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This is a photo of the National Register of Historic Places listing with reference number 7000063

Sunday, November 24, 2013

FORMER BROKER SENT TO PRISON FOR FOGUE TRADES

FROM:  U.S. SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION 
Former Rochdale Securities Broker Sentenced to 30 Months' Imprisonment for Rogue Trades

The Securities and Exchange Commission announced today that on November 19, 2013, the Honorable Robert N. Chatigny of the United States District Court for the District of Connecticut sentenced David Miller, 41, of Rockville Center, New York, to 30 months imprisonment, followed by three years of supervised release, for his role in a fraudulent scheme to place a series of unauthorized purchases of more than 1.6 million shares of Apple, Inc. stock on October 25, 2012 while employed as an institutional sales trader for Rochdale Securities LLC ("Rochdale") of Stamford, Connecticut. Judge Chatigny also ordered Miller to make full restitution to Rochdale, which suffered a loss of $5,292,202.50 and ceased all business operations as a result of Miller's actions. Miller was arrested on December 4, 2012, and on April 15, 2013 he pleaded guilty to one count of conspiracy to commit wire fraud and securities fraud, and one count of wire fraud.

On April 15, 2013, the Commission filed a partially settled civil injunctive action against Miller in federal court in Connecticut arising out of the same conduct. To settle the Commission's charges, Miller consented to be enjoined from future violations of the antifraud provisions of the federal securities laws. The amount of a civil monetary penalty will be determined at a later date. In related administrative proceedings that the Commission separately instituted on April 25, 2013, Miller consented to a Commission Order barring him from any future association with any broker, dealer, investment adviser, municipal securities dealer, municipal advisor, transfer agent, or nationally recognized statistical rating organization, and barring him from participating in any offering of penny stock.

Saturday, November 23, 2013

SEC ANNOUNCES CHARGES AGAINST TWO INVESTMENT ADVISERS FOR FAILURE TO DISCLOSE COMPENSATION

FROM;  U.S. SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION

The Securities and Exchange Commission announced charges against two Tampa-area investment advisers accused of committing fraud by failing to truthfully inform clients about compensation received from offshore funds they were recommending as safe investments despite substantial risks and red flags.

The advisers also are charged with contributing to violations of the “custody rule” that requires investment advisory firms to establish specific procedures to safeguard and account for client assets.

The SEC’s Enforcement Division alleges that Gregory J. Adams and Larry C. Grossman solicited and directed clients of their investment firm Sovereign International Asset Management to invest almost exclusively in funds controlled by an asset manager named Nikolai Battoo, who the SEC charged in a separate enforcement action last year.  Grossman and Adams failed to inform clients about the conflict of interest in recommending these investments as Battoo was paying them millions of dollars in compensation for steering investors to his funds.

“Investment advisers have a fiduciary duty to act in utmost good faith when recommending investments, and they must fully disclose all of the relevant facts to their clients,” said Eric I. Bustillo, director of the SEC’s Miami Regional Office.  “Adams and Grossman breached this duty when they misstated their compensation and failed to disclose serious conflicts of interest.”

According to the SEC’s order instituting administrative proceedings, Grossman was paid approximately $3.3 million and Adams received $1 million in the undisclosed compensation arrangements.  Grossman and Adams promoted the investments as safe, diversified, independently administered and audited, and suitable for the investment objectives and risk profiles of their clients who were often retirees.  However, Battoo’s funds were in fact risky, lacked diversification, and lacked independent administrators and auditors.  Grossman and Adams also failed to investigate – and in some cases wholly disregarded – numerous red flags surrounding Battoo and his funds.

The SEC’s Enforcement Division alleges that Grossman and Adams aided and abetted Sovereign’s violations of the custody rule when they instructed clients to transfer their investment funds to a bank account controlled by a related entity.  Grossman and Adams pooled clients’ money in this bank account before investing it in Battoo’s offshore funds.  Sovereign failed to comply with the custody rule, which requires an investment adviser to comply with surprise examinations or certain other procedures to verify and safeguard client assets.

