to fine the company. By imposing no monetary penalty on a company that acted responsibly and proactively to disclose and redress wrongdoing, the SEC sent an unambiguous signal that Ahold should serve as a model for how the Commission expects boards and management to behave when wrongdoing is uncovered. In a nutshell, the SEC expects genuine cooperation.

The Ahold settlement is emblematic of the SEC’s new agenda. By imposing increasingly massive fines, the Commission has been showing the stick for the past several years. Now the SEC is showing the carrot by demonstrating that companies that act promptly and responsibly are more likely to receive leniency even if serious wrongdoing occurs.

Scrushy Update

2 updates:

1.  Mr. Scrushy's challenge to the constitutionality of the certification requirements of Sarbanes-Oxley, the first such challenge of its kind, reportedly has been rejected by the federal court in Alabama.

2.  In answer to my question back in September as to whatever happened to Richard Scrushy's original lawyers from Chadbourne & Park, they have reportedly quit the criminal case (they will continue to work on the civil cases).  This marks at least a partial end to their self-proclaimed "historic endeavor of service to [Scrushy], one which will prove to be of unprecedented magnitude."

SCAS Webcast, Dec. 7: Getting Your Share of SEC, Securities Class Action Settlement Pipelines

ISS's Securities Class Action Services will hold its next webcast on December 7, 2004. The webcast will offer an inside look at the massive settlement pipelines for both SEC enforcement actions and securities class actions, and provide insight on how to track and participate in these settlements.  The webcast is free and open to anyone who is interested. It will be led by Scott Friestad, Assistant Director in the SEC's Division of Enforcement, and myself.

For further details, please click on the thumbnail image below or click here. Please join us!

111704email

November 24, 2004

The New "Obstruction"

Prosecutors requested a fall 2005 trial date yesterday for Sanjay Kumar, former CEO of Computer Associates International, who is charged with obstruction of justice, conspiracy and lying to law enforcement officers in a multibillion-dollar financial fraud.  The obstruction of justice charge is particularly notable, and perhaps novel, because it relates to statements Kumar made not to any government official but rather to the company's outside counsel (Wachtell Lipton), which was conducting an internal investigation of the matter. 

According to paragraph 53 of the indictment filed against Kumar,

Shortly after being retained in February 2002, the Company’s Law Firm met with the defendant SANJAY KUMAR and other CA executives in order to inquire into their knowledge of the practices that were the subject of the Government Investigations. During these meetings, KUMAR and others did not disclose, falsely denied and otherwise concealed the existence of the 35-day month practice. Moreover, KUMAR and others concocted and presented to the Company’s Law Firm an assortment of false justifications, the purpose of which was to support their false denials of the 35-day month practice. KUMAR and others knew, and in fact intended, that the Company’s Law Firm would present these false justifications to the United States Attorney’s Office, the SEC and the FBI so as to obstruct and impeded the Government Investigations.

Four former executives of the company, including its chief financial officer and general counsel, have reportedly already pleaded guilty to the charge of obstructing justice by lying to the lawyers from Wachtell.

As discussed in this excellent article in Wall Street Lawyer by two lawyers from Latham and Watkins,

One notable aspect of the Computer Associates case is that it essentially “deputized” the company’s counsel. Lying to a federal official is, of course, a federal crime. Martha Stewart, for example, was convicted of obstruction of justice for lying to investigators about her ImClone stock sale. But lying to corporate counsel was not previously considered obstruction of justice.

The Computer Associates case thus represents another example of the recent trend to enlist corporate counsel in the battle against corporate misconduct.

According to this article in the National Post, this new form of obstruction was the subject of discussion recently by defense attorneys John Keker and Theodore Wells, Jr. at PLI's annual securities conference:

"You better understand how broad these obstruction statutes are -- and how risky for both you and your clients," Mr. Keker told the audience of securities lawyers.

