Contact

Click here for a confidential contact or call:

1-212-350-2774

Misrepresentations

This archive displays posts tagged as relevant to fraudulent misrepresentations in financial transactions and financial markets. You may also be interested in the following pages:

Page 52 of 60

April 14, 2015

The SEC announced fraud charges and an asset freeze against central Texas-based Leroy Brown Jr. accused of telling false tales about his stockbroking experience to lure current and former US military personnel into investing with him.  According to the government, Brown through his firm LB Stocks and Trades Advice LLC falsely assured investors, including some stationed at nearby Fort Hood, that he had many years of experience in the securities markets when in fact he is not a licensed securities professional and his firm is not registered with the SEC, Financial Industry Regulatory Authority, or any state regulator, and they have no evident experience with investments.  SEC

April 9, 2015

Katsuichi Fusamae, a senior accounting officer at Molex Japan Co. Ltd., agreed to settle SEC charges he cost his company millions of dollars in trading losses and manipulated accounting records to avoid detection.  Specifically, the SEC alleged Fusamae engaged in unauthorized equity trading in the company’s brokerage accounts that resulted in losses of more than $110 million and then concealed the losses by taking out unauthorized and undisclosed company loans with Japanese banks and brokerage firms to replenish account balances.  Fusamae admitted wrongdoing and accepted a permanent bar from serving as an officer or director of a publicly traded company with possible monetary sanctions to come.  SEC

April 9, 2015

The SEC announced fraud charges and an asset freeze against the operators of a South Florida-based microcap scheme spearheaded by Dean A. Esposito, Joseph DeVito, and Frederick Birks, all hired by the CEO of eCareer Holdings, Inc. Joseph J. Azzata.  According to the SEC, more than $11 million were raised from more than 400 investors by telling them their money would be used as working capital to develop eCareer’s online job staffing business when in reality much of it was diverted to pay exorbitant fees to the brokers and sales agents.  SEC

April 1, 2015

Timothy Scronce agreed to settle charges of defrauding Illinois-based telecommunications company PCTEL Inc. and its shareholders during and after its acquisition of his business TelWorx Communications LLC and his three related telecommunications companies.  According to the SEC, Scronce used false accounting entries to inflate TelWorx’s quarterly revenues and earnings in the months leading up to the purchase to inflate the price PCTEL paid for the companies.  He also allegedly falsified PCTEL’s books and records and circumvented the company’s internal controls by recording bogus transactions.  Scronce consented to the SEC’s order requiring him to return his allegedly ill-gotten gains with interest, pay a civil penalty, and be barred for 10 years from serving as a public company officer or director.  SEC

March 31, 2015

The SEC charged Andrew Miller, the former CEO of Silicon Valley-based technology firm Polycom Inc., with using nearly $200,000 in corporate funds for personal perks that were not disclosed to investors.  The SEC separately charged Polycom in an administrative order finding the company had inadequate internal controls and failed to report Miller’s perks to investors.  Polycom agreed to pay $750,000 to settle the SEC’s charges.  SEC

March 30, 2015

The SEC announced fraud charges against investment adviser Lynn Tilton and her New York-based Patriarch Partners firms accusing them of hiding the poor performance of loan assets in three collateralized loan obligation (CLO) funds they manage collectively referred to as the Zohar funds.  SEC

March 27, 2015

New York-based brokerage firm Macquarie Capital (USA) Inc., a wholly owned subsidiary of global financial services firm Macquarie Group Limited, agreed to pay $15 million to settle SEC charges for underwriting a public offering o Puda Coal despite obtaining a due diligence report indicating that the China-based company’s offering materials contained false information.  Former Macquarie Capital managing director Aaron Black and former investment banker William Fang also agreed to pay $212,711 and $35,000, respectively, to settle charges they failed to exercise appropriate care in their due diligence review.  SEC

February 27, 2015

The SEC charged purported venture capital fund manager Gregory W. Gray Jr. and his firms Archipel Capital LLC and BIM Management LP with fraudulently using money from three investment funds to pay fictitious returns to investors in a different fund.  SEC

February 19, 2015

New York City-based brokerage firm VCAP Securities and its CEO Brett Thomas Graham agreed to pay nearly $1.5M to settle charges they fraudulently deceived other market participants while conducting auctions to liquidate collateralized debt obligations.  SEC

February 13, 2015

The SEC charged purported hedge fund manager Moazzam “Mark” Malik with stealing money from his investors.  Specifically, the SEC alleges Malik raised $840,774 from investors but never made real investments and withdrew the cash and spent it as his own.  His fund, which has changed its name several times, has been called Wall Street Creative Partners, then Seven Sages Capital LP, and then American Bridge Investment Group LLC, and most recently Wolf Hedge LLCSEC
1 50 51 52 53 54 60