March 31, 2010

UBS, JP Morgan, Lehman, Bank of America, and Other Banks Included on List of Co-Conspirators in CDR Bid-Rigging Scam

Over two dozen bankers at Wall Street investment firms have been listed as co-conspirators in a bid-rigging scheme to pay lower than market interest rates to the federal and state governments over guaranteed investment contracts. The banks named as co-conspirators include JP Morgan Chase & Co, UBS AG, Lehman Brothers Holdings Inc., Bear Stearns Cos., Bank of America Corp, Societe General, Wachovia Corp (bought by Wells Fargo), former Citigroup Inc. unit Salomon Smith Barney, and two General Electric financial businesses.

The investment banks were named in papers filed by the lawyers of a former CDR Financial Products Inc. employee. The attorneys for the advisory firm say that they “inadvertedly” included the list of bankers and individuals and asked the court to strike the exhibit that contains the list. The firms and individuals on the co-conspirators list are not charged with any wrongdoing. However, over a dozen financial firms are contending with securities fraud complaints filed by municipalities claiming conspiracy was involved.

The government says that CDR, a local-government adviser, ran auctions that were scams. This let banks pay lower interests to the local governments. In October, CDR, and executives David Rubin, Evan Zarefsky, and Zevi Wolmark were indicted. They denied any wrongdoing. This year, three other former DCR employees pleaded guilty.

While the original indictments didn’t identify any investment contract sellers that took part in the alleged conspiracy, Providers A and B were accused of paying kickbacks to CDR after winning investment deals that the firm had brokered. The firms were able to do this by allegedly paying sham fees connected to financial transactions involving other companies.

Per the court documents filed in March, the kickbacks were paid out of fees that came out of transactions entered into with Royal Bank of Canada and UBS. The US Justice Department says the kickbacks ranged from $4,500 to $475,000. Financial Security Assurance Holdings Ltd divisions and GE units created the investment contracts that were involved.

Approximately $400 billion in municipal bonds are issued annually. Schools, cities, and states use money they get from the sale of these bonds to buy guaranteed investment contracts. Localities use the contracts to earn a return on some of the funds until they are needed for certain projects. The IRS, which sometimes makes money on the investments, requires that they are awarded on the basis of competitive bidding to make sure that the government gets a fair return.

Related Web Resources:
JPMorgan, Lehman, UBS Named in Bid-Rigging Conspiracy, Business Week, March 26, 2010

U.S. Probe Lays Out Bid Fixing, Bond Buyer, March 29, 2010

Read the letter to District Judge Marrero (PDF)


Continue reading "UBS, JP Morgan, Lehman, Bank of America, and Other Banks Included on List of Co-Conspirators in CDR Bid-Rigging Scam " »

December 22, 2009

New Judge in Securities Fraud Case Involving Former Brokers Previously Affiliated with Capital Growth Financial, Wachovia Securities, and VSR Financial Services

A new judge will preside over the case against two former brokers accused of defrauding over 130 Nebraska investors of over $20 million. Gage County District Judge Paul Korslund takes over for Sarpy County District Judge David Arterbur, who recused himself over possible conflicts.

Prosecutors are accusing Brian Schuster and Rebecca Engle, previously affiliated with Wachovia Securities LLC, Capital Growth Financial LLC, and VSR Financial Services Inc., of improperly selling risky investments to former clients when they worked together between 2000 and 2007. The two of them entered not guilty pleas to eight felony counts of securities fraud.

The investments under dispute were sold to investors while Capital Growth employed the two brokers. Investors say they bought securities in American Capital Corp. and Royal Palm. PrimEdge Inc. eventually bought both companies and Schuster became PrimEdge chief executive and president.

Over 200 investors will share a settlement of approximately $900,000 to be paid by the brokers’ ex-employers. Quanta Specialty Lines Insurance Co. will pay for most of it on behalf of Capital Growth. However this recovery is just a small portion of the over $20 million dollars in broker fraud losses that investors are claiming.

The majority of investors that have filed securities fraud lawsuits and arbitration claims were either nearing retirement or already retired when they were defrauded. They had wanted to make stable, low risk, conservative investments and they claim that the former brokers made investments for them in risky ventures without fully explaining what was involved. Engle and Schuster, however, say they shouldn’t be prosecuted for securities fraud because investors acknowledged the risks in writing.

Related Web Resources:
Judge appointed in fraud cases of ex Neb. Brokers, AP, December 22, 2009
Insurer to Pay Bulk of $900K Settlement in Nebraska Fraud Case, Insurance Journal, July 23, 2009

Continue reading "New Judge in Securities Fraud Case Involving Former Brokers Previously Affiliated with Capital Growth Financial, Wachovia Securities, and VSR Financial Services" »

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August 20, 2009

Wachovia Securities Ordered by Pennsylvania Securities Commission to Repurchase $325 Million in Auction-Rate Securities

Wachovia Securities, LLC and related entities will offer to refund $324.6 million in auction-rate securities from Pennsylvania investors. The Pennsylvania Securities Commission announced the ARS repurchasing agreement on August 11. Wachovia must also pay the commonwealth a $2.52 million assessment for the part the broker-dealer played in the ARS market.