He pointed to the case against Computer Associates International, in which the three executives -- including the general counsel -- pleaded guilty to obstruction of justice for lying to their own lawyers at Wachtell Lipton Rosen & Katz, who were conducting an internal investigation.

Government prosecutors said the general counsel hid some information and gave incorrect information to Wachtell, even though he knew the findings were being passed along to the government.

"What's really scary here is some prosecutors are now taking the position that if an employee makes a false statement to the outside lawyer doing the internal investigation, that can constitute obstruction based on the theory that the outside lawyer is doing the investigation with the purpose of giving that information to the government," said Mr. Wells, who, like Mr. Keker, is consistently ranked as one of America's leading white-collar defence lawyers.

"So now we've moved from a situation where you're not supposed to make false statements to government agents, which at least people understand, to a world where if you make a false statement to the lawyer from Skadden Arps or Cravath, that in and of itself may constitute an act of obstruction."

November 19, 2004

Do Not Try This at Home

Just when you start to think that all of the creative securities-related schemes have been tried out, along comes something new.  According to the allegations in this Litigation Release from the SEC,

From at least June 2003 through April 2004, [Peter J.] Wilson, a 43-year-old resident of Rocky River, Ohio, engaged in a scheme to profit illegally from trading in the securities of at least five NASDAQ-listed issuers and two AMEX-listed issuers. After seeing an unusual upward spike in the share price or trading volume of a stock, Wilson would telephone the issuer at or about the time he traded the stock. Wilson's trading strategy generally was to sell the securities short prior to the calls. During these calls, Wilson used an alias and told a corporate officer of the issuer that he was an employee of NASDAQ or AMEX, depending on where the issuer's stock was listed. Using that false authority, Wilson then asked the corporate officers if they knew of a reason for their companies' unusually high share price or trading volume. Wilson was seeking-and in several of these telephone calls received-material, non-public information: that the company knew of no reason for the increased price or volume. In all but one case, Wilson instructed the company to issue a press release confirming that it knew of no reason for the increased price or volume. Two of the companies followed Wilson's instructions and issued such releases. Wilson knew that the companies' stock prices would drop as a result of these press releases.

Whoa! 

Couple of quick thoughts:

1.  Might this be related to, or inspired by, the person the FBI was after back in July 2004 for impersonating an SEC examiner and calling hedge funds to ask questions about the funds' business?
2.  Since only two companies issued press releases, does this mean that four of the six companies allegedly "instructed" to issue press releases by a [fake] official of the AMEX/NASD refused to do so?
3.  This has the makings of a great law school exam question (Insider Trading 101).

November 16, 2004

The Truth is Out There, Part II

SLW is resting easy again, no longer worrying about time-traveling insider traders, after several readers sent in comforting information.  Specifically, we're told that the story of Andrew Carlssin, who according to the World Weekly News turned an initial investment of $800 into over $350 million in a period of two weeks by using time-travel, has been officially debunked.

We're also advised that although it is no longer on the SEC website, the cache of the original SEC (a.k.a. the "Security and Exchange Commission" in the WWN article) statement in FAQ 19 concerning Mr. Carlssin still exists here.

Finally, one alert reader pondered why using time-travel to make money through insider trading would even be illegal.  Given the elaborate "duty" requirements for insider trading under existing law, we think that reader may have a valid point.  In that case, let the "Free Andrew Carlssin" movement begin!

November 15, 2004

Breaking Down the Settlement Timeline

The law firm Barrack, Rodos & Bacine has published this excellent "Barrack Brief" breaking down the securities class action settlement process "from handshake to cash in hand."  It also contains the following timeline for a typical case, which estimates that it will takes 560 days from the initial tentative "handshake" settlement until the settlement funds:

Day 1: The handshake settles the case.

Day 10: The lawyers sign the MOU.

Day 45: The lawyers complete the Settlement Agreement and accompanying documents and submit them to the court for preliminary approval.

Day 50: The court grants preliminary approval to the settlement.

Day 55: Notice of the settlement is published and mailed.