According to the SEC’s order, Grossman and Adams willfully violated Section 17(a)(2) of the Securities Act of 1933, Section 15(a) of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, and Sections 206(1), 206(2), 206(3) and 207 of the Investment Advisers Act of 1940.  They willfully aided and abetted violations of Section 15(a) of the Exchange Act and Section 206(4) of the Advisers Act and Rules 204-3 and 206(4)-2.

The SEC’s investigation was conducted by Andre J. Zamorano, Sunny H. Kim, and Kathleen Strandell in the SEC’s Miami office.  The case was supervised by Thierry Olivier Desmet, and the litigation will be led by Patrick R. Costello.  The SEC examination of Sovereign that led to the investigation was conducted by Roda A. Johnson and Jean M. Cabot under the supervision of John C. Mattimore.

Friday, November 22, 2013

THREE SENTENCED FOR ROLES IN $1 BILLION HIGH-YIELD INVESTMENT FRAUD

FROM:  U.S. JUSTICE DEPARTMENT 
Wednesday, November 20, 2013
Three Investment Advisors Sentenced in California for $1 Billion High-yield Investment Fraud

Three former investment advisers were sentenced on Nov. 19, 2013 for their roles in attempting to defraud a wealthy investor of $1 billion through a high-yield investment fraud scheme.

Acting Assistant Attorney General Mythili Raman of the Criminal Division and U.S. Attorney Andre Birotte Jr. of the Central District of California made the announcement.

William J. Ferry, a former stock broker and investment advisor; Dennis J. Clinton, a former real estate investment manager; and Paul R. Martin, a former senior vice president and managing director of Bankers Trust, were convicted on July 31, 2012, of conspiracy, mail fraud and wire fraud.   The investor they attempted to defraud was, in reality, part of an undercover FBI team that posed as wealthy investors and investment managers to stop fraudsters before they actually harmed victims.

Ferry, 71, of Newport Beach, Calif., was sentenced to serve 15 months in prison.  Clinton, 65, of San Diego, Calif., was sentenced to serve 30 months in prison.   Martin, 64, of New Jersey, was sentenced to 30 months in prison.            

Evidence at trial established that from February to December 2006, Ferry, Clinton, Martin and others conspired to promote a high-yield investment fraud scheme that promised an extremely high return at little or no risk to principal.   The defendants claimed their investment program was a “Fed Trade Program” that was regulated by the Federal Reserve Bank, that they had to follow strict Fed guidelines, and that a Fed trade administrator administered their program, with compliance duties handled by a Fed compliance officer.

Investors also were told that once the investment program passed compliance, it would become registered in Washington, D.C., with the Fed.   The defendants falsely represented to FBI undercover agents that they would arrange for them to meet a Federal Reserve official and/or the chairman of the board of a major U.S. bank to confirm the existence of the defendants’ investment program.   The defendants falsely claimed that these Fed investment programs existed primarily to generate funds for project funding and humanitarian purposes, such as Hurricane Katrina relief.   The promised profits from investing in a Fed program had to be divided in equal amounts, with one portion going to some humanitarian purpose, another portion to some kind of project financing and the remainder to the investor.   The defendants represented to the undercover agents that the agents’ offshore bank account would be managed by a Swiss banker who was already managing billions of dollars for the defendants.

Throughout the scheme, Ferry acted as an underwriter and member of the compliance team; Martin acted as a banking expert; and Clinton acted as a trouble shooter during the compliance phase and transfer of funds to the Swiss banker.
           
Another conspirator, Brad Keith Lee, of California, who acted as the contact with the Swiss banker, pleaded guilty to conspiracy and wire fraud on April 13, 2009, and was sentenced to 24 months in prison on Jan. 11, 2010.   Oregon resident John Brent Leiske, who acted as a trader during the scheme, pleaded guilty in the District of Oregon to conspiracy, mail fraud and wire fraud on Jan. 24, 2012, and was sentenced to 120 months in prison on Feb. 14, 2013.