According to Robert Lam, the commission chairperson, Wachovia failed to properly supervise its agents that dealing with investors over the sale of auction-rate securities, as well as engaged in business practices that were “unethical or dishonest.” Commissioner Steven Irwin said Wachovia sold and marketed ARS as liquid investments even though they were long-term investments that were involved in a complicated auction process. The auction-rate securities market failed in 2008.

Right before the ARS market went downhill, over 1,300 Pennsylvania retail investors held ARS that they had purchased from Wachovia. Now, the broker-dealer will repurchase the ARS.

The Pennsylvania commission is investigating other firms over any alleged misconduct committed that caused investors to get stuck with frozen ARS that they had been told were liquid, similar to cash. The commission has made it clear that they will not allow members of the securities industry to take part in dishonest or unethical business practices.

Wachovia sold more than $12.8 billion in ARS to investors throughout the US. Securities regulators in different states have pushed for Wachovia and other brokerage firms, such as Wells Fargo, Citigroup, Bank of America, and UBS to buyback the frozen auction-rate securities that investors were left with after the market dropped. Broker-dealers are accused of misrepresenting ARS to clients and that despite knowing that the market was about to collapse continuing to sell ARS to investors.

Related Web Resources:
Pennsylvania Securities Commission Orders Wachovia to Refund Over $300 Million to More Than 1,300 for Auction Rate Securities, Earth Times, August 11, 2009

Wachovia to Buy Back $325 Million in ARS, Wall Street Journal, August 11, 2009

Continue reading "Wachovia Securities Ordered by Pennsylvania Securities Commission to Repurchase $325 Million in Auction-Rate Securities" »

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July 3, 2009

Wachovia Securities Agrees to $1.4 Million FINRA Fine for Failure to Deliver Prospectuses to Customers

FINRA is fining Wachovia Securities, LLC $1.4 million for its alleged failure to provide customers with product descriptions and prospectuses between July 2003 and December 2004, as well as for related supervisory failures. A probe conducted by the SRO determined that the broker-dealer did not provide the prospectuses to clients in 6,000 of about 22,000 transactions during this time period. These 6,000 transactions’ market value was about $256 million.

Per FINRA rules and by law, broker-dealers are required to give potential clients hard copy prospectuses. The SRO, however, discovered a number of deficiencies related to prospectus delivery by Wachovia Securities related to:

• Collateral mortgage obligations
• Exchange-traded funds
• Preferred stocks
• Secondary purchases of equity non-syndicate initial public offerings
• Corporate debt securities
• Mutual funds
• Equity syndicate initial public offerings
• Alternative investment securities
• Auction market preferred securities

According to FINRA Enforcement Chief and Executive Vice President Susan L. Merrill, failure to provide the investing public with prospectuses and other offering documents deprives customers of valuable data that they need to make “informed investment decisions.”

Per FINRA, reasons Wachovia Securities did not give prospective customers the required prospectuses included:

• Business units’ failure to report to the proper department that prospectus delivery was required
• Coding errors
• Failure to supervise and monitor outside vendors under contract to deliver prospectuses
• Inadequate supervisory systems, procedures, and polices

When the activity allegedly at issue occurred, Wachovia Securities, LLC was a non-bank affiliate and subsidiary of Wachovia Corporation. This year, the latter merged with Wells Fargo & Co..

By agreeing to settle, Wachovia Securities is not admitting to or denying the allegations. The broker-dealer, however, has agreed to an entry of the SRO’s findings.

Related Web Resources:
FINRA Fines Wachovia Securities $1.4 Million for Prospectus Delivery Failures, Related Supervisory Violations, FINRA, June 25, 2009

Wachovia Fined $1.4 Million By Finra For Not Sending Prospectuses, June 30, 2009

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April 26, 2009

Wachovia and Citigroup Settle Michigan ARS Case for $880 Million

Wachovia Capital Markets LLC and Citigroup Global Markets Inc. will settle allegations by the Michigan Office of Financial and Insurance Regulation that the firms misled investors who bought auction rate securities by paying a combined $880.3 million—$717 million for Citigroup and $159 million for Wachovia—to reimburse clients. The OFIR says the firms misled clients into thinking ARS were liquid like cash and were surprised when the market collapsed, freezing their assets. OFIR claims the securities were sold and marketed as if they were conservative investment and that the firms did not give investors information about the risks involved.

Both firms will also pay $2.3 million to Michigan to resolve the ARS charges. Citigroup will pay $1.72 million per an administrative consent order and Wachovia will pay $654,000. According to OFIR, 90% of the funds will be placed in a general fund for the state, while the rest will go to the Michigan Investor Protection Trust for consumer education about a number of issues, including investment fraud.

Just this March, Wachovia and Citigroup said they would pay back California investors over $4.7 billion after the investment firms were accused of misleading investors about investing in ARS. Also last month, the North American Securities Administrators Association set up a Web site so investors could find out how to file arbitration claims for damages stemming from ARS losses.

