July 14, 2009
Refco Attorney Joseph Collins Found Guilty of Securities Fraud
Posted by Christine Hurt

This is the result we've all been waiting for (OK, maybe just me).  Joseph Collins, as you may recall, is a partner in Mayer, Brown and was named in a shareholder suit under Rule 10b-5 for committing securities fraud as the outside counsel for Refco.  He claimed he had no idea that fraud was occurring and that he was kept in the dark.  A district court judge dismissed the lawsuit against him, reminding us all that parties may not be sued as aiders and abetters to securities fraud, but only as primary actors.  And, the court, must have reasoned, no jury could find by a preponderance of the evidence that Mr. Collins was a primary actor in the Refco securities fraud.  Now, in private securities litigation speak, this doesn't mean that a jury couldn't find that Collins knew about the fraud and kept going; in fact, the district judge thought that was almost surely true.  But to find that Collins perpetrated securities fraud against investors after Stoneridge Investors v. Scientific-Atlanta, the investors must have known that the fraudulent statements were coming from Collins in order to have "relied" on him.  So, since the fake documents that were prepared by Collins were put in filings without investors really associating them with the law firm, Collins is in the clear as far as a private civil lawsuit goes.

Well, now a jury has found that beyond a reasonable doubt, Mr. Collins committed securities fraud.  Not just that he was engaged in a conspiracy to commit securities fraud, but also that he committed two counts of securities fraud.

One of these would seem to be wrong to a bystander just walking by, observing.  How could the evidence against someone be enough for a criminal conviction, but not enough for a civil lawsuit?  The short answer is because the elements of criminal fraud don't require much, and the elements of securities fraud, at least for private parties, do.  The prosecutor doesn't have to prove that anyone relied or was damaged by Collins' fraud -- only that he knew of the fraud and kept going.  Because we have made a decision that the frivolous securities lawsuit is inefficient and too costly for defendants to bear, we require private plaintiffs to prove (basically without discovery) that they relied on the particular actor's part of the fraud and that they were economically damaged.  This, obviously can lead, and has in this instance led, to some crazy situations.  What a crazy world if Mr. Collins is sufficiently blameless to avoid civil liability but must spend part of his life in prison for the same act.  Sentencing will come later.  The CEO is in prison for 16 years; the President for 10 years.

If readers are interested in the legal structures and practices that make it possible for this disconnect, feel free to read The Undercivilization of Corporate Law (33 J. Corp. L. 361 (2008)).

White Collar Crime | Bookmark

TrackBacks (0)

TrackBack URL for this entry:
http://www.typepad.com/services/trackback/6a00d8345157d569e2011571ff19c4970b

Links to weblogs that reference Refco Attorney Joseph Collins Found Guilty of Securities Fraud:

Comments (1)

1. Posted by MDF on July 14, 2009 @ 11:47 | Permalink

I look at this the other way. What a crazy world we would have if we decided to shield actors from private rights of action because of concerns that a bounty-hunter approach to securities law enforcement leads to over-enforcement (and concommitant potential costs to law-abiding actors), but in doing so the government is prohibited from going after aiders and abettors itself? This is fundamentally about a choice of law enforcement tools and ensuring an adequate (but not excessively costly) form of enforcement, isn't it?

Post a comment

If you have a TypeKey or TypePad account, please Sign In

Bloggers
Papers
Posts
Recent Comments
Popular Threads
Search The Glom
The Glom on Twitter
Archives by Topic
Archives by Date
February 2012
Sun Mon Tue Wed Thu Fri Sat
      1 2 3 4
5 6 7 8 9 10 11
12 13 14 15 16 17 18
19 20 21 22 23 24 25
26 27 28 29      
Syndicate The Glom
Subscribe

The Glom's Blog Network on Facebook:

Miscellaneous Links
LexisNexis Top Business Blogs 2011

 LexisNexis Tax Law Community 2011 Top 20 Blogs