Day 105: Fairness hearing.

Day 135: Claim forms due to be mailed.

Day 500: Claims administration completed.

Day 530: Lawyers for the class request permission to distribute the settlement fund based on the report of the claims administrator.

Day 545: Court grants permission to distribute.

Day 560: Settlement fund distributed.

This timeline appears to be quite accurate based on data from the SCAS database.  In particular, a survey of a group of approximately 750 settlements in the SCAS database showed that the average number of days between the claim deadline and the disbursement date was 435 days, closely in line with the 425 day estimate in the Barrack timeline.

November 11, 2004

The Truth is Out There

Securities Litigation Watch is on red-alert following an alarming discovery today and yes, SEC, we're talking to you.  Since January 2004, SLW has slept well at night knowing that our nation's securities markets were free from the corrupt influence of time-travelers who would exploit their time-traveling informational edge through insider trading.  As you may recall, the SEC comforted the market with this statement, discussed here back in January, in Question 19 of the "FAQ" section of its website:

"Question: Is the Andrew Carlssin case for real?

Your Answer: Many investors and other members of the public have asked us about news reports concerning the Andrew Carlssin, an alleged "time-traveler" who supposedly made a fortune in the stock market by trading in the year 2003 based on information gleaned from his travels to the future. The reports appear to be a hoax. The SEC has not, in fact, brought an enforcement action against any such person."

Imagine my anxiety, then, when I clicked on what had been the link to this seminal FAQ and found . . .  nothing.  Now the link goes to a general index entitled "Fast Answers — Key Topics" and call me crazy but I do not see Andrew Carlssin, time travel or anything related on that page.  Panicking, I plugged Carlssin into the search box on that page and turned up . . . nothing.   Hands shaking, I tried the same search on the entire SEC website . . . nothing.

Then I was off to Google to find the "cache" of the old webpage . . . nothing.  Yahoo?  Nothing.

Clearly something is going on.   If the SEC has now confirmed the existence of this time-traveling insider trader, then doggone it, just tell us.  We can handle it.  I think.

November 10, 2004

SEC Considered, Rejected Insider Trading Investigation of U.S. Senators

As discussed in detail in this post a couple weeks ago by Professor Bainbridge, a recent study by Alan J. Ziobrowski of Georgia State University and colleagues at three other schools showed that during the 1990s, senators' stock picks (which must be publicly disclosed periodically) beat the market by 12 percentage points a year on average.  By comparison, corporate insiders only beat the market by about six percentage points a year, and U.S. households underperformed the market by 1.4 percentage points a year on average.

As reported in this article in Sunday's Philadelphia Inquirer, the authors of the study conclude that these results "suggest that senators are trading stock based on information that is unavailable to the public, thereby using their unique position to increase their personal wealth...." The study adds that it is as if "senators knew appropriate times to both buy and sell their common stock."  The article quotes Ziobrowski  as stating in a recent interview that "there is cheating going on, at a 99 percent level of confidence."

The Inquirer article states that according to Ari Gabinet, head of the SEC's Philadelphia Office, "agency staff reviewed a draft of the study in March but decided not to press the issue because it is hard to win insider-trading cases without detailed knowledge of what, if any, privileged information the subjects received and proof insiders used it to trade. The SEC lacked such information in the senators' case."

Huh?  Yes, it's hard to win insider trading cases but the SEC does so routinely by using its subpoena power to gather documents and testimony that often will provide "detailed knowledge of what, if any, privileged information the subjects received and proof insiders used it to trade."

The article also points out that "the SEC may have little incentive to tangle with the Senate, given their relationship. Senators approve members of the SEC's governing body, as well as the agency's budget."

The Top 100 Settlements List

SCAS maintains a "Top 100 Settlements" list of the 100 largest securities class action settlements.  The list is dynamic, obviously, as new, larger settlements periodically bump smaller settlements from the Top 100.