Citigroup, Wachovia in $876M Mich. ARS Buyback, The Bond Buyer, April 17, 2009

Michigan regulators detail settlement with Citigroup, Wachovia over auction rate securities, Associated Press, April 16, 2009


Related Web Resources:
North American Securities Administrators Association

Michigan Office of Financial and Insurance Regulation

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March 20, 2009

Wachovia Securities Must Pay Texas $4 Million for Auction-Rate Securities

The Texas State Securities Board has fined Wachovia Securities $4 million for misleading investors about auction-rate securities. The Wells Fargo & Co unit must also have completed buying back ARS from investor clients in Texas by June 30.

This is the final step in the auction-rate securities case against Wachovia in which a tentative settlement agreement was reached last year when Wachovia Securities agreed to pay back over $8.5 billion in ARS from investors throughout the US.

It is also part of Texas’s efforts to deal with problems related to securities. The nearly $4 million is Texas’s share of the $50 million penalty Wachovia said it would pay. Last December, the Texas State Securities Board issued a final order mandating that Citigroup pay the state $3.6 million for making misrepresentations to investors about the auction-rate securities.

According to the Texas order, Wachovia Securities created misconception when it told investors that ARS were like cash and could be retrieved at nearly any time. The order accused Wachovia and its registered securities agents of knowing that the ARS market was in trouble yet neglecting to provide investors with this information. Wachovia Securities is one of the registered securities dealers in Texas.

UBS Financial Services, Merrill Lynch, and Citigroup are among the large investment firms that reached similar billion-dollar settlements with state regulators and the Securities and Exchange Commission. The collapse of the auction-rate securities market in February 2008 left many investors with frozen ARS that they thought were going to remain liquid and safe.

Wachovia Securities Ordered To Pay Texas $4 Million In ARS Probe, CNNMoney.com, March 17, 2009

Texas State Securities Board

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February 20, 2009

Wachovia Fined More than $4.5 Million by FINRA for Sales Violations Involving Mutual Funds and Trusts

Two Wachovia units have agreed to fines totaling over $4.5 million for violations related to the sales of unit investment trusts and mutual funds. The Financial Industry Regulatory Authority announced the fines last week. By agreeing to settle, Wachovia, which is now owned by Wells Fargo Bank, is not admitting to or denying wrongdoing.

Wachovia Securities is being fined $4.4 million for failing to give investors sales-charge discounts for eligible unit-investment-trust-transactions, for not making sure investors were given the benefit of net-asset-value transfer programs whenever they were applicable in mutual fund purchases, and for unsuitability violations involving Class B and Class C mutual fund shares.

FINRA also says Wachovia Securities neglected to provide breakpoint and rollover discounts connected to over 20,000 unit-investment-trust purchases. As a result, customers ended up paying excess sales charges worth about $2.7 million.

When a customer pays a sales charge, NAV transfer programs let clients redeem fund shares and use these proceeds to purchase shares in a different mutual fund without having to pay another sales charge. FINRA cites Wachovia’s failure to ensure that investors availed of these kinds of programs as the reason customers ended up paying front-end charges they shouldn’t have or purchasing share classes that were accompanied by higher fees. Also, Wachovia Securities Financial Network must pay a $150,000 fine for the improper sale of Class B shares. Both firms were cited for inadequate supervisory procedures connected to the transactions.

According to FINRA enforcement chief Susan Merrill, failing to recommend an appropriate share class or present existing discounts creates additional costs to investors. She cautioned that regulated firms should take into account all applicable factors when making recommendations to clients.

Wachovia says that its units have returned over $5.4 million to customers affected by the violations.


Related Web Resources:
FINRA Fines 2 Wachovia Units Over $4.5 Million For Sales Violations

Financial Industry Regulatory Authority

Wachovia Securities

Wachovia Securities Financial Network

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February 16, 2009

Wachovia and SEC’s Finalized Auction-Rate Securities Settlement Will Provide Over $7 Billion in Liquidity to Investors

Wachovia Securities, LLC and the Securities and Exchange Commission have reached a finalized settlement to resolve charges that the company mislead investors when selling billions of dollars worth of auction-rate securities. Under the terms of the agreement, Wachovia would purchase ARS from non-profit organizations, individuals, and clients with accounts worth up to $10 million. This phase ended on November 28, 2008 and Wachovia has bought back over $6.2 billion in ARS from clients as of that date.

During a second buyback phase running from June 10 – 30, 2009, Wachovia will repurchase ARS it sold to its other clients. Fulfillment of the terms of the settlement will give thousands of investors over $7 billion in liquidity.

The terms of Wachovia’s agreement with the SEC are similar to the ones it reached with the North American Securities Administrators Association and New York Attorney General Andrew M Cuomo’s office, which mandated that Wachovia pay a $50 million fine and buy back the ARS it sold to investors. Following completion of this latest settlement's terms, the SEC will determine whether Wachovia needs to pay a fine. By agreeing to settle, Wachovia is not admitting to or denying wrongdoing.

The SEC, the North American Securities Administrators Association, and Cuomo have alleged that sales representatives purposely misled investors about ARS liquidity in 2008 (even though they knew as early as late 2007 that the ARS market was beginning to collapse) when they claimed the securities were equivalent in liquid to cash. The market fell on February 14, 2008 when Wachovia and other broker-dealers stopped supporting the auctions, causing segments of the ARS market to freeze and leaving thousands of clients without any means of recovering their funds.

