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

Thursday, August 6, 2015

SEC.gov | Dissenting Statement at an Open Meeting to Adopt the “Pay Ratio” Rule

SEC.gov | Dissenting Statement at an Open Meeting to Adopt the “Pay Ratio” Rule

Statement on Pay Ratio Disclosure

Statement on Pay Ratio Disclosure

Tuesday, August 4, 2015

SEC CHARGES MAN WITH OPERATING $114 MILLION PONZI SCHEME BASED ON ANTI-DROWSY DRIVING TECHNOLOGY

FROM:  U.S. SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION 
08/03/2015 02:25 PM EDT

The Securities and Exchange Commission charged a Houston-area businessman with operating a $114 million Ponzi scheme that defrauded investors, some of whom were told that their money would fund technology to prevent accidents caused by drowsy driving.

The SEC’s case filed in federal court in Houston charged Frederick Alan Voight of Richmond, Texas with defrauding more than 300 investors in multiple offerings of promissory notes issued by two partnerships he owns, F.A. Voight & Associates LP and DayStar Funding LP.  While Voight’s latest offering promised investors returns as high as 42 percent a year from loans to small public companies, most of the funds went to pay earlier investors, the complaint alleges.  Approximately $22 million of Voight’s allegedly ill-gotten gains remain unaccounted for to date.

“Voight wooed investors with promises of outsized returns and once-in-a-lifetime investment opportunities.  But, like all Ponzi schemes, we allege that this one collapsed when Voight couldn’t find enough new money to keep up with his false promises,” said David L. Peavler, Acting Regional Co-Director of the SEC’s Fort Worth Regional Office.

According to the SEC’s complaint, Voight recently raised $13.8 million that he said would be loaned to a startup named InterCore Inc. to fund its deployment of a “Driver Alertness Detection System,” or DADS.  Starting in October 2014, Voight allegedly wrote to prospective investors about a “tremendous” opportunity to help InterCore install the DADS technology into “several million trucks and buses,” which he said was enough for the company to pay the 30 to 42 percent annual interest rates on the promissory notes “many, many times over.”

Voight knew the claims were false because he served on InterCore’s board and was aware that the Delray Beach, Florida public company was financially troubled and had no means to pay back the loans, the complaint alleges.  The SEC alleges that Voight used funds from the DADS investors to make Ponzi payments to earlier investors or funneled them to InterCore through two of his other partnerships, Rhine Partners LP and Topside Partners LP.  The complaint alleges that InterCore sent the funds to its Montreal-based subsidiary, InterCore Research Canada, Inc., where the funds seemingly disappeared.  By routing funds through Rhine and Topside, Voight is alleged to have garnered benefits – including fees and InterCore stock warrants – that he never disclosed to the DADS investors.

The SEC’s complaint charges Voight and DayStar with securities fraud and with conducting unregistered securities offerings.  Voight and Daystar, without admitting or denying the allegations, agreed to settle the SEC’s complaint by consenting to permanent injunctions against committing these violations in the future.  They also agreed to asset freezes and other emergency relief, and to pay civil penalties and return allegedly ill-gotten gains with interest in amounts to be set later by the court.  Voight also consented to being barred from serving as a public company officer or director and to be barred permanently from participating in the offer, purchase, or sale of any security except for his own personal account.

The SEC named F.A. Voight & Associates, Rhine, Topside, InterCore, and InterCore Research Canada as relief defendants for the purpose of recovering any allegedly ill-gotten gains they received from the fraud.  F.A. Voight & Associates, Rhine, and Topside have agreed to asset freezes and other emergency relief and to return allegedly ill-gotten gains in amounts to be set by the court.  The SEC will litigate its claims against relief defendants InterCore and InterCore Research.

The SEC’s investigation was conducted by Senior Counsel Jeff Cohen, Senior Staff Accountant Keith Hunter and Assistant Regional Director Jessica Magee of the Fort Worth office.  The SEC’s litigation will be led by Jennifer Brandt.

Monday, August 3, 2015

STOCK PRICE SPIKE INDICATED STOCK RISE SCAM ACCORDING TO SEC

FROM:  U.S. SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION 
07/31/2015 04:30 PM EDT

The Securities and Exchange Commission charged a Canadian citizen with conducting a scheme to conceal his control and ownership of a microcap company whose price quickly spiked last year.  The SEC suspended trading in the stock, Cynk Technology Corp., before the alleged schemer, Phillip Thomas Kueber, could profit on the gains from the stock’s rise to more than $21 from less than 10 cents per share.

