Countrywide CEO Charged with Securities Fraud
In a step that has securities attorneys and law experts all praise for the Securities and Exchange Commission, former Countrywide Financial Corp. chief executive Angelo Mozilo has been charged with securities fraud.
The SEC has charged Mozilo, former chief operating officer David Sambol, and former chief financial officer Eric Sieracki with misleading investors about risks the company took to increase its market share. The three have been accused of falsely telling investors Countrywide Financial avoided underwriting risky loans. According to Robert Khuzami, the SEC’s enforcement director, Countrywide Financial promoted its image as a company that used “high underwriting standards” and was engaged in underwriting prime quality mortgages. However, behind the scenes, the company functioned recklessly, taking on high risks.
According to the SEC, Mozilo also made $140 million selling Countrywide financial shares around the same time he, in email messages, referred to the company’s loan products as “toxic “ and “poison”. The agency, which cited these emails, says they proved Mozilo mislead investors about the company’s risky lending practices. Mozilo has been charged with insider trading, because he sold Countrywide stock based on “non public information”.
The civil suit filed by the SEC is one of the most important filed against people involved in the mortgage crisis. Countrywide was the country’s largest mortgage lender and was heavily engaged in offering housing loans to high risk borrowers.
The company also faces a class action lawsuit filed by several New York City pension funds that have lost tens of millions of dollars because of the company's recklessness.
The SEC, in recent years, has seen its reputation erode as a result of the financial crisis. It has been heavily criticized by securities attorneys for its failure to enforce federal securities laws. However, the agency, under new leadership, has been embarking on a campaign to clear its reputation and add more bite to its enforcement actions.
He is being held at the Potter county jail on a $500,000 bond for each charge.
According to Sims, his office worked together with the
Kiselak allegedly entrusted the funds to a California-based Venture capital firm, Gemstar Capital Group Inc. The firm and its president, Jeffrey Sykes, have also been named in the
According to authorities, the investment fraud affected investors across the country. Next week, Hsu faces another trial for campaign finance fraud. According to prosecutors, his contributions to politicians allowed him access into influential political circles, and he used these connections to impress potential investors. At least one of his fraud victims is due to testify that Hsu played a voice mail message by a political candidate to impress her into investing with him. Hsu is facing charges that he had “straw donors“ contribute to federal candidates. These donors were then reimbursed.
Separate teams are not entirely unheard of at the SEC. Currently the agency has a separate team for internet enforcement, and sometimes, temporary teams are created for dealing with specific abuses. Kuzami’s plans will create specialized teams that will focus exclusively on specific securities investment fraud areas.
Pardue, the pastor of an unidentified Birmingham area church, is being charged with seven counts of fraud in connection with the sale of a security, and one count for each sale of an unregistered security.
In most cases, Ponzi fraudsters use investor money partly to fund their lavish lifestyles, while the rest is used to pay off early investors and keep the scheme afloat. The recklessness with which fraudsters squander investor money is a common feature of many of the Ponzi schemes that have been exposed.
According to the SEC lawsuit, as much as $3.5 million was spent on lavish personal expenses, including a down payment on a $1.9 million home. She also threw a grand party to celebrate the company’s "success" at the Ritz Carlton in Marina Del Ray, which unsuspecting investors paid for. Of the $23 million, approximately $13 million was spent making interest payments to investors while more than $5 million was lost in speculative investments. There is no information yet on whether there is a criminal investigation into Flores' actions. The SEC lawsuit is seeking restitution and penalties.
In a classic investment fraud tactic, Merriman promised his investors returns of up to 20%, but lost approximately $400,000 from the initial funds. It was then that Merriman started another fund to pay investors in a Ponzi scheme operation. As the scale of the fraud grew, he added two more funds to pay withdrawals. He traded securities during the first year of his scam, but eventually stopped and focused completely on his scheme. The SEC asked that Merriman‘s assets be frozen and that he be ordered to pay his investors back with interest.
The SEC’s shortcomings were glaringly evident in the way Bernard Madoff managed to operate his
Needless to say, the investments went neither into initial public offerings or trading firms. Instead, Regensberg invested in speculative investments, losing large portions of investor money in the process. Large sums of money also found their way into the hands of his relatives.
In March, the 38-year-old Schrenker was put through mental evaluation tests to determine whether he was competent to stand trial. Those evaluations came about as a result of Schrenker’s bizarre behavior prior to his arrest. On January 11th, Schrenker, aware that he was facing a black hole of investment fraud charges and lawsuits, got into his plane, put it on auto pilot, and parachuted out of it, leaving the aircraft to crash into an Alabama swamp. Once safely on the ground, Schrenker hopped onto a motorcycle he had earlier hidden in a storage unit and drove away. His ingenious, Bondesque escape plan was unsuccessful, however, and he was arrested two days later on Florida camping grounds.
For Greenwood and Walsh, the trouble began in February when their firms were subjected to an audit by the National Futures Association. They refused to cooperate and were suspended from the organization. Since then, the two have been the subject of several
Friehling was not charged for knowledge of the
A few employees from the Houston headquarters will be kept on long enough to wrap things up at the office and close the company down. After, however, they will also be out of a job.
Most of these accounts are managed at Pershing LLC, the clearing firm for the majority of Stanford accounts. Janvey, however, has also considered releasing accounts held at JP Morgan Clearing Company.
According to Business Insurance, contrary what you might expect, most of these lawsuits were not filed in the latter half of 2008, when the extent of the credit crisis became clear. Rather, most of the cases were filed in the first half of the year,
In January, Burden and the Gagosian Gallery purchased the gold, through Stanford Coins & Bullion, from Dillon Gage Group, a rare coins and metal dealer unrelated to Stanford or any of his businesses. The parties agreed that Burden and the Gagosian would wire the payment for
Guiana Island is Antigua's largest island measuring 2.5 miles across and .5 miles wide. With extensive mangroves, coral reefs and wildlife it is one of Antigua's ecological treasures. It is home to Antigua's national animal, the European fallow deer, and the endangered West Indian whistling duck.
The next day, authorities found Nadel's vehicle in a local airport parking lot. He also left his wife a handwritten note explaining he left documentation enough for her to take over what is left, "even documentation for divorce" and felt "extreme guilt." He also advised her to withdraw money as soon as possible, knowing the assets would be frozen shortly.
According to the SEC, since 2004 the schemer swindled nearly $900 million from naive investors. Soon after
According to the SEC, on a monthly basis, Stanford and Davis came up with a set return on Stanford International Bank investments and worked backward from there, falsifying financial documents to support their deception.
In a different lawsuit, J. Mark Brewer sued to SEC in an attempt to get access to frozen retirement accounts. His funds are held by a clearing firm called Pershing, who handled Stanford transactions. Brewer argues that, although, Stanford may be guilty, his dealings with Pershing have nothing to do with his situation. Brewer is one of many investors unhappy with the freezing of their Pershing assets. Some of the others, however, have taken a different approach; they are on board with the SEC's civil lawsuit in Dallas.
Also, in 2001, Stanford, claimed he was a descendant of Stanford University's founder, Leland Stanford. Stanford University officials denied any relation and, in 2008, filed a trademark infringement lawsuit against the billionaire, claiming his actions were "injurious" to the university's name and caused "public confusion." This odd attempt at name dropping supports the idea that the egomaniacal Stanford is after power in every way.
At least 300 investors with their
Florida has been hit particularly hard in the recent series of investment fraud scandals that have come to light. The victims of
In December of 2007, former Stanford Financial Group (SFG) financial advisers, Charles Rawl and Mark Tidwell quit their jobs for fear of being held criminally liable due to the