Just recently, Cuomo’s office concluded its probe into Wachovia’s ARS activities and issued an Assurance of Discontinuance.

Related Web Resources:
SEC Finalizes ARS Settlement to Provide $7 Billion in Liquidity to Wachovia Investors, SEC.gov

Read the SEC Complaint

NY State Attorney General Andrew Cuomo's Office

Continue reading "Wachovia and SEC’s Finalized Auction-Rate Securities Settlement Will Provide Over $7 Billion in Liquidity to Investors" »

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January 19, 2009

Wachovia Corp Sued by Carolinas Health Care System for More than $19 Million in “Bad” Investments

Carolinas Healthcare System (CHS) is suing Wachovia Corp for alleged bad investments that resulted in losses valued at over $19 million. CHS is also accusing the bank of “directly misleading” it, misrepresenting the risks associated with the investments, and failing to follow the hospital system's orders that it be withdrawn from the securities-lending program. Wachovia spokesperson Mary Eshet says that the company disagrees about the allegations, was always in compliance, and only made appropriate investments for CHS.

In 2003, according to the investment fraud lawsuit, Wachovia recommended that CHS take part in a securities-lending program. As a participant, a third party would borrow securities from CHS's portfolio in return for collateral that would be invested by Wachovia until the securities were returned. This would also hopefully result in additional returns.

Per the agreement, Wachovia was only supposed to invest in safe, liquid, quality securities. Any time CHS opted to withdraw from the program, the hospital system was supposed to get all of its investments back within five business days. Also, Wachovia would be allowed to keep 40% of the profits on one account and 35% on the other account.

Last summer, CHS determined that the securities-lending program was proving too risky, especially with the markets collapsing. In September, CHS notified Wachovia to return all borrowed securities right away.

Wachovia couldn’t return all of the securities immediately. Wachovia had invested for CHS $14.9 million in Sigma Finance Corp-issued floating rate notes (now worth $750,000) and $5 million in Pricoa Global Funding floating-rate notes (now worth $4.95 million).

The lawsuit contends that Wachovia never notified Carolinas HealthCare System that the investments were not appropriate until CHS decided to end its participation in the securities-leading program. 5 days after Sigma went into receivership last October, Wachovia told the hospital system for the first time that its investment was, at that time, worth just $1.8 million. CHS says there is now no market for the Pricoa-related securities.

CHS contends that Wachovia gained 40% of the profits but did not suffer any of the losses. The hospital system is solely responsible for returning the lost collateral to its borrowers.

CHS sues Wachovia over investment advice, Charlotte Observer, January 15, 2009

CHS files suit vs. Wachovia over losses on investments, Charlotte Business Journal, January 9, 2009


Related Web Resources:
Carolinas HealthCare System

Wachovia Corp

Continue reading "Wachovia Corp Sued by Carolinas Health Care System for More than $19 Million in “Bad” Investments" »

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November 19, 2008

NASAA Says Investors with Frozen Auction-Rate Securities Should Ask Investment Firms About Buyback Opportunities

The North American Securities Administrators Association is reminding investors to ask the investment firms that sold them any now-frozen auction-rate securities about repurchase opportunities. Following the ARS market collapse, securities regulators in 12 US states joined together to form a multi-state Task Force dedicated to finding out whether Wall Street investment firms had misled investors when persuading them to invest in the ARS market.

As part of their settlement agreements reached with the firms in question, 11 major Wall Street investment banks have said they will buy back over $51 billion in ARS from charities, retail investors, and small companies. However, these repurchase offers may not be available indefinitely.

NASAA President Fred Joseph says the best way to avail of any redemption offers is to contact the investment firms as soon as possible. So far, 11 firms have agreed in principle to buy back over $50 billion in ARS. NASAA says additional repurchase opportunities are expected to become available in the coming months.

Investment Firms with ARS Hotlines:

Bank of America 1-866-638-4183
Deutsche Bank 1-866-926-1437
Citi 1-866-720-4802
JP Morgan 1-866-450-8470
Goldman Sachs 1-888-350-2857
Merrill Lynch 1-888-706-1381
UBS 1-800-253-1974
Morgan Stanley 1-800-566-2273
Wachovia 1-866-283-794

Meantime, more investigations are under way into the sales practices of US firms that marketed and sold auction-rate securities to investors. Unfortunately, many investors who were told ARS were liquid investments are now dealing with frozen securities and cannot access their funds.

If you invested in the auction-rate securities industry and your ARS became frozen during the market’s collapse, you may be the victim of securities fraud.


Related Web Resources:
State Securities Regulators Remind Auction Rate Securities Investors to Contact Firms About Buyback Offers, NASAA, November 17, 2008

Small firms caught in ARS buyback vise, November 16, 2008

Continue reading "NASAA Says Investors with Frozen Auction-Rate Securities Should Ask Investment Firms About Buyback Opportunities" »

August 13, 2008

Claims Continue over MasterShare - Prudential Securities’ Deferred Compensation Plan

Prudential Securities has been plagued by claims over its deferred compensation plan, known as MasterShare. A number of former representatives have filed claims and recovered damages.