The SEC alleges that Kueber was behind a false and misleading registration statement filed by Cynk and enlisted a small group of straw shareholders and sham CEOs to conceal his control of purportedly non-restricted shares in Cynk stock.  The complaint alleges that the straw shareholders – mainly Kuber’s family members and associates in British Columbia and California – never received the shares they “purchased.”  Kueber allegedly transferred the shares to brokerage accounts and offshore shell companies he secretly controlled and misled broker-dealers about his ownership of the shares to create the false appearance of a company with publicly held shares.

According to the SEC’s complaint filed in U.S. District Court for the Eastern District of New York, Kueber was unable to cash in on selling his Cynk shares when the SEC suspended trading in Cynk on July 11, 2014 amid suspicious activity surrounding the company’s stock.  Once trading resumed, the share price fell, closing at 60 cents per share on July 28, 2014.

“We allege that Kueber used straw shareholders, offshore dummy corporations, and puppet corporate officers to gain and conceal control over the majority of Cynk shares,” said Michael Paley, Co-Chair of the SEC Enforcement Division’s Microcap Fraud Task Force.  “Law enforcement has again pierced through the layers of deceit to hold an alleged wrongdoer accountable, in this case before he could liquidate his shares in the open market and realize ill-gotten profits.”

The SEC’s complaint alleges that Kueber violated the antifraud provisions of federal securities laws and related SEC antifraud rules.  The SEC is seeking to impose a civil monetary penalty, to bar Kueber from serving as a public company officer or director or participating in a penny-stock offer, and to be subject to a court-ordered injunction against future antifraud violations.

The SEC’s continuing investigation has been conducted by Joshua R. Geller, Joseph G. Darragh, and Michael Paley of the Microcap Fraud Task Force along with Wendy Tepperman of the New York office.  The litigation will be conducted by Preethi Krishnamurthy and Mr. Geller.  The case is being supervised by Sanjay Wadhwa.  The SEC appreciates the assistance of the U.S. Attorney’s Office for the Eastern District of New York, Federal Bureau of Investigation, Internal Revenue Service, Department of Homeland Security, and Financial Industry Regulatory Authority.

Sunday, August 2, 2015

FOREIGN CURRENCY PONZI SCHEMERS ORDERED TO PAY $76 MILLION

FROM:  U.S. COMMODITY FUTURES TRADING COMMISSION 
Court Orders $76 Million in Civil Monetary Penalties against Keith F. Simmons, Deanna Salazar and Their Companies in Connection with Foreign Currency Ponzi Scheme

In Related Criminal Actions, Simmons Sentenced to 40 Years’ and Salazar Sentenced to 4.5 Years’ Incarceration and Ordered to Pay in Total $40 Million in Criminal Restitution

Both Simmons and Salazar Currently are Serving Their Prison Sentences

Washington, DC – The U.S. Commodity Futures Trading Commission (CFTC) today announced that Judge Robert J. Conrad, Jr. of the U.S. District Court for the Western District of North Carolina entered separate Consent Orders (Orders) against Defendants Keith F. Simmons and his company, Black Diamond Capital Solutions, LLC, and Deanna Salazar and her companies, Life Plus Group, LLC and Black Diamond Holdings, LLC, imposing a total of $76 million in civil monetary penalties in connection with a foreign currency exchange (forex) scheme in violation of the Commodity Exchange Act (CEA). The Orders also impose permanent trading and registration bans on the Defendants and prohibit them from further violations of the anti-fraud provisions of the CEA, as charged.

Simmons was a resident of West Jefferson, North Carolina, and Salazar was a resident of Yucca Valley, California.

The Orders arise out of a CFTC Complaint, filed on January 13, 2011, charging Simmons, Salazar, and their companies with fraudulent solicitation and misappropriation of customer funds in connection with a Ponzi-style scheme involving forex trading (see CFTC Press Release and Complaint 5985-11, February 16, 2011). Also charged in the CFTC complaint are Bryan Coats of Clayton, North Carolina and his company, Genesis Wealth Management, LLC, and Jonathan Davey of Newark, Ohio and his companies, Divine Circulation Services, LLC, Divine Stewardship, LLC, Safe Harbor Ventures, Inc., Safe Harbor Wealth Investments, Inc., and Safe Harbor Wealth, Inc. The CFTC’s litigation against these Defendants is ongoing.

