SKJ Investment Management and CEO Have Assets Frozen by SEC; SEC Brings Claims

 

On Thursday, the U.S. District  Court for the Northern District of Georgia issued an order freezing the assets of SJK Investment Management, an investment advisor firm, as well as the assets of SJK's Chief Executive Officer Stanley Kowalewski, in an action by the Securities and Exchange Commission against SJK which sought an emergency freeze of the assets, according to a press release by Courthouse News Service. The SEC claims in its complaint, filed on Thursday, that SJK allegedly defrauded investors in two hedge funds worth approximately $65 million. Mr. Kowalewski is alleged to have placed $16.5 million of the funds into a separate account which he allegedly used for personal uses. Government officials claim that Kowalewski allegedly paid himself $1 million for personal and business expenses, charged an alleged $4 million "administrative fee" which he allegedly took as a salary draw, and allegedly lived rent free in a home that he caused the fund to purchase. SJK is also alleged to have sent investors false account statements showing fictitious returns on their investments, according to the complaint.  The complaint seeks permanent injunctions, penalties, disgorgement of profits and a ruling to bar Mr. Kowalewski from the financial industry.
 

Director of BOEMRE Announces Investigations and Review Unit and More Agressive Tactics to Investigate Companies Engaged in Offshore Drilling

In response to the massive oil spill (over 19,000 square miles in area--or larger than the state of Maryland) in the Gulf of Mexico, on June 18, 2010, U.S. Department of the Interior Secretary Ken Salazar issued an order renaming the Minerals Management Service (MMS) the Bureau of Ocean Energy Management, Regulation, and Enforcement (BOEMRE). MMS/BOEMRE manages the nation's natural gas, oil and other mineral resources on the outer continental shelf. On June 15, President Barack Obama appointed Michael Bromwich to head the reorganized MMS and overhaul regulations governing offshore oil drilling.

The appointment of Bromwich--a former prosecutor--as Director of BOEMRE reflects the no-nonsense response of the Administration to the environmental disaster and growing public dissatisfaction. Bromwich was an Inspector General for the U.S. Department of Justice. Prior to that, he was an Assistant U.S. Attorney for the U.S. Attorney's Office for the Southern District of New York. Bromwich was an Associate Counsel for the Office of the Independent Counsel for Iran-Contra, and headed an Investigation into the Federal Bureau of Investigation Laboratory. He has been appointed as an independent monitor to investigate the Metropolitan Police Department for the District of Columbia, and the crime lab for the Houston Police Department. Prior to his appointment as head of BOEMRE, Bromwich was a partner with Fried Frank in New York and Washington. Bromwich has developed a reputation for helping to turn around troubled federal agencies.

Director Bromwich has written a column today in Newsweek which confirms the Adminstration's tough approach. In the column, Bromwich discusses his acceptance of the appointment by President Obama and Secretary Salazar. He emphasizes that his career has been defined by law enforcement, and that his experience in monitoring agencies will guide his reform of BOEMRE. Bromwich cites the alleged "coziness" of MMS with oil companies. On the subject of the Deepwater Horizon oil leak, he comments that the evidence suggests that British Petroleum (BP) and other companies "cut corners or made grave errors that led to the explosion."

Bromwich cites a need for "aggressive" investigators and states that BOEMRE has announced an "Investigations and Review Unit" (IRU), composed of prosecutors, investigators, scientists and other experts, to investigate allegations of misconduct by companies regulated by BOEMRE. The column states that companies that fail to cooperate may have their drilling permits suspended. "Serious wrongdoing" will be referred to the Department of Justice for prosecution.

Bromwich further states that BOEMRE and the IRU will investigate potential conflicts of interest, will conduct more thorough reviews of applications for drilling permits and more thorough environmental analyses, and will increase research of spill control. Bromwich concludes with the caveat that his efforts "while potentially aggressive, will not be hasty."

Bromwich's statements are certainly not comforting to BP, TransOcean or the other companies with ties to the Deepwater Horizon disaster. However, only time will tell if Bromwich's and BOEMRE's efforts are successful in bringing about any reform to the offshore drilling industry, especially in the face of a risk of increased energy prices. On June 30, 2010, Secretary Salazar issued a press release announcing that the Department of the Interior is postponing public scope meetings on the Environmental Impact Statement (EIS) for the 2012–2017 Outer Continental Shelf (OCS) Oil and Gas Leasing Program until later this year. The release states that, while the Department is committed to "strong" reforms in the oil and gas industry, "[o]ffshore oil and gas production will remain an important component of our nation’s energy portfolio as we transition to a clean energy economy." With a "clean energy economy" being a distant dream at this point, it is uncertain how much increased regulation the Adminstration is willing to heap upon the industry.