Started in 1999, MasterShare allowed Pru employees to deduct up to 25 percent of their gross pay to purchase discounted shares of a stock index fund. This discount had the effect of a company match of the funds deducted. Yet, the plan also provided that if the employee left the firm early he or she not only forfeited the company's “match” but also the portion withheld from his or her check!

With the threat of forfeiture of a substantial portion of the employee’s pay, some representatives claim they became hostages of Prudential. One former broker trainee says the firm promoted the plan as a pension plan and that he was “strongly encouraged” to join with the further suggestion that those not participating were perceived as “transients”.

Pru faced a number of claims by ex-employees over the MasterShare program but was at first successful in fighting these. The firm relied on New York Labor Law which stated that employers can make deductions from employees’ wages that “are expressly authorized in writing by the employee and are for the benefit of the employee.” It also avoided claims under ERISA while noting that “the existence of the identical forfeiture provision did not stop six judges on the New York Court of Appeals from unanimously holding” the plan is valid under New York Labor Law.

But in late 2005 the tables began to turn when a panel of three securities arbitrators awarded almost $2 million to Robert J. Ostrowski, a former retail broker who had worked for over 41 years for Prudential Securities. The arbitrators also ordered Mr. Ostrowski's Form U-5 to be amended to state that he was terminated "without cause on July 25, 2001," while also ordering Prudential to pay the hearing costs of $15,000.00.

The following year, an arbitration panel ruled in favor of another former Prudential broker, Charles J. Hazlett. The arbitration Award states that “Prudential breached the MasterShare Agreement and shall pay to [Hazlett] compensatory damages in the amount of $243,045.22, plus interest …”

That same year, other arbitrators considered a claim by former agent Frederick J. O’Meally against Prudential and Wachovia Securities, which had merged. Included in the claim was $2 million of assets allegedly forfeited in O”Meally’s MasterShare account, plus $1.3 million in damages for other claims. Prudential never officially submitted to the arbitration and was dismissed by agreement, but the arbitrators ordered Wachovia, Prudential’s sister firm, to pay O’Meally the entire $3.3 million.

Since 1990, the securities law firm of Shepherd Smith Edwards and Kantas, LLP has represented clients, including registered persons, in claims against securities brokerage firms. Those who have dispute with their firm or former firm can call for a free confidential consultation with one of our attorneys. (Note: Law firms that represent investment firms are usually prevented by conflict from representing others in disputes against those firms.)

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July 17, 2008

Securities Regulators Arrive At Wachovia Securities Headquarters to Conduct Auction-Rate Securities Investigation

In St. Louis, Missouri, 10 securities regulators probing the auction-rate securities crisis arrived at Wachovia Securities today. The firm has reportedly failed to fully comply with requests related to the investigation, which is what prompted the onsite visit.

The investigators, from Missouri, Massachusetts, New Jersey, Illinois, Pennsylvania, and other US states, arrived to conduct interviews and demand documents regarding Wachovia’s marketing and sales practices.

The Missouri Securities Division investigation into Wachovia Securities began last April, and the office of Missouri Secretary of State Robert Carnahan has subpoenaed over a dozen Wachovia Securities executives and agents in search of more information related to the company’s auction-rate securities business. Carnahan says that hundreds of Missouri investors have contacted her office frustrated that they cannot access their money.

The Missouri Securities Division says it has received more than 70 formal complaints over the last 70 months from investors that believe they were misled when they bought auction-rate securities.

The Securities and Exchange Commission is also seeking information from the investment firm. Nationally, Wachovia has been hit by a class action lawsuit and a number of arbitration claims. Many investors say they were told that the securities they were purchasing were “equivalent to cash or money market funds.” The investors say that Wachovia knew but did not reveal key facts about the market to them.

No charges have been filed so far against Wachovia Securities.

In the last year, Wachovia Corp’s stock has dropped 80%. The company is expected to report a $2.6 to $2.8 billion loss for the second quarter.

If you cannot access your money because a broker-dealer told you to invest in the auction-securities market and that the securities were “equivalent to cash,” Shepherd Smith Edwards and Kantas, LLP would like to talk to you. Contact our stockbroker fraud law firm today.

Mo. regulators investigate St. Louis Wachovia Securities headquarters, St. Louis Business Journal, July 17, 2008

Wachovia Inspected by States Over Auction-Rate Sales, Bloomberg.com, July 17, 2008

Wachovia Securities

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May 9, 2008

Wachovia Securities LLC Sued For Alleged Fraud Involving the Sale of Le Nature's Senior Subordinated Notes

In Los Angeles Superior Court, a number of life insurance companies, mutual funds, retirement systems, and other investors are suing Wachovia Securities LLC for alleged fraud related to the sale of senior subordinated notes for beverage maker Le Nature's Inc. The Pennsylvania-based company filed for bankruptcy in 2006.

Causes of action include fraud, negligent misrepresentation, aiding and abetting fraud, and fraudulent inducement. California Public Employees' Retirement System (CalPERS) and the Nature Conservancy are among the scores of plaintiffs.

The plaintiffs are accusing Wachovia of knowing about the fraud and financial problems at Le Nature’s but keeping this information from investors so that the beverage company would keep paying the firm substantial fees. They say the lack of disclosure also helped Wachovia’s high-yield debt business.