Beginning today, we will provide updates here when a new settlement cracks the Top 100 (we wait until a settlement notice and claim form have been issued before adding a case to our list).  Two new settlements already have joined our list this week:

  1. The $100,000,000 AT&T settlement, previously discussed here, enters the Top 100 at number 37.
  2. The $75,000,000 Elan settlement has cracked the Top 100 at number 53.

November 8, 2004

WorldCom/Citigroup Settlement Finalized, Reduced Slightly

The WSJ reports that U.S. District Judge Denise Cote approved Citigroup's massive settlement with investors in the former WorldCom.  According to the article, the settlement, which had been announced at $2.65 billion, was reduced to $2.58 billion to compensate for investors who elected to opt out of the court-approved settlement class.  To put the size of this settlement (the second largest securities class action settlement in history) in context, the SCAS Database shows this relatively small reduction of $75 million would itself be in the top 60 securities class action settlements of all time.

The article further notes that Judge Cote awarded $141.5 million in attorneys' fees (5.5% of the settlement amount, which will be split among 10 law firms), and that plaintiffs' lawyers claim to have logged 200,000 hours on the case.  That's $707 per hour, by my math.

Second Circuit Refuses to Block Alabama's WorldCom Suit

The following article first appeared in the November 2004 SCAS Alert:

Second Circuit Refuses to Block Alabama's WorldCom Suit
B
y Ted Allen, Managing Editor

More pension funds may pursue their securities claims in state court and opt out of federal class actions after an Alabama pension fund negotiated a $111 million settlement with WorldCom Inc.'s underwriters, some observers say. The underwriters settled after a federal appeals court refused to delay the pension fund's state lawsuit.

The U.S. Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit overturned U.S. District Judge Denise Cote's injunction that blocked the Retirement Systems of Alabama (RSA) from pursuing a state court lawsuit against WorldCom's former top officers, accounting firm and underwriters, who are also defendants in a federal class action in New York. Cote had ordered that the state court trial, set for Oct. 18, be delayed after the resolution of the federal lawsuit, which is to go to trial on Jan. 10. Most of WorldCom's bondholders and shareholders, led by the New York State Common Retirement Fund, are plaintiffs in the federal case.

On Aug. 25, the appeals court issued a preliminary order, allowing RSA to pursue its case in state court. A month later, Citigroup Inc., JPMorgan Chase & Co. and Bank of America Corp. agreed to a $111 million settlement with RSA, thus avoiding trial in Alabama. Arthur Andersen LLP, WorldCom's former auditor, also joined the settlement.

"This shows why pension funds should bring their own cases in state court,'' J. Michael Rediker, a lawyer in Birmingham, Alabama, who represents RSA, told the SCAS Alert.

WorldCom, the second-largest U.S. long-distance phone company, collapsed into bankruptcy in July 2002 amid an $11 billion accounting scandal. Shareholders lost more than $200 billion in market value. The company emerged from bankruptcy as MCI Inc. in April.

"Significant" Decision
Calling the Second Circuit decision "really significant," Rediker said it upholds the right of pension funds to sue on their own in state court, without interference from the federal judiciary. The appeals court, in a full opinion issued Oct. 18, noted that no federal judge has the right to be "the first court to hold a trial on the merits."

Rediker cautioned that the ruling would not allow a state pension fund to assemble a rival class of investors or try to thwart a federal class settlement. "As long as a pension fund and its lawyers are not trying to carry water for anyone else and are not trying to steal the march on a [multidistrict litigation] case or grab from a limited settlement fund, then it's OK,'' he said.

Rediker said he was not surprised that the underwriters moved to settle the Alabama case after failing to delay the trial. He said the banks' lawyers didn't want to expose their witnesses to cross-examination in Alabama out of fear that it might hurt them in the federal trial. They were also concerned about the prospect of a billion-dollar verdict in Alabama, he said.