Image from The Canadian

Hedge Fund Managers, Attorneys, Others Fall in Rajaratnam/Galleon Insider Trading Investigation

Raj Rajaratnam and Danielle Chiesi were indicted in indictment alleging 17 counts of securities and wire fraud on Tuesday in the U.S. District Court for the Southern District of New York, U.S. v. Raj Rajaratnam et al, Case No. 09-2306, as reported by the New York Daily News here, here and here, and the New York Times here, here and here. Rajaratnam is a former Bear Stearns hedge fund manager and is the founder of Galleon Management LP, which managed some $3.7 billion in funds. Rajaratnam, a U.S. citizen born in Sri Lanka, was arrested on October 16 at his Manhattan home. U.S. Magistrate Judge Douglas Eaton set Rajaratnam's bail at $100 million which Rajaratnam posted. The indictment alleges a multi-million dollar insider trading scheme that spanned from coast to coast, in which Rajaratnam and Chiesi shared tips on companies like Google, Advanced Micro Devices, Hilton Hotels and others, and reaped more than $20 million in illicit profits by trading on the confidential information. Rajaratnam and Chiesi have both pled not guilty and are fighting the charges. The government claims to have numerous recorded telephone conversations from cooperating witnesses in support of the charges.

Rajaratnam's attorneys also requested a second time that his bail amount be reduced to $20 million. His lawyers disputed the government's reliance on Roomy Khan, an Intel Corp employee and former trader who was convicted of wire fraud in California in 2002 for passing confidential information to Galleon and Rajaratnam when she was an employee of Intel, and who is cooperating with the government. Half a dozen persons, including Ms. Khan, are cooperating in the case.

The U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission has also filed civil charges against Rajaratnam. Following Rajaratnam's arrest, investors withdrew more than $4 billion from various Galleon hedge funds, and the firm ceased operations.

The investigation has implicated 21 individuals, including 14 hedge fund managers, lawyers and other investors who were arrested in November. Robert Moffat, a senior official at I.B.M., Rajiv Goel, an executive of Intel; and Anil Kumar, an executive at the consulting firm McKinsey & Company, were arrested at the same time as Rajaratnam, but have not yet been indicted. The Court has granted the prosecution an extension of 30 more days to indict these individuals. The prosecution has described the case as the largest insider trading case in history.

Attorney Brien Santarlas, of the New York law firm of Ropes & Gray, pled guilty to conspiracy to commit securities fraud and wire fraud this week. Santarlas admitted that, from June 2007 to May 2008, he and another attorney, Arthur Cutillo, also with Ropes & Gray, used confidential information regarding acquisitions by 3Com, Inc., and Axcan Pharma, Inc. Bain Capital Partners LLC, a Ropes & Gray client, had announced it planned to acquire 3Com on September 27, 2007, in a deal which would have also involved China's Huawei Technologies Co Ltd. A U.S. government security panel rejected the deal, however. 3Com is now in the process of being purchased by Hewlett-Packard Co. Another Ropes & Gray client, TPG Capital LP, announced on November 29, 2007 that it was acquiring Axcan Pharma.Prosecutors charged Santarlas, Cutillo, Jason Goldfarb and Zvi Goffer with causing trades of 3Com and Axcan stock before the public announcements, making approximately $20 million in profits.Santarlas also faces civil charges by the SEC. His sentencing is tentatively scheduled for June 1. Cutillo was indicted in November.

Rajaratnam has also been linked to Steven Cohen, manager of SAC Capital Advisors, a hedge fund, major art collector, and with a $6 billion net worth, the 36th richest person in America. Cohen's ex-wife, Patricia Cohen, filed a lawsuit in Federal court on Wednesday alleging that Cohen had hid money during their divorce 20 years ago and asserting civil RICO claims. The former Mrs. Cohen alleges that Cohen had made millions from insider trading in the 1980s and had hid the money with the help of one of his real estate partners. Specifically, she claims that Cohen received an insider tip prior to General Electric's purchase of RCA in 1985. She is seeking $300 million from Cohen. SAC issued a statement criticizing the former Mrs. Cohen and her attorney, calling the allegations in the lawsuit "ludicrous" and "without merit."

Federal prosecutors on Wednesday asked for 30 more days to indict four defendants tied to the Galleon Group insider trading scheme, one day after two of the main players were formally indicted on conspiracy and fraud charges.