Also named in the lawsuit are BDO Seidman and Ernst & Young. The companies had worked for Le Nature’s as auditors on different occasions. The plaintiffs say that the “clean” audit reports aided in the fraud. BDO Seidman denies the accusation and vows to vigorously defend itself against the charges.

Wachovia claims that it too was the victim of fraud by the drink company. One Le Nature's accounting director that pled guilty to fraud acknowledged that the company had issued false information to Wachovia.

About 75 plaintiffs claim they suffered aggregate losses worth over $70 million. The plaintiffs are accusing Wachovia Securities of minimizing its own losses by purposely reducing its own exposure to Le Nature’s notes.

The complaint says that the drink company massively inflated its profits and revenue for years even though it was failing badly. Yet Wachovia market analysis gave Le Nature’s an “outperform” rating despite the fact that it was struggling to survive.

The stockbroker fraud law firm of Shepherd Smith and Edwards represents investor fraud victims in cities across the United States.

Related Web Resources:

Lawsuit alleges fraud in LeNature's dealings, Pittsburgh-Tribune Review, May 1, 2008

Former Le-Nature's employee pleads guilty in fraud scheme, Forbes.com, April 24, 2008

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October 9, 2007

Citigroup, Lehman Brothers, DeutscheBank and other Firms Fined for Failing to Deliver Trade Confirmations.

NYSE Regulation fined 14 of its member firms a total of $10.4 million in fines for failing to deliver trade confirmations to their clients and other violations.

Citigroup Global Markets received the heaviest fine of $2.25 million for failing to deliver trade confirmation documents in more than a million consumer transactions. Lehman Brothers and DeutscheBank were each fined $1.25 million.

Other firms sanctioned included UBS Securities; Bear Stearns & Co.; Credit Suisse Securities (USA) LLC ; Banc of America Securities LLC; Goldman Sachs & Co.; JP Morgan Securities; Wachovia Capital Markets LLC; and Keefe, Bruyette & Woods Inc. Fines levied against these firms ranged from $375,000 to $800,000.

According to the New York Stock Exchange (NYSE) enforcement wing, the violations occurred between July 1, 2003 and Oct 31, 2004. These include failures to ensure delivery of prospectuses to customers who purchased securities and mutual funds, failure to deliver product descriptions to customers purchasing exchange traded funds and failure to establish and maintain appropriate supervisory procedures regarding such activities.

Each of the member firms also agreed to certify that its current policies and procedures are reasonably designed to ensure compliance with current federal securities laws and regulations regarding such requirements. This action was one of the final acts by the regulatory staff of the NYSE prior joining the Financial Industry Regulatory Authority (FINRA) which has taken over all former NASD and NYSE regulatory responsibilities.

Shepherd Smith and Edwards represents investors nationwide in claims against securities firms. We have represented investors in more than 1,000 securities cases. To learn whether we may be able to assist you with a claim contact us to arrange a free consultation with one of our attorneys.


June 28, 2007

Wachovia Securities Settles NASD Supervision Charges and Agrees to $2 Million Fine

Wachovia Securities LLC of Richmond, Virginia says that it will pay $2 million in restitution to settle charges that it did not properly supervise its fee-based brokerage business from 2001 to 2004. It also says that it will pay some 1,300 customers who were either allowed to continue the inappropriate fee-based accounts or were asked to pay account fees on Class A mutual fund shareholdings that had already been paid for.

In a settlement reached with NASD, Wachovia says it will work with an outside consultant to evaluate the way that it identifies and pays customers their restitution. 549 customers collectively paid Wachovia fees of about $1.9 million, although they did not conduct any trades for at least two years.

NASD says that firms are obligated to look at whether fee-based accounts are appropriate. Customers with fee-based accounts are generally asked to pay a yearly fee (either a set rate or a percentage fee) instead of a commission every time a transaction takes place.

NASD says that Wachovia did tell its brokers that a Pilot Plus account was not suitable for buy-and-hold customers, customers who made a limited number of trades, and customers with assets worth less than $50,000. NASD also says, however, that Wachovia did not create a system or procedures for figuring out whether Pilot Plus accounts were appropriate for these customers.

NASD claims that 620 Pilot Plus clients with assets lower than $25,000 paid the minimum yearly fee—already two times the 2% rate allowed. Other clients were asked to pay an initial sales fee and an ongoing asset-based fee on purchases of Class A mutual fund shares. Both groups are entitled restitution under the settlement terms.

NASD also alleged that Wachovia did not properly supervise members of the “Red Carpet Club.” These are the firm’s high revenue producing brokers that were not required to undergo Wachovia’s review and approval processes. Wachovia is charged with violating NASD’s rules about communicating with members of the public after it gave brokers a customer letter that inaccurately referenced Pilot Plus as a fee-based, investment advisory service.

If you are an investor who has lost money because of the broker misconduct, please contact Shepherd Smith and Edwards today for your free consultation. We are a securities litigation law firm dedicated to help investors recover their financial losses caused by the inappropriate actions of members of the securities industry.