The Alabama pension fund is still pursuing claims against Bear Stearns Cos., which is not a defendant in the federal case. State court jury selection began Oct. 18 and testimony is scheduled to start Nov. 8, Rediker said. RSA is also suing former WorldCom CEO Bernard Ebbers and ex-Chief Financial Officer Scott Sullivan, but those claims have been delayed until the resolution of their criminal trials.

The investors in the federal class action have already negotiated a $2.65 billion settlement with Citigroup. They are represented by Bernstein Litowitz Berger & Grossman LLP of New York and Barrack Rodos & Bacine of Philadelphia.

Arguments Against Opting Out
Traditionally, few institutional investors have litigated their claims in state court. The practice has become more common in the past two years. Last year, pension funds in Ohio and California opted out of a federal class action against AOL Time Warner to bring state court claims.

Federal class counsel have argued that investor recoveries typically occur sooner and are more certain in federal court. Defense lawyers also have tried to discourage state litigation, preferring to negotiate a single federal class settlement that would cover all investors.

At an ISS conference in February, Jerome F. Birn Jr., a partner with Wilson Sonsini Goodrich & Rosati, said defense counsel are reluctant to settle with state plaintiffs before resolving a federal class action because that would set a minimum settlement amount for the federal claims. Conversely, if a company settles a federal class action first, it will have limited room to negotiate on state claims, because the federal plaintiffs' attorneys will often demand that no one else receive a more favorable settlement. Pursuing state court claims only adds to the complexity of settling shareholder claims over corporate restatements, Birn said. That task is already difficult, given the interests of prosecutors, who may pursue criminal charges and the demands of insurers that provide directors and officers' coverage.

Litigation History
The Alabama pension fund filed suit on July 15, 2002, two and a half months after the first securities class action was filed in federal court in New York. Like the federal plaintiffs, RSA sued WorldCom's underwriters over their handling of the company's $10.1 billion bond offering in May 2001. The investors contend that the banks should have noticed the discrepancies between WorldCom's actual expenses and reported expenses before underwriting the bond issue. The RSA suit also included claims against Bear Stearns over its underwriting of an October 2001 bond offering.

A multidistrict litigation panel ordered the federal suits consolidated before Judge Cote in New York, who certified the class. Cote issued a scheduling order, asking the state judges hearing investor cases in Alabama, Ohio and Illinois ensure that those cases would not interfere with the Jan. 10 federal trial. The Ohio and Illinois judges scheduled later trials, but Alabama Circuit Judge Charles Price set an Oct. 18 trial in the RSA case. After Price refused to delay that date, the underwriters asked Cote for help. In April, Cote ordered the Alabama court to delay its trial until 60 days after a verdict in the federal class suit. In her opinion, she said her "ability to control the schedule of this complex, multidistrict securities litigation will be hamstrung'' if the Alabama trial proceeded.

Appeals Court Rules
The Second Circuit disagreed, concluding that Cote exceeded her authority. While federal judges have the power under the "All Writs Act" to issue orders to protect their jurisdiction, that authority is limited by the Anti-Injunction Act, which bars federal courts from enjoining state courts, except when expressly authorized by Congress, "where necessary in aid of its jurisdiction, or to protect or effectuate its judgments," the court said.

The appeals court distinguished the Alabama case from its In Re Baldwin-United Corp. (1985) decision, which upheld an injunction under the All Writs Act. In that case, a federal judge enjoined a group of state attorneys general from suing in state court to challenge a proposed class settlement with a group of broker-dealers of annuities. The Baldwin-United court said the injunction was necessary because "the existence of multiple and harassing actions by the states could only serve to frustrate the district court's effort to craft a settlement." The Second Circuit said Baldwin-United did not apply because the WorldCom underwriters had not shown how the Alabama litigation would undermine an actual or impending settlement. The prospect that a state court case might cause delays in the federal class action was not sufficient to justify the injunction, the appeals court said.

