Supreme Court finds investment banker following orders culpable

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WASHINGTON—An investment banker who sent deceptive emails to prospective clean-energy investors greatly overstating a company’s financial health can’t escape responsibility for securities fraud because he was only following his supervisor’s directions, the Supreme Court ruled March 27.

Justice Stephen Breyer wrote the 6-to-2 majority opinion in Lorenzo v. SEC, rejecting the reasoning employed by Justice Brett Kavanaugh, when he was a member of the lower court panel that previously heard the case.

“By sending emails he understood to contain material untruths, [the petitioner] ‘employ[ed]’ a ‘device,’ ‘scheme,’ and ‘artifice to defraud’” within the meaning of U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission rules, and “engage[d] in a[n] act, practice, or course of business” that “operate[d] … as a fraud or deceit.”

The court rejected Lorenzo’s argument that as the mere “disseminator” of false information he had “not primarily violated” the rules.

“That is not what Congress intended. Rather, Congress intended to root out all manner of fraud in the securities industry. And it gave to the Commission the tools to accomplish the job.”

The case arose out of the business of Waste2Energy Holdings Inc. of Neptune Beach, Florida, which filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy in 2013.

In 2009, investment banker Francis V. Lorenzo of Staten Island, New York-based Charles Vista LLC emailed would-be investors in an effort to sell $15 million in debentures secured only by Waste2Energy’s earning capacity.

The emails presented Waste2Energy as having $10 million in assets and more than $40 million in purchase orders, but when the emails were sent, the company acknowledged an audit had found its assets weren’t even worth $400,000.

Lorenzo’s boss and firm settled with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) but Lorenzo refused and an administrative law judge found he had broken the law by sending the emails, even though he hadn’t drafted them. The SEC banished Lorenzo from the securities industry for life and fined him $15,000.

A three-judge panel of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit rejected Lorenzo’s appeal in 2017.

Justice Kavanaugh, then a member of the circuit court, dissented. “How could [petitioner] have intentionally deceived the clients when he did not draft the emails, did not think about the contents of the emails, and sent the emails only at his boss’s direction?”

Kavanaugh recused himself from the Supreme Court case, leaving the other eight justices to participate in oral arguments Dec. 3.

During those oral arguments, the Trump administration sided with the SEC. “I don’t think you’re likely to see a … more egregious fraud than this,” Christopher Michel, assistant to the solicitor general, told the justices at the time.

Justice Clarence Thomas filed a dissenting opinion in Lorenzo v. SEC, in which Justice Neil Gorsuch joined.

“[I]t is undisputed that Lorenzo did not engage in any conduct involving planning, scheming, designing, or strategizing, as” SEC rules “require for a primary violation,” Thomas wrote.

The Supreme Court’s majority opinion “misconstrues the securities laws and flouts our precedent in a way that is likely to have far-reaching consequences,” the justice wrote, as he described “the sweeping nature of the Court’s holding” in this case.

In Janus Capital Group Inc. v. First Derivative Traders (2011), the high court “drew a clear line between primary and secondary liability in fraudulent-misstatement cases: A person does not ‘make’ a fraudulent misstatement within the meaning of” SEC Rule 10b-5(b) “and thus is not primarily liable for it.”

“Today, the Court eviscerates this distinction by holding that a person who has not ‘made’ a fraudulent misstatement can nevertheless be primarily liable for it.”

This article by Matthew Vadum appeared March 28, 2019, in The Epoch Times.