It's not exactly an epidemic, but a federal judge in Colorado
appears to have caught Rakoff fever.
Two weeks before the 2nd Circuit Court of Appeals will hear
oral arguments on whether U.S. Senior District Judge Jed Rakoff
exceeded his authority when he rejected the Securities and
Exchange Commission's $285 million settlement with Citigroup,
U.S. Senior District Judge John Kane of Denver has refused to
approve the SEC's proposed $12 million "neither admit nor deny"
settlement with Bridge Premium Financial and a former Bridge
executive accused of running a Ponzi scheme. In a one-paragraph order last week, Kane said he would not approve a deal in which
the defendant "remains defiantly mute" about the truth of the
SEC's allegations. "A defendant's options in this regard are
binary: He may admit the allegation or he may go to trial," Kane
wrote. The judge also said he would not consent to any final
judgment without an entry of findings of fact and conclusions of
law. "These findings are important to inform the public and the
appellate courts," he said.
The ruling seems to represent a change of heart for Kane,
who in 2011 approved the SEC's $4 million settlement with
investment advisor Neal Greenberg, even though that deal did not
require Greenberg to admit or deny the agency's allegations.
When Rakoff refused to approve the Citi deal, which involved
the bank's alleged misrepresentations to investors in a complex,
mortgage-backed derivative instrument, he said the SEC's settlement policy does not serve the public interest. "The
court, and the public, need some knowledge of what the
underlying facts are: for otherwise, the court becomes a mere
handmaiden to a settlement privately negotiated on the basis of
unknown facts, while the public is deprived of ever knowing the
truth in a matter of obvious public importance," the judge wrote
in November 2011 in a now famous 15-page opinion.
The SEC and Citi jointly appealed Rakoff's ruling to the 2nd
Circuit, which gave a pretty clear hint of its stance on
deference to the SEC in a per curiam ruling last March that
concluded Rakoff erred when he refused to stay the Citi case
during the appeal. On Feb. 8, a different three-judge panel at
the 2nd Circuit will hear the merits of the underlying joint
appeal, with Rusty Wing of Lankler Siffert & Wohl arguing for
Rakoff. (The judges on the Feb. 8 panel have not yet been
announced.)
Rakoff is the most outspoken judicial critic of the SEC's
neither-admit-nor-deny boilerplate, which the agency says it
needs in order to extract settlements from defendants concerned
about follow-on liability in private suits. Every government
agency with enforcement powers, as SEC officials have said many
times, uses similar language in consent decrees. Despite the
SEC's explanations, Rakoff first challenged the policy in 2009,
when he rejected a $33 million settlement between the agency and
Bank of America before grudgingly approving a revised $150
million deal. Rakoff also expressed concerns about "neither
admit nor deny" when he approved an SEC settlement with Vitesse
in 2011.
Since Rakoff began his campaign, several other federal
judges have groused about deals in which the government does not
require defendants to admit wrongdoing. In 2010, U.S. District
Judge Ellen Huvelle of Washington questioned another SEC
settlement with Citi but ultimately approved it. In 2011, after
Rakoff's Citi ruling, U.S. District Judge Rudolph Randa of
Milwaukee rejected an SEC deal with Koss Corporation and U.S.
District Judge Renee Bumb of Camden tossed a Federal Trade
Commission settlement with Circa Direct. (Both judges eventually
approved revised settlements.) Last year, U.S. District Judge
Frederic Block of Brooklyn grilled the SEC about whether it
simply expected judges to rubber-stamp its settlement before
later approving the agency's deal with former Bear Stearns hedge
fund managers Ralph Cioffi and Matthew Tannin. Judge Kane in
Colorado now joins that small club.
An SEC representative declined to comment on Kane's order,
citing the upcoming 2nd Circuit argument. Rakoff counsel Wing of
Lankler Siffert told me that he would probably cite Kane's order
at next month's oral argument. "It's a decision by a
well-regarded judge," he said.
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