This continuing investigation is being conducted by the FBI.   This case is being prosecuted by Senior Litigation Counsel David Bybee and Trial Attorney Fred Medick of the Criminal Division’s Fraud Section.

Thursday, November 21, 2013

MAN ORDERED TO PAY RESTITUTION AND PENALTY FOR OFF-EXCHANGE FOREIGN CURRENCY POOL FRAUD

FROM:  COMMODITY FUTURES TRADING COMMISSION 
November 19, 2013
Federal Court Sanctions David Prescott for Forex Pool Fraud
Prescott Ordered to Pay Restitution and a Civil Monetary Penalty Totaling More than $1.8 Million

Washington, DC – The U.S. Commodity Futures Trading Commission (CFTC) obtained $455,098 in restitution for defrauded off-exchange foreign currency (forex) customers and a $1,365,294 civil monetary penalty in a federal court default judgment Order against Defendant David Prescott, individually and doing business as Cambridge Currency Partners (Cambridge). The court’s Order stems from a CFTC civil Complaint filed on April 30, 2013, charging Prescott with fraudulently soliciting individuals to invest in Cambridge’s forex pool and then misappropriating their monies (see CFTC Press Release 6581-13).

The Order, entered by the Honorable Charles N. Clevert, Jr. of the U.S. District Court for the Eastern District of Wisconsin on October 31, 2013, requires Prescott to pay the restitution and civil monetary penalties, and permanently bars Prescott from engaging in any commodity-related activity, including trading, and from registering or seeking exemption from registration with the CFTC.

Specifically, the Order finds that, from at least June 2010 through April 2013, Prescott fraudulently solicited individuals to invest in Cambridge’s off-exchange forex pool and misappropriated $455,098 of pool participants’ monies, using some of those funds for air travel, hotel accommodations, and gambling. According to the Order, Prescott defrauded pool participants and prospective pool participants by misrepresenting the risks involved in forex trading and executing demand promissory notes in their favor that promised the repayment of the note amount and monthly interest payments, knowing or recklessly disregarding that he could not make those payments by his forex trading.

The Order also finds that Prescott failed to inform participants and prospective participants that, under the name of David Weeks, he previously had been convicted of conspiracy to commit securities fraud, mail fraud and wire fraud, and perjury, had been ordered to pay restitution of over $1 million to defrauded investors, and was permanently enjoined from violating the anti-fraud provisions of the Securities Exchange Act.

CFTC Division of Enforcement staff members responsible for this case are Diane M. Romaniuk, Ava M. Gould, Mary Beth Spear, Scott R. Williamson, Rosemary Hollinger, and Richard B. Wagner.

Wednesday, November 20, 2013

FDIC ANNOUNCES SETTLEMENT WITH JP MORGAN CHASE & CO. IN RESIDENTIAL MORTGAGE-BACKED SECURITIES CASE

FROM:  U.S. FEDERAL DEPOSIT INSURANCE CORPORATION

The Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation (FDIC) as Receiver for six failed banks has announced a $515.4 million settlement with JPMorgan Chase & Co. and its affiliates (JPMorgan) of the receiverships' federal and state securities law claims based on misrepresentations in the offering documents for 40 residential mortgage-backed securities (RMBS) purchased by the failed banks. The settlement funds will be distributed among the receiverships for the failed Citizens National Bank, Strategic Capital Bank, Colonial Bank, Guaranty Bank, Irwin Union Bank and Trust Company, and United Western Bank. As part of the settlement, JPMorgan has agreed to waive any claims for indemnification from the FDIC in its corporate capacity or its capacity as Receiver for the failed Washington Mutual Bank based on any part of JPMorgan's $13 billion settlement with the United States Department of Justice and other government entities of claims relating to the sale of RMBS, including the $515.4 million settlement with the FDIC.

FDIC Chairman Martin J. Gruenberg said, "The settlement announced today will provide a significant recovery for the six FDIC receiverships. It also fully protects the FDIC from indemnification claims out of this settlement. The FDIC will continue to pursue litigation where necessary in order to recover as much as possible for FDIC receiverships, money that is ultimately returned to the Deposit Insurance Fund, uninsured depositors and creditors of failed banks."

