Not the right thread for this, but of interest to all nonetheless...
interactive.wsj.com
February 7, 2001
'Tokyo Joe' Reaches a Deal With the SEC in Fraud Case
By AARON ELSTEIN WSJ.COM
"Tokyo Joe," a burrito vendor turned Internet-stock guru, has raised the white flag in a high-profile fight with securities regulators.
Yun Soo Oh Park IV, known on Internet-message boards as Tokyo Joe, has agreed to return about $750,000 of his trading profits as part of a settlement of securities-fraud charges brought by the Securities and Exchange Commission, a person familiar with the matter says. The SEC originally had been seeking as much as $2.25 million, another person familiar with the matter says.
Thomas Szromba, an SEC lawyer handling the case, declined to discuss the terms of the settlement, but said the pact must now be approved by the SEC's commissioners. Mr. Park declined to comment on the case. His lawyer, Ira Lee Sorkin, former chief of the SEC's New York office, said Mr. Park will neither admit nor deny wrongdoing as part of the settlement.
The SEC's suit against Mr. Park, filed in January 2000 in a Chicago federal court, generated considerable interest because to some investors, Tokyo Joe symbolized the power of Internet-message boards during the mania for technology stocks that lasted until the bubble burst last March.
Mr. Park, 50 years old, had no securities-industry experience. But he became something of a folk hero, thanks to an apparent flair for picking stocks that almost invariably rose after he recommended them.
But the SEC asserts in its suit that Mr. Park was a stock manipulator, who defrauded investors on at least 10 occasions by failing to disclose that he had bought stocks before recommending them, and who then sold the shares as prices rose after his advice to buy.
It is no sure thing that the commissioners will approve the settlement. They could modify its terms and send the proposal back to the enforcement staff. "It's not that infrequent" that they do that, says Bruce Hiler, a former associate enforcement director at the SEC.
A native of Seoul, South Korea, Mr. Park gained a following starting in 1997, when he began posting his recommendations on Internet message boards such as Silicon Investor (www.siliconinvestor.com) and Raging Bull (www.ragingbull.com).
Mr. Park's picks became so popular that in April 1998, he formed Tokyo Joe's Societe Anonyme Corp. (www.tokyojoe.com), where people who paid as much as $300 a year could learn about them first. About 3,800 people signed up, and the SEC alleges that Mr. Park collected more than $1.1 million in membership fees.
The SEC suit alleges that Mr. Park also profited by advising others to buy shares in companies in which he previously had invested. For example, the agency alleges Mr. Park bought 16,000 shares, as well as warrants for 8,000 shares, of Vialink Co. on Dec. 11, 1998, and three days later told Societe Anonyme members the stock was his "pick of the day." He didn't disclose his ownership or that he had placed an order to sell the shares one minute before issuing his recommendation, according to the SEC. He allegedly sold the shares as the price rose to $8.50 a share from $7.38 after his recommendation.
The SEC also alleges Mr. Park failed to disclose that he was paid by a company whose stock he recommended and that he deceived investors by telling them his picks had performed better than they actually had in order to boost membership. The SEC didn't disclose how much money Mr. Park allegedly made from selling the stocks he was recommending or how much he collected in undisclosed fees from the company from which he allegedly received payment. The SEC said in its suit that it was seeking disgorgement of "ill-gotten gains," a permanent injunction against Mr. Park, and civil penalties.
Mr. Park had vigorously fought the SEC's charges. His lawyers argued that Mr. Park's stock-picking was protected free speech and wasn't subject to federal-securities regulations, as recommendations from registered investment advisers would be, because his advice wasn't tailored to any particular individual. But U.S. District Judge Charles P. Kocoras denied Mr. Park's motions to dismiss the case in May and again in September.
Harry Weiss, a former SEC associate enforcement director, says the SEC likely will use a settlement with Tokyo Joe to send a strong signal to other online stock-pickers. "Because this is such a high-profile case, the SEC won't want its legal and policy message blunted by a settlement," he says.
The SEC was criticized last year for settling with a New Jersey teenager who, like Tokyo Joe, was accused of failing to disclose that he was selling stocks that he was simultaneously recommending on the Internet. The SEC collected $285,000 from the youth, Jonathan Lebed, but allowed him to keep more than $500,000 in profits. SEC officials said they forced Mr. Lebed to return profit only where there were "clear instances of fraud." Mr. Lebed agreed to forfeit the $285,000 without admitting wrongdoing.
Since the SEC sued him, Mr. Park has continued to post stock picks on his Web site. But the past year has been tough for him and his followers. In an interview last week, he said membership in his Societe Anonyme declined to about 600 after he doubled the subscription price last year amid a sinking stock market.
"A lot of people were wiped out last year, but I am still going, and so are my core members," said Mr. Park, who said he is profiting by buying some shares and shorting others. Mr. Park's Web site also highlights charities, including a policeman's benevolent association in New York, to which he and his subscribers have donated money.
Write to Aaron Elstein at: aaron.elstein@wsj.com
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