Related Web Resources:

NASD Fines Wachovia $2 Million For Fee-Based Account Violations, CNN.com, June 21, 2007

NASD Fines Wachovia Securities $2 Million for Fee-Based Account Violations, NASD, June 21, 2007

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June 24, 2007

Do Wall Street Powerhouses Earn Billions Through Fraudulent Fund Sweeps?

Merrill Lynch, Morgan Stanley, Smith Barney and Charles Schwab are being sued for claims they improperly directed their clients's funds into lower paying deposit accounts at affiliate banks, enabling those banks to reap billions in extra profits. Attorneys for investors seek permission to add Wachovia, based on "sweep" accounts it will receive from AG Edwards in an impending merger.

Details of the suit, filed in January but amended last month, had not previously been reported. Bank deposit sweep programs “put the broker in a very conflicted position” said an attorney for the investors recently, adding “this is not what they should be doing as financial advisers.”

The claim states that the firms are positioning themselves as objective financial advisers, but send their customers' funds into bank deposits paying far less than market rates, adding that the firms disclose to clients that more profitable accounts are available, but bury the disclosures in documents while failing to mention the magnitude of their profits.

Merrill’s savings bank, for example, holds $55 billion in deposits from Merrill’s customers, plus other assets, and earned over $2 billion last year, confirms Jon Holtaway, managing director of Danielson Associates Inc., a bank consulting firm in Rockville, Maryland. He added that Merrill earns a net interest margin of 3.6% - 6 to 7 times as much as the 0.5% to 0.6% firms make on money merket funds.

The suit claims that most of the firms' banks initially paid interest rates competitive with money market funds, but changed to a "tiered" rate structure with yields of 1% or less to smaller customers. Morgan Stanley rolled out its program in 2005, with deposits growing by 30 times to $16.4 billion by February 2007, according to company reports.

Shepherd Smith and Edwards is a securities law firm which represents investors nationwide in claims against investment firms. To learn whether our firm can assist you or your firm, contact us to arrange a free confidential consultation with one of our attorneys.

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May 31, 2007

Wachovia Brokerage Buying A.G. Edwards to Become Second Only to Merrill Lynch

Wachovia Corporation agreed to acquire A.G. Edwards Corporation for $6.8 billion in stock. This will vault Wachovia into the second-largest U.S. retail brokerage, behind only Merrill Lynch, with $1.1 trillion in client assets.

This transaction is the largest of the recent takeovers of regional brokerage firms, which are having difficulty fending off hiring of their representatives. Falling commissions in the industry has caused disruptions in sales staffs.

For years there has been speculation over whether A.G. Edwards, a mostly employee owned firm, could maintain its independence and raises new speculation about other large regional brokerages like Raymond James.

The deal will cause Wachovia to surpass Citigroup's Smith Barney brokerage unit in number of representatives as well as Ameriprise Financial, which claimed to be third. Wachovia said the combined company will have 15,000 financial advisers and an increased presence in 48 of the 50 largest metropolitan areas.

Wachovia has built its brokerage business relatively quickly, largely through the acquisition of Prudential Securities in 2003, and several smaller firms. Prudential Financial Inc. continues to own 38% of Wachovia.

By purchasing A. G. Edwards Wachovia will not only have a larger base to market financial products, but it will nearly double its number of brokerage offices to 1,512. The acquisition of A. G. Edwards will also increase Wachovia's focus on small investors and give it wider geographic coverage, particularly the Midwest.

A question yet unanswered is whether, with disparities in payout, Wachovia can retain both the A. G. Edwards Brokers as well as its own. Merrill Lynch retained a much smaller number of brokers than expected it bought Advest in December 2005. UBSAG saw an exodus of brokers from Piper Jaffray’s advisory business, which the Swiss bank last year.

Wachovia and its rivals, including Bank of America Corp., are eager to take aim at baby boomers, tens of millions of whom will take control of their retirement assets in the next decade. Wachovia also advertises its services to women and young people.

Shepherd Smith and Edwards represents investors in the recovery of their losses. We have handled many claims against both Wachovia and A. G. Edwards. Our expertise is also valuable to clients seeking to recover from investment firms after mergers, since such claims have unique problems concerning party entity, supervisory changes and documentation. If you or your company has sustained significant investment losses, contact Shepherd Smith and Edwards to schedule a free conficential consultation with one of our attorneys.

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May 20, 2007

Wachovia is Among the Financial Institutions Accused of Assisting Scam Artists To Bilk Seniors

For decades, telemarkers in "boiler rooms" have bilked the elderly by convincing touting them to buy investments which supposedly pay high rates of return or have fabulous growth potential.

Now thieves operating in small offices in Canada and warehouses in India work day and night targeting elderly Americans. Working from lists of names and phone numbers, they call War veterans, retired schoolteachers and thousands of other elderly Americans and posed as government and insurance workers updating their files.

Then, the criminals empty their victims’ bank accounts!

These seniors are being targeted with the help of by large companies! For example the firm InfoUSA advertises lists of “Elderly Opportunity Seekers,” 3.3 million older people “looking for ways to make money,” and “Suffering Seniors,” 4.7 million people with cancer or Alzheimer’s disease. “Oldies but Goodies” contained 500,000 gamblers over 55 years old, for 8.5 cents apiece. One list said: “These people are gullible. They want to believe that their luck can change.”