As receiver for failed financial institutions, the FDIC may sue professionals and entities whose conduct resulted in losses to those institutions in order to maximize recoveries. From May 2012 to September 2012, the FDIC as Receiver for five of the failed banks filed ten lawsuits against JPMorgan, its affiliates, and other defendants for violations of federal and state securities laws in connection with the sale of RMBS. As of October 30, 2013, the FDIC has authorized lawsuits based on the sale of RMBS to a total of eight failed institutions and has filed 18 lawsuits seeking damages for violations of federal and state securities laws.

Citizens National Bank and Strategic Capital Bank were each placed into receivership on May 22, 2009; Colonial Bank was placed into receivership on August 14, 2009; Guaranty Bank was placed into receivership on August 21, 2009; Irwin Union Bank and Trust Company was placed into receivership on September 18, 2009; and United Western Bank was placed into receivership on January 21, 2011.

Tuesday, November 19, 2013

CFTC GENSLER'S REMARKS AT SWAP EXECUTION FACILITY CONFERENCE

FROM:  U.S. COMMODITY FUTURES TRADING COMMISSION 
Remarks of Chairman Gary Gensler at Swap Execution Facility Conference: Bringing Transparency and Access to Markets
November 18, 2013

Thank you, Shawn, for that kind introduction. I’m pleased to be back for my third Swap Execution Facility (SEF) Conference. I’m particularly pleased to be here now that SEFs are up and running.

For the first time, all swaps market participants have access to compete. For the first time, all – and that means dealers and non-dealers alike – benefit from transparency.

Since the time of Adam Smith and The Wealth of Nations, economists have consistently written that transparency and open access to markets benefits the broad public and the overall economy.

When markets are open and transparent, markets are more efficient, competitive, and liquid, and costs are lowered for companies and their customers.

President Roosevelt understood this when he asked Congress during the Great Depression to bring transparency, access and competition to the commodities and securities markets.

The reforms of the 1930s transformed markets. They helped establish the foundation for the U.S. economic growth engine for decades.

The swaps market emerged nearly 50 years later, but remained dark and closed until just last year. Lacking transparency and common-sense rules of the road, the swaps market contributed to the 2008 crisis.

Thus, just as President Roosevelt did in the 1930s, President Obama and Congress passed comprehensive financial reform. They brought the $400 trillion swaps market out of the shadows and opened access to all participants.

With the completion of nearly all of the agency’s rulemaking and the initial major compliance dates behind us, the marketplace has been transformed.

Bright lights now are shining on the swaps market. Transparency is shining both prior to and after a trade.

Real-time clearing also is now a reality with 99 percent of swaps clearing within 10 seconds and 93 percent actually doing so within three seconds. Approximately 70 percent of newly entered interest rate swaps and over 60 percent of credit index swaps are being cleared.

The playing field has been leveled through transparency, impartial access, central clearing and straight-through processing. Asset managers, pension funds, insurance companies, community banks and all market participants are gaining benefits that until recently only swap dealers had.

It’s been a remarkable journey these past five years – and all of you have been part of this. Your hundreds of comments, meetings and questions have been critical to CFTC’s efforts. You worked hard – with real costs and against deadlines – to implement these reforms to bring us to a new marketplace.

Open Access

With 18 temporarily registered SEFs, we now have more than a quarter-of-a-trillion dollars in swaps trading occurring on average per day. That is a big number by any measure.

Congress said that SEFs are to provide market participants with impartial access to the market.

Consistent with Congress’ direction, the Commission’s final SEF rules, completed six months ago, are clear. Impartial access is about allowing market participants to “compete on a level playing field.”

Last week, CFTC staff issued guidance reminding SEFs of this core responsibility: the Commission’s regulations require SEFs to provide all its market participants – dealers and non-dealers alike – with the ability to fully interact on order books or request-for-quote (RFQ) systems.

SEFs are required to provide dealers and non-dealers alike the ability to view, place or respond to all indicative or firm bids and offers, as well as to place, receive, and respond to RFQs.

