Whistleblower who exposed 1 billion dollar fraud denied reward

Discussion in 'Wall St. News' started by zdreg, Feb 29, 2024.

  1. zdreg

    zdreg

    https://news.bloomberglaw.com/secur...o-exposed-1-billion-fraud-denied-sec-windfall
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    May 1, 2023, 5:00 AM EDT
    Whistleblowers Who Exposed $1 Billion Fraud Denied SEC Windfall
    [​IMG]
    John Holland
    Senior Investigative Reporter
    [​IMG][​IMG]
    Barr petition
    Fifth Circuit docket
    Doe petition
    D.C. Circuit docket
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    March 27 final order. But because the money was recovered through a bankruptcy proceeding, the law as written means the whistleblowers can’t be paid, the commission ruled.

    One of the whistleblowers, John Barr, was the SEC’s lead witness in court when it successfully petitioned a federal court judge to install the agency’s own choice to become bankruptcy trustee. That trustee won the settlement with Life Partners Holdings in 2016, weeks after filing a report that concluded “Investor dollars have been lost because of the fraud and rampant self-interest and self-dealing,” of company directors.

    Read More: Wall Street Whistleblowers Tip Off SEC — But Hear Nothing Back

    The whistleblower program provides for tipsters to receive up to 30% of any money recovered from a successful SEC investigation. The agency has awarded more than $1.5 billion since the program’s inception, including payouts of more than $100 million to individual whistleblowers.

    But last month the SEC told Barr and the other, unidentified, whistleblowers that they can’t get any money recovered through bankruptcy. Instead, they are left to split $31,000 – money collected before Life Partners went bankrupt. The company filed for bankruptcy in 2015 after a judge ordered it to pay $46.8 million to the SEC following a civil jury trial.

    The SEC didn’t respond to requests for comments on the lawsuits or its decision.

    “As we noted in connection with the adoption of several rule amendments, our statutory authority does not extend to paying whistleblower awards for recoveries in bankruptcy proceedings,” the commission wrote in the March order, referencing a finding the agency issued in September, 2021, more than nine years after SEC first charged Life Partners.

    Barr and one of the other whistleblowers, identified only as John Doe, filed separate lawsuits in federal appeals courts this week seeking to overturn the SEC’s ruling.

    “Mr. Barr respectfully submits that the order is unlawful and defective on multiple grounds, including that it is arbitrary and capricious, an abuse of discretion (and) unsupported by evidence,” Barr’s attorneys, Kevin Edmundson and Daniel Geyser, wrote in their initial petition to the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit last week. A full pleading is expected within the next few weeks.

    Doe brought his suit in the D.C. Circuit.

    Written into the Dodd-Frank financial reform law of 2010, the whistleblower law was created to make sure tips about financial wrongdoing aren’t ignored, as they were before Bernie Madoff’s $64.8 billion Ponzi scheme unraveled.

    Harry Markopolos, a financial analyst and securities fraud investigator, spent years warning the SEC about Madoff’s fraudulent scheme, only to be ignored by the agency. He inspired lawmakers to create the program and in 2018 urged the commission to address a law he said was “unclear, and seemingly fails to address a critical gap in cases that settle and/or go into federal bankruptcy court instead of receivership.”

    “Remember, it is the largest, most widespread frauds that bankrupt companies, and the Commission does not want to be in a position of discouraging whistleblowers from bringing cases that may result in such a proceeding,” Markopolos wrote, pointing to Life Partners and WorldCom, a telecom fraud from two decades earlier.

    Madoff’s company went into bankruptcy days after it was exposed, and the approximately $15 billion recovered for investors since then has come through bankruptcy proceedings. That means even Markopolos could not have been paid under the current rules, Washington attorney Jason Zuckerman said.

    “The law should be amended to clarify that money recovered from a bankruptcy after a whistleblower’s disclosure should be eligible for an award. That should be considered monetary sanctions that would count toward an award,” Zuckerman said.

    A House bill introduced in 2021 that would have expanded the law to include bankruptcy recoveries died without a vote.

    The cases are Barr v. SEC, 5th Cir., No. 23-60216, 4/25/23 and Doe v. SEC, D.C. Cir., No. 23-1121, 4/25/23.

    To contact the reporter on this story: John Holland at jholland1@bloombergindustry.com

    To contact the editor responsible for this story: Gary Harki at
     
  2. schizo

    schizo

    So who are the creditors that are entitled to the remaining 70%? Maybe the whistleblower should look into who will get the lion share out of the bankruptcy proceeding.
     
    murray t turtle and EdgeHunter like this.
  3. nitrene

    nitrene

    The SEC is a pathetic organisation. The current dumbass chief is too busy trying to kill crypto ETFs to worry about catching thieves. The last time the SEC wasn't wasting time or involved in show trials was back when Drexel was prosecuted using RICO laws.
     
    Quanto likes this.
  4. zdreg

    zdreg

    They don't to pay out because the monies would come out of their budget?
     
    murray t turtle likes this.
  5. Quanto

    Quanto

    As time goes by: this was back in 1988 :)
    https://www.csmonitor.com/1988/1223/adrex.html
    "
    As RICO charges loomed, Drexel sought cover in settlement
    By Barbara Bradley, Staff writer of The Christian Science Monitor
    December 23, 1988 | WASHINGTON


    The legal fencing match between the government and the Wall Street firm of Drexel Burnham Lambert Inc. came to a rapid end when the government pulled out a bazooka. The dispute was over whether Drexel, one of Wall Street's most profitable and renegade companies, repeatedly engaged in insider trading, wire and mail fraud, and other securities violations. The bazooka was the racketeering law, which is generally used to prosecute Mafia figures and not young professionals on Wall Street.
    [...]

    "
     
    murray t turtle and schizo like this.
  6. schizo

    schizo

    If anything, you'll wanna avoid RICO charges. One misstep and you could end up serving a lifer.
     
  7. zdreg

    zdreg

    It is all about the money. and jobs. If you have enough money to pay off the extortion+ an unspoken promise(?) to hire SEC employees in the future, the case will fade.
     
  8. schizo

    schizo

    What, like mob bosses don't have money and connections. :) RICO is a serious stuff. Avoid it at all costs. What you see below is a description of RICO but they don't charge you with just 1 count of RICO. In most cases, you end up with multiple counts, which means your life is pretty much done.

    upload_2024-3-1_12-11-27.png
     
    murray t turtle likes this.
  9. zdreg

    zdreg

    You need to cite outcomes not theocratical possibilities.
     
  10. Unfortunately, Harry Markopolos diminished his rep quite a bit. Remember, when he was shorting GE and then going public making statements that turned out to be false regarding massive fraud there?

    One can argue that in itself is a big violation and Markopolos should be punished.

     
    #10     Mar 2, 2024
    murray t turtle likes this.