Among recent enforcement actions, the SEC barred an investment advisor who failed to tell his clients that he used astrology to determine his investment strategy, and after a jury trial, the Wyly brothers were found guilty on SEC charges of using offshore trusts to hide stock holdings and exceed trading limits.
In addition, the SEC charged a Tiburon, Calif.-based securities salesman for selling millions of dollars in oil-and-gas investments without being registered with the SEC as a broker-dealer or associated with a registered broker-dealer, and the agency took action on two cases of insider trading.
Hiding Astrology-Based Investment Strategy Gets Advisor Barred
The SEC has barred an investment advisor who based his investment strategy on cycles of the moon and the gravitational attraction between the earth and the moon, but failed to disclose that fact to clients.
Gurudeo Persaud, who is already serving three years in prison for fraud after the SEC found that he was basing investment decisions on gravitational forces of the planets, failed to advise clients of his method, used client money to pay his own expenses and ran a Ponzi scheme, settled with the SEC and agreed to be barred from the industry.
Persaud had started his own company, White Elephant Trading Co. LLC, while still with Money Concepts Capital Corp., and used White Elephant to solicit investments of more than $1 million. Half of this went to pay Persaud's own expenses, and what he did invest was based on lunar cycles and gravitational forces rather than more conventional investment strategies. He promised returns of between 6% and 18%, and of course failed to deliver on those promises.
The SEC charged him with fraud in 2012; after he pled guilty in 2013 he was ordered to pay almost $1 million in restitution. The current settlement with the SEC bars him "from association with any broker, dealer, investment advisor, municipal securities dealer, municipal advisor, transfer agent, or nationally recognized statistical rating organization…"
Credit Suisse Could Plead Guilty, Pay $2.5 Billion in Tax Case
After an investigation on how the bank allegedly helped Americans evade taxes, Credit Suisse Group AG is expected to plead guilty and fork over $2.5 billion, with the Justice Department garnering $1.7 billion. Other agencies getting a slice of the penalty are the New York State Dept. of Financial Services ($600 million) and the Federal Reserve ($100 million).
While the deal is not yet set, the financial industry is concerned not just about the dollars involved but also the fallout from a guilty plea. Such a plea could open the door to revocation of a bank's charter, although regulators are said to be working to be sure that doesn't happen — since the eventual result could force the bank out of business altogether, not to mention what the repercussions of such an eventuality would be on the economy.
The tough stance Benjamin Lawsky, head of New York's agency, has taken on financial wrongdoing is the reason the Dept. of Financial Services is pulling in so much more of the settlement than the Federal Reserve. Earlier reports said Lawsky's agency alone had asked for a penalty of $2 billion.
New York had launched its investigation after a U.S. Senate report put the number of Americans evading U.S. taxes with the help of the bank at more than 22,000, with assets topping $12 billion. The report also said that Credit Suisse bankers came from Switzerland to the U.S. specifically to recruit American clients.
Unregistered Oil and Gas Securities Salesman to Pay $22 Million
The SEC charged a Tiburon, Calif.-based securities salesman for selling millions of dollars in oil-and-gas investments without being registered with the SEC as a broker-dealer or associated with a registered broker-dealer.
Behrooz Sarafraz has agreed to settle the SEC's charges by paying disgorgement of his commissions, prejudgment interest, and a penalty for a total of more than $22 million.
According to the SEC's complaint filed in federal court in San Francisco, Sarafraz acted as the primary salesman on behalf of TVC Opus I Drilling Program LP and Tri-Valley Corp., which were based in Bakersfield, Calif. From February 2002 to April 2010, these companies raised more than $140 million for their oil-and-gas drilling venture. While Sarafraz was raising money for these entities, he was not associated with any broker-dealer registered with the SEC.
According to the SEC's complaint, Sarafraz worked full time locating investors for the Opus and Tri-Valley oil-and-gas ventures. He described the investment program to investors and recommended they purchase Opus partnership interests or securities of Tri-Valley and its affiliated entities.
In return, Sarafraz received commissions that ranged from seven to 17% of the sales proceeds that he and members of a sales network generated. The SEC alleges that Opus and Tri-Valley paid Sarafraz approximately $18.3 million in sales commissions. He paid approximately $1.9 million to others as referral fees and kept the remaining $16.4 million.
Sarafraz has agreed to settle the SEC's charges by consenting to entry of a final judgment ordering him to pay a total of $22,482,318.87 without admitting or denying the allegations. The sum consists of $16,406,459 in disgorgement, $6,075,859.87 in prejudgment interest, and a $50,000 penalty. The final judgment will also permanently enjoin him from violating Section 15(a) of the Exchange Act. The settlement is subject to court approval.
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Wylys Found Guilty on Illegal Use of Offshore Trusts