All market participants should feel confident that their bids or offers are being communicated to the rest of the market.

Further, SEFs must provide to all eligible contract participants (ECPs) market services, including quote screens and similar pricing data displays.

Last week’s guidance, spoke directly to some questions that market participants had brought to our attention as contrary to impartial access.

First, any discriminatory treatment for swaps intended to be cleared, such as “enablement mechanisms,” that prevents market participants from viewing bids or offers on a SEF is inconsistent with the Dodd-Frank Wall Street Reform and Consumer Protection Act (the Dodd-Frank Act) and the Commission’s regulations.

Second, requiring swaps traded on a SEF that are intended to be cleared to have pre-execution agreements, such as breakage agreements, is inconsistent with the Dodd-Frank Act and the Commission’s regulations.

Third, requiring a market participant to be a swap dealer or a clearing member to respond to an RFQ is inconsistent with the Dodd-Frank Act and the Commission’s regulations.

Dodd-Frank reforms truly are about bringing greater access to these markets. Reforms really are about allowing multiple market participants to meet and transact with multiple market participants.

This does mean a paradigm shift from the business models of the past.

Thus, SEF registration was not meant to be just business as usual.

Bringing access to the entire marketplace means platforms will no longer be just dealer to dealer or dealer to customer.

Through reform, all market participants who meet the standard of an ECP must be given impartial access.

Transparency

Congress was also clear that transparency must shine on the swaps market both before and after a trade.

When light shines on a market, the economy and public benefit.

Post-Trade Transparency

With reform, post-trade transparency has become a reality in the swaps market.

The price and volume of each swap transaction can be seen as it occurs. This post-trade transparency spans the entire market, regardless of product, counterparty, or whether it’s a standardized or customized transaction.

This information is available, free of charge, to everyone in the public. The data is listed in real time – like a modern-day tickertape – on the websites of each of the three swap data repositories.

Regulators also gained transparency into the details on each of the 1.8 million transactions and positions now in data repositories. The data repositories, swap dealers and SEFs, though, need to do more to ensure that the data flowing into the data repositories is accurate; consistent; and able to be readily sorted, filtered, and aggregated.

Pre-Trade Transparency

Reform also is about shining light before a trade happens.

Such pre-trade transparency gives anyone looking to compete in the swaps market the ability to see prices of available bids and offers prior to making a decision on a transaction.

This lowers costs for investors, businesses and consumers, as it shifts information from dealers to the broader public.

Our final rules provided significant flexibility in achieving this pre-trade transparency.

All SEFs are required to provide for an order book to all its market participants. In addition, SEFs have the flexibility to offer trading through RFQs.

Further, as long as certain minimum functionality is met, SEFs can conduct business through any means of interstate commerce, such as the Internet, telephone, and the mail – or, if one chooses, carrier pigeons.

The final rules were technology neutral.

Trade Execution Requirement

To benefit the public, broaden competition, and promote transparency, Congress required that certain standardized swaps must be executed on a SEF or designated contract market (DCM). The trade execution requirement covers all swaps that are subject to mandatory clearing and made available to trade.

Four SEFs already have made filings for a wide range of interest rate and credit index swaps to be determined made available for trading.

With 90 registered swap dealers, including the world’s largest financial institutions, I believe sufficient liquidity exists across the entire interest rate swap curve to support SEFs making these swaps available for trading.

The major dealers already quote markets across the entire curves, including for so-called benchmarks as well as non-benchmarks.

I anticipate that by next February there will be a trade execution requirement for a significant portion of the interest rate and credit index swap markets. The significant flexibility built into SEFs’ minimum trading protocols – including order books, RFQs and crossing rules – will enable the markets to adjust to this new mandatory trading environment.

Futures Block Rule

Earlier this year, the Commission finalized a block rule for swaps. To preserve the pre-trade transparency that has been a longstanding hallmark of the futures market, I believe that it is critical do so for futures as well.