The decision was a surprise to many observers, because the Second Circuit is regarded as protective of the prerogatives of federal judges to coordinate multidistrict cases, Rediker said, recalled the court's rulings in Agent Orange litigation.

While some observers may see this decision as a "retrenchment," Rediker said the ruling simply affirms the right of investors to pursue their own claims in state court.

While Rediker said he expects more state pension funds to take this route, they should resist the temptation to try to represent other shareholders. "Institutional investors should ask their lawyers: ‘who else do you want to represent?' "

November 5, 2004

Pre-Cog Extraordinaire, Part II

According to this article in the L.A. Times, Pre-Cog Extraordinaire Barry Minkow has done it again, tipping off the SEC to yet another alleged Ponzi scheme operating out of California.  According to the article,

The alleged scam came to the notice of authorities via a tip from Barry Minkow, who as a teenager founded ZZZZ Best, a Reseda carpet-cleaning company that perpetrated a notorious fraud on Wall Street investors. Having served a lengthy prison sentence, Minkow is now the pastor of a San Diego church and helps operate a private company that investigates suspected frauds.

Minkow said he and Juan Lopez, a private investigator who works for Minkow's Fraud Discovery Institute, posed as investors to meet with Financial Solutions. His 15-page report, addressed to [SEC attorney Peter F.] Del Greco and dated June 17, was attached to the SEC's filings with Timlin.

Profiling the Corporate Fraudster, Part III

A while back KPMG concluded that the "profile" of the most typical corporate fraudster was a male director or senior manager between the ages of 36 and 45, who has worked in the finance department of a public company for more than 10 years.

Then E&Y told us that "employees who work excessive hours, refuse to delegate and fail to take up their full holiday entitlement are more likely to commit fraud."

Now USA Today wonders in this provocative article whether "philanderers" are more likely to be involved in financial fraud.

November 4, 2004

Oh, That Barge Deal, Part II

Any would-be facilitator of a public company's fraudulent revenue recognition practices who has not already been deterred by the string of SEC cases discussed in posts such as this should consider the verdict handed down yesterday in the Enron "barge" case. As discussed in detail in this article in the New York Times, a federal jury in Houston found that five defendants, including four former executives of Merrill Lynch, conspired to help Enron report bogus profits. The case "centered on a single transaction involving what the government argued was a bogus sale of an interest in barges by Enron to Merrill." Specifically, according to the article,

The barge transaction took place in late December 1999, when Enron was struggling to meet Wall Street's profit projections. When no buyer emerged, Merrill agreed to invest $7 million in an entity that made the purchase, in exchange for what the government said was a secret oral commitment from Enron to repurchase the barges in six months. Such a deal would guarantee Merrill against loss, meaning that Enron still retained the risk of ownership and could not report the money from the deal as revenue.

The former Merrill executives include the former head of global investment banking at Merrill and the former head of the firm's project and lease finance group. They now face sentences of up to five years in jail on the conspiracy charge.

November 1, 2004

SCAS Database Free Trial

From time to time we like to offer a free trial of the SCAS Database and email alert service as a thank you to Securities Litigation Watch readers, and we are doing so again now for readers who respond this week.

The SCAS database tracks securities class actions going back over a decade, and can be searched in many powerful ways such as by law firm; court (Circuit, District, State); case status (active, settled, disbursed, dismissed); filing date; settlement date; dismissal date or combinations of any of the above (e.g., all active cases that Milberg Weiss filed in the U.S. District Court for the District of Maryland between February 5, 2000 and March 13, 2002).

The SCAS database also provides real-time email alerts (with 24-hour/day coverage) whenever new cases are filed, cases are settled, or other key events, as well as copies of Complaints, Settlement Notices and Claim Forms.

To request the free trial, kindly send an email to scas@issproxy.com with the word "TRIAL" in the subject line, along with the following contact information:

Name
Organization
Address
Phone

   
 
About RiskMetrics Group | Disclaimer

Copyright © 2007 RiskMetrics Group


Powered by Movable Type 3.36