The Orders find that from at least April 2007 through at least 2009, Simmons and Salazar, acting through their companies and with others, fraudulently solicited and accepted at least $35 million from at least 240 individuals to engage in off-exchange forex trading through a trading platform known as Black Diamond. In fact, according to the Orders, no forex trading was ever conducted through the Black Diamond trading platform, and the Black Diamond trading platform never existed. Rather, Simmons and Salazar misappropriated millions of dollars of customer funds to make purported profit payments to customers, as is typical of a Ponzi scheme, and for personal and unrelated business expenses, according to the Orders. The Orders further find that to conceal their fraud, Simmons, with the assistance of Salazar, issued false customer account statements reflecting the promised returns or more based on Black Diamond’s purportedly successful forex trading.

In a related criminal action brought by the U.S. Attorney’s Office for the Western District of North Carolina, Simmons was convicted on December 16, 2010, on charges of securities fraud, wire fraud, and money laundering. Simmons was sentenced to 40 years’ incarceration and ordered to pay criminal restitution of $35 million. On December 7, 2010, Salazar pleaded guilty to charges of investment fraud conspiracy and tax evasion. Salazar was sentenced to 4.5 years’ incarceration and ordered to pay $5 million in criminal restitution. Both Simmons and Salazar are still serving their sentences.

CFTC Division of Enforcement staff members responsible for this case are Alan Edelman, Maura Viehmeyer, James H. Holl III, Gretchen L. Lowe, and Rick Glaser. The Division would like to thank the U.S. Attorney’s Office for the Western District of North Carolina and the Federal Bureau of Investigation for their cooperation in this matter.

Saturday, July 25, 2015

3 FORMER OPPENHEIMER & CO. EMPLOYEES SETTLE SEC CHARGES RELATED TO UNREGISTERED SALES OF PENNY STOCKS

FROM:  U.S. SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION 
7/23/2015 12:35 PM EDT

The Securities and Exchange Commission announced that three former employees of Oppenheimer & Co. Inc. have agreed to settle charges stemming from the unregistered sales of billions of shares of penny stocks on behalf of a customer.  The actions involve a portion of the conduct announced in January in a settled enforcement action against Oppenheimer in which the broker-dealer admitted wrongdoing and paid $20 million to the SEC and the Treasury Department’s Financial Crimes Enforcement Network.

Today’s actions were instituted against Scott A. Eisler, a former registered representative at Oppenheimer’s branch in Boca Raton, Fla., his former branch manager and supervisor Arthur W. Lewis, and Lewis’s supervisor Robert Okin, a former head of Oppenheimer’s Private Client Division.

According to the SEC’s orders instituting settled administrative proceedings, on behalf of the Oppenheimer customer, Eisler executed billions of penny stock shares in illegal unregistered distributions with Lewis participating in and in some cases approving the sales.  Although securities laws provide an exemption from liability for brokers who engage in a reasonable inquiry into the facts surrounding a customer’s proposed sale, the SEC’s orders find that Eisler and Lewis failed to make the requisite inquiry despite substantial red flags associated with the sales.

The SEC’s orders found supervisory failures by Lewis and Okin because they did not respond to red flags that the individuals they supervised were violating federal securities laws.

“In the face of red flags that their customer’s stock sales were not exempt from registration, Oppenheimer’s branch personnel allowed these unregistered transactions to occur,” said Andrew J. Ceresney, Director of the SEC’s Division of Enforcement.  “Okin, one of Oppenheimer’s senior-most executives, also failed to properly supervise by allowing these transactions to occur and failing to respond appropriately to the red flags suggesting violations of the federal securities laws.”

Scott W. Friestad, Associate Director of the SEC’s Division of Enforcement, added, “These actions show the SEC’s resolve in holding responsible individuals, including senior managers, when they violate the securities laws.”

Eisler agreed to pay a $50,000 penalty and be barred from engaging in penny stock sales or working in the securities industry for at least one year.  Lewis agreed to pay a $50,000 penalty and be barred from working in a supervisory capacity in the securities industry for at least one year.  Okin agreed to pay a $125,000 penalty and be barred from working in a supervisory capacity in the securities industry for at least one year.  They each agreed to the settlements without admitting or denying the SEC’s findings.

The SEC’s investigation was conducted by Margaret W. Smith with assistance from Christian Schultz and Matthew Scarlato.  The case was supervised by Nina B. Finston and Jan Folena.  The SEC appreciates the assistance of the Financial Industry Regulatory Authority.