This is important so that we do not allow for arbitrage between the swaps market that now has a block rule and the futures market that does not have a formal block rule. Thus, it is my hope that the CFTC staff’s recommendation to publish a futures block rule for public comment be on the agenda for our next open Commission meeting in December.

SEF Registration

Requiring trading platforms to be registered and overseen by regulators was central to the swaps market reform President Obama and Congress included in the Dodd-Frank Act. They expressly repealed exemptions, such as the so-called “Enron Loophole,” for unregistered, multilateral swap trading platforms.

They did so based on a long public debate.

In fact, then-Senator Obama in June 2008 called for fully closing the “Enron Loophole.”

Last week, CFTC staff issued guidance with regard to SEF registration. If a multilateral trading platform is a U.S. person, or it is located or operating in the U.S., it should register.

Consistent with the cross-border provisions of Dodd-Frank, a multilateral swaps trading platform located outside the United States that provides U.S. persons or persons located in the U.S. (including personnel and agents of non-U.S. persons located in the United States) with the ability to trade or execute swaps on or pursuant to the rules of the platform, either directly or indirectly through an intermediary, will register as a SEF or DCM.

This will trigger some SEF registrations for foreign-based platforms that are already registered with their home country. For instance, one Australian platform is going to register with the CFTC, and we’re working with the Australian home country regulators. We’re prepared to figure out where we might defer to those home country regulators.

In addition, we have been asked by a number of swap dealers and SEFs about how our rules apply to foreign swap dealers operating in the United States.

Last week, CFTC staff issued an advisory addressing this question.

If a foreign-based swap dealer has personnel in New York and they regularly arrange, negotiate, or execute swaps in the United States, then the transactions come under Dodd-Frank requirements. As the advisory stated, these activities are “core, front-office activities” of a swap dealer’s dealing business.

In other words, a U.S. swap dealer on the 32nd floor of a New York building and a foreign-based swap dealer on the 31st floor of the same building, have to follow the same rules when arranging, negotiating or executing a swap.

One elevator bank … one set of rules.

Moving Forward

The CFTC now largely has moved beyond rulewriting and initial compliance dates.

We have now moved on to reviewing registered entities and registrants to ensure they fully come into compliance.

As we have done for many years, we are doing this through examinations, surveillance, enforcement and issuing guidance and advisories. To smooth implementation, we will continue to work with market participants as needed.

We know the markets are undertaking a significant effort to ensure a smooth transition, including steps to incorporate guidance and advisories. We will continue working with market participants, but when there is a question, the best thing to do is to come into compliance with all of the CFTC’s rules and guidance.

CFTC Resources

To ensure for a well-functioning futures and swaps market, the public needs a well-funded CFTC.

To ensure that transparency and access are a reality and not something just in the rulebooks, the public needs a well-funded CFTC.

To ensure that the markets are free of fraud, manipulation and other abuses, the public needs a well-funded CFTC.

Though this small and effective agency was able to complete 67 rulemakings, orders and guidances to transform a marketplace, this should not be confused with the agency having sufficient people and technology to oversee the markets.

With 670 people, we are only 36 people more than 20 years ago, and we’ve got a whole lot more to do. We have a vast $400 trillion swaps market to oversee, in addition to the $30 trillion futures market that we historically have overseen.

The overall branding of these markets is dependent on investors and customers having confidence in using them.

It’s also critical that we have the resources for the timely reviews of applications, registrations, petitions and answers to market participants’ questions.

The President has asked for $315 million for the CFTC. This year we’ve been operating with only $195 million.

Worse yet, as a result of continued funding challenges, sequestration, and a required minimum level Congress set for the CFTC’s outside technology spending, the CFTC already has shrunk 6 percent, and was forced to notify employees of an administrative furlough for up to 14 days this fiscal year.

I believe that the CFTC is a good investment for the American public. It’s a good investment for transparent, well-functioning markets.

Conclusion

Let me close by thanking all of you. These last five years have been a remarkable journey, and the result is a transformed marketplace.

I want to thank you for all that we’ve achieved together.

I look forward to answering your questions.