In Securities and Exchange Commission v. Vitesse Semiconductor Corp. et al, 771 F. Supp. 2d 304 (S.D.N.Y. 2011) Download SEC v. Vitesse Semiconductor Corp. (S.D.N.Y. Case No. 10CIV9239, Opinion and Order Filed March 21, 2011), the Securities and Exchange Commission defended its recent settlement practices in cases it brings alleging fraud against directors and officers. Its settlement practices are codified in the Code of Federal Regulations. They include filing cases against Defendants in which the SEC alleges fraud, and which the SEC practice is to settle without requiring the Defendants to admit or deny guilt. The SEC claimed in this case that it instituted this practice in 1972.
That claim caused the Federal Judge in that case, Judge Jed Rakoff, to set the record straight, as it were, as to the history and effects of this SEC practice:
Long before 1972, the S.E.C. had already begun entering into consent decrees in which the defendants neither admitted nor denied the allegations. This was strongly desired by the defendants because it meant that their agreement to the S.E.C.'s settlements would not have collateral estoppel consequences for parallel private civil actions, in which the defendants frequently faced potential monetary judgments far greater than anything the S.E.C. was likely to impose. But there were benefits for the S.E.C. as well. First, the practice made it much easier for the S.E.C. to obtain settlements. And second, at a time (prior to 1972) when the S.E.C.'s enforcement powers were largely limited to obtaining injunctive relief, the S.E.C.'s focus was somewhat more centered on helping to curb future misconduct by obtaining access to the Court's contempt powers than on obtaining admissions to prior misconduct.
But, by 1972, it had become obvious that as soon as courts had signed off on such settlements, the defendants would start public campaigns denying that they had ever done what the S.E.C. had accused them of doing and claiming, instead, that they had simply entered into the settlements to avoid protracted litigation with a powerful administrative agency. Thus, the real change effected by the S.E.C. in 1972 was the requirement that a defendant who agreed to a consent judgment “without admitting or denying the allegations of the Complaint” nevertheless agree that the defendant would not thereafter publicly deny the allegations. To this end, each of the proposed Consent Judgments now presented to this Court is accompanied by a *309 formal written “Consent” of the defendant agreeing, pursuant to 17 C.F.R § 205.5, “not to take any action or to make or permit to be made any public statement denying, directly or indirectly, any allegation in the complaint or creating the impression that the complaint is without factual basis.”
The result is a stew of confusion and hypocrisy unworthy of such a proud agency as the S.E.C. The defendant is free to proclaim that he has never remotely admitted the terrible wrongs alleged by the S.E.C.; but, by gosh, he had better be careful not to deny them either (though, as one would expect, his supporters feel no such compunction). Only one thing is left certain: the public will never know whether the S.E.C.'s charges are true, at least not in a way that they can take as established by these proceedings.
This might be defensible if all that were involved was a private dispute between private parties. But here an agency of the United States is saying, in effect, “Although we claim that these defendants have done terrible things, they refuse to admit it and we do not propose to prove it, but will simply resort to gagging their right to deny it.”
The disservice to the public inherent in such a practice is palpable.
Comments