“Only one kind of customer wants to buy lists of seniors interested in lotteries and sweepstakes: criminals,” said Sgt. Yves Leblanc of the Royal Canadian Mounted Police. “If someone advertises a list by saying it contains gullible or elderly people, it’s like putting out a sign saying ‘Thieves welcome here.’ ”

Some researchers estimate that the elderly account for 30 percent of telemarketing sales — another example of how companies and investors are profiting from the growing numbers of Americans in their final years. In 2003, the Federal Trade Commission estimated that 11 percent of Americans over age 55 had been victims of consumer fraud. “Most people have no idea how widespread and sophisticated telemarketing fraud has become,” said James Davis, a Federal Trade Commission lawyer. “It shocks even us.”

Telemarketing fraud has become a global criminal enterprise preying largely upon millions of elderly Americans every year, authorities say. Vast databases of names and personal information, sold to thieves by large publicly traded companies, have put our seniors within reach of fraudulent telemarketers. Major banks then make it possible for criminals to dip into victims’ accounts without authorization, according to court records.

One such victim is Iowa resident Richard Guthrie, a 92 year old World War II Veteran and Purple Heart recipient. Mr. Guthrie was contacted by phone and tricked into revealing his banking information. The crooks then contacted Wachovia, the nation’s fourth-largest bank, and raided his account, according to banking records. Between 2003 and 2005, scam artists submitted at least seven unsigned checks to Wachovia that withdrew funds from Mr. Guthrie’s account, according to banking records. Wachovia accepted those checks and forwarded them to Mr. Guthrie’s bank in Iowa, which in turn sent back $1,603 for distribution to the checks’ creators that submitted them.

Within days, however, Mr. Guthrie’s bank became concerned and told Wachovia the checks had not been authorized. Wachovia then returned the funds. But it failed to investigate whether Wachovia’s accounts were being used by criminals, according to prosecutors who studied the transactions.

According to the New York Times, some financial firms, including Wachovia, have made refunds to victims who complain, yet have not stopped selling lists used by criminals, even after executives were warned that they were aiding continuing crimes, according to government investigators.

In all, Wachovia accepted $142 million of unsigned checks from companies that made unauthorized withdrawals from thousands of accounts, federal prosecutors say. Wachovia collected millions of dollars in fees from those companies, even as it failed to act on warnings, according to records.

In 2006, after account holders at Citizens Bank were victimized by the same thieves that singled out Mr. Guthrie, an executive wrote to Wachovia that “the purpose of this message is to put your bank on notice of this situation and to ask for your assistance in trying to shut down this scam.” But Wachovia, which declined to comment on that communication, did not shut down the accounts.

Banking rules required Wachovia to periodically screen companies submitting unsigned checks. Yet there is little evidence Wachovia screened most of the firms that profited from the withdrawals.

In a lawsuit filed last year, the United States attorney in Philadelphia said Wachovia received thousands of warnings that it was processing fraudulent checks, but ignored them. That suit, against the company that printed those unsigned checks, Payment Processing Center, or P.P.C., did not name Wachovia as a defendant, though at least one victim has filed a pending lawsuit against the bank.

During 2005, according to the United States attorney’s lawsuit, 59 percent of the unsigned checks that Wachovia accepted from P.P.C. and forwarded to other banks were ultimately refused by other financial institutions. Wachovia was informed each time a check was returned.

“When between 50 and 60 percent of transactions are returned, that tells you at gut level that something’s not right,” said the United States attorney in Philadelphia, Patrick L. Meehan.

Other banks, when confronted with similar evidence, have closed questionable accounts. But Wachovia continued accepting unsigned checks printed by P.P.C. until the government filed suit in 2006.

Although Wachovia is the largest bank that processed transactions that stole from Mr. Guthrie, at least five other banks accepted 31 unsigned checks that withdrew $9,228 from his account. Nearly every time, Mr. Guthrie’s bank told those financial institutions the checks were fraudulent, and his money was refunded. But few investigated further.

Mr. Guthrie’s memory is faulty, but his family says he has lost a total of more than $100,000 to such practices.

Wachovia was asked in detail about its relationship with the firm that perpetrated the hoax against Mr. Guthrie and the accusations in the United States attorney’s lawsuit. The company declined to comment, except to say: “Wachovia works diligently to detect and end fraudulent use of its accounts.” During the time the bogus firm was a customer, Wachovia say it honored all requests for returns related the company’s accounts. The bank’s statement continued: “Wachovia is cooperating fully with authorities on this.”

Prosecutors argue that many elderly accountholders never realized Wachovia had processed checks that withdrew from their accounts, and so never requested refunds. Wachovia declined to respond.

We at Shepherd Smith and Edwards, have assisted investors to recover losses from financial institutions including Wachovia. We recommend you NEVER GIVE PERSONAL FINANCIAL INFORMATION TO ANYONE WHO CALLS YOU. We also recommend you NEVER INVEST THROUGH ANYONE YOU HAVE NOT MET IN PERSON, NO MATTER HOW CONVINCING THE SALESMAN OR SOUND THE FIRM MAY APPEAR. If you wish to discuss your situation in confidence with an experienced securities attorney, contact Shepherd Smith and Edwards today.

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