ANALYSIS-SEC's Miami win likely to embolden muni crackdown -lawyers
By Dena Aubin and Sarah N. Lynch
NEW YORK, Sept 15 (Reuters) - The U.S. Securities and
Exchange Commission's courtroom victory in a fraud case against
the City of Miami will likely further embolden the agency in its
years-long effort to more tightly regulate the $3.7 trillion
municipal bond market, securities lawyers said.
A jury took only a few hours on Wednesday to find Miami and
its former budget director Michael Boudreaux liable for
securities fraud in the sale of over $150 million in municipal
debt in 2009. The SEC had accused the city of "playing a shell
game" by shuffling money among accounts to conceal its
deteriorating financial condition from investors.
The SEC told the court on Wednesday it would present a
request for injunctive relief and monetary penalties within two
weeks. The city and Boudreaux, who argued the fund transfers had
been approved by auditors and publicly disclosed, said they
planned to appeal.
The verdict is a "big boost" for the SEC, making the agency
likely to sue more municipalities, Bradley Bondi, a former SEC
lawyer now with Cahill Gordon & Reindel, said in an interview.
The SEC has been criticized for favoring administrative
proceedings over trials to resolve cases, he noted.
The SEC had subjected the municipal bond market to light
enforcement, for reasons that include a reluctance to impose
penalties that might be passed on to taxpayers. But its stance
changed following a wave of defaults during the financial
crisis.
In 2010, the agency set up a special enforcement unit for
municipal securities and public pensions. Since 2012, it has
brought cases against 19 municipal issuers over faulty
disclosures, most of which have settled or ended in default
judgments. An additional 71 issuers settled charges last month
through a special self-reporting program.
Other cases have targeted municipal officials with fines.
Since the start of 2013, eight officials have been hit with SEC
civil penalties, compared to just five in the 15 preceding
years, Robert Doty, a litigation consultant who tracks
securities cases, said.
"It is truly a sea change and we have seen the SEC ramp up
its municipal enforcement very aggressively," Stephen Crimmins,
a lawyer with Murphy & McGonigle who had previously led the
SEC's trial unit, said in an interview.
The Miami case also shows the SEC is losing some of its
aversion to seeking financial penalties, said Kit Addleman, a
former SEC lawyer now with Haynes and Boone in Dallas.
Now the SEC feels very strongly that "in some cases conduct
is egregious enough that a penalty is the only way to drive the
message home that the entity needs to clean up its act," she
said in an interview on Tuesday.
The SEC had won a 2003 cease-and-desist order against the
city in a previous case over similar conduct. Miami's repeat
offense was a "rare situation" among muni cases, Bondi said.
In April, the SEC, which is only empowered to bring civil
charges, announced a cooperative case with the U.S. Justice
Department involving the criminal indictment of a town
supervisor of Ramapo, New York, and one other individual over
fraudulent disclosures in the sale of $150 million municipal
bonds.
The SEC also has civil lawsuits pending against Rhode
Island's economic development agency and the municipality of
Victorville, California.
"We will continue to hold municipalities and their officers
accountable, including through trials, if they engage in
financial fraud or other conduct that violates the federal
securities laws," Andrew Ceresney, director of the SEC's
division of enforcement, said in a statement following the Miami
verdict.
Crimmins said municipal issuers would be challenged by the
SEC's more aggressive stance. Despite raising large sums of
money, they largely fall short compared to corporations in terms
of gathering financial data and evaluating and reporting it.
"Obviously this is a wake up call for people in the
municipal securities area," he said.
(Reporting by Dena Aubin and Sarah N. Lynch; Editing by Anthony
Lin and Richard Chang)
Reuters
Reuters
09/15/2016 15:47
© Copyright Reuters Ltd. All rights reserved. The information contained in this news report may not be published, broadcast or otherwise distributed without the prior written authority of Reuters Ltd.


