| Re: 3/8/01 - SEC Settles Securities Fraud Action Against "Tokyo Joe"; NY Times: 'Tokyo Joe' Settles S.E.C. Suit 
 SEC  SETTLES  SECURITIES  FRAUD ACTION AGAINST "TOKYO  JOE";  INTERNET  STOCK PICKER  REQUIRED TO GIVE UP ALL ILLEGAL PROFITS, PAY A PENALTY OF  MORE  THAN $400,000 AND CONSENT TO THE ENTRY OF AN ANTIFRAUD INJUNCTION
 
 The  Commission has settled the enforcement action it brought last  year against Yun Soo Oh Park, the Internet stock picker known as "Tokyo Joe," and  the company Park controls, Tokyo Joe's Societe Anonyme Corp.  Under the terms of the settlement, which was as approved today by the District Court  for the Northern District of Illinois, Park and Societe  Anonyme, without  admitting or denying the allegations made in  the  Commission's complaint,  consented to entry of a federal District  Court  order  that permanently  enjoins  them  from  violating  the  antifraud  and   other provisions  of the federal securities laws, and orders Park and  Societe Anonyme  to  pay  $324,934 in ill-gotten gains  and  $429,696  in  civil penalties,  for a total monetary payment of $754,630.  Park and  Societe Anonyme  also agreed to post a hyperlink to the court order on the  home page of the Tokyo Joe web site for a period of thirty days.
 
 SEC  Enforcement  Director  Richard  H.  Walker  said,  "This  case  has established  groundbreaking precedent: Those who are in the business  of offering  investment advice on the Internet may take on the same  duties and  responsibilities as other investment advisers."  Mr. Walker  added, "Today's   settlement   demonstrates  that  we  will   not   countenance undisclosed conflicts of interest or other fraudulent conduct from those recommending purchases or sales of securities - whether on  the  web  or elsewhere."
 
 SEC Midwest Regional Director Mary E. Keefe said, "In requiring Park and Societe Anonyme to pay a significant penalty and to give back all of the profits they made from their illegal trading and touting, we are sending a  clear message to those in the stock-picking business:  We will pursue you vigorously if you mislead your customers."
 
 In  its  complaint, filed in January 2000, the Commission  alleged  that Park,  a  self-proclaimed  Internet  stock-picking  guru,  operated   an Internet  web site through which investors who paid a monthly membership fee  received  stock  recommendations and other investment  advice  from Park.  The Commission charged that Park defrauded members of his Societe Anonyme  by  failing  to  disclose that, in several  instances,  he  had already purchased shares of the stock that he was recommending and  that he  planned  to  sell his shares into the buying flurry  and  subsequent price  rise that followed his recommendations, an illegal practice known as "scalping."  The Commission also charged that Park touted one company to  members of Societe Anonyme and to the public without disclosing that he  had  received  shares of stock in the company in  exchange  for  his recommendation.   Finally,  the  Commission  charged   that   the   past performance results posted on Park's web site were materially false  and misleading.
 
 Before  submitting  his  settlement offer, Park  moved  to  dismiss  the Commission's  complaint, arguing primarily that, since he dispensed  his stock  picks  and investment advice over the Internet,  he  was  not  an "investment  adviser" within the meaning of the Investment Advisers  Act and   that   the  antifraud  provisions  of  that  Act  could   not   be constitutionally  applied  to  him.  The District  Court  denied  Park's motion  to  dismiss  in  its  entirety and held  that  the  Commission's complaint  sufficiently  alleged that Park was an  "investment  adviser" under the Advisers Act and that Park was subject to that Act's antifraud provisions (SEC v. Park a/k/a Tokyo Joe, and Tokyo Joe's Societe Anonyme Corp., 99 F. Supp. 2d 889 (N.D. Ill. 2000).
 
 Under the terms of the settlement, Park and Societe Anonyme consent to a permanent  injunction  prohibiting them  from  violating  the  antifraud provisions  of  the Investment Advisers Act of 1940 and  the  Securities Exchange  Act  of  1934, as well as the anti-touting  provision  of  the Securities  Act of 1933.  Park and Societe Anonyme also are required  to pay all of the $279,696 in profits they made from the thirteen instances of  scalping  and  the one instance of illegal touting  alleged  by  the Commission, plus $45,238 in prejudgment interest on that amount,  for  a total  disgorgement payment of $324,934.  Park and Societe Anonyme  also are  required  to  pay  a civil penalty equal to  the  amount  of  their scalping  and  illegal  touting profits ($279,696)  plus  an  additional penalty of $150,000 based on Park's posting of false and misleading past performance  results  on the Tokyo Joe web site,  for  a  total  penalty payment  of  $429,696.  Finally, within two days of  the  entry  of  the District Court order, Park and Societe Anonyme must post a hyperlink  to a  copy of the Commission's order on the home page of the Tokyo Joe  web site  for  a  period of thirty days. [SEC v. Yun Soo Oh Park  and  Tokyo Joe's  Societe Anonyme Corp., N.D. Ill., Civil No. 00-C-0049] (LR-16925; Press Rel. 2001-26)
 
 sec.gov
 
 Similarly worded press release, with contact information:
 sec.gov
 
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 March 9, 2001
 
 'Tokyo Joe' Settles S.E.C. Suit
 
 By GRETCHEN MORGENSON
 
 Yun Soo Oh Park, owner of an Internet investing site that was one of the hottest sources of stock picks on the Web, has settled a civil complaint brought last year by the Securities and Exchange Commission.
 
 Mr. Park, known to his subscribers as Tokyo Joe, neither admitted nor denied the S.E.C. charges, but agreed to pay $754,630 to settle the case.
 
 In the case, filed in January 2000, regulators said Mr. Park defrauded his customers by buying ahead of his recommendations and selling as subscribers were getting in. The S.E.C. said that on 13 occasions, Mr. Park failed to tell subscribers that he was trading ahead of them, an illegal practice known as scalping. Regulators also charged that Mr. Park promoted one company to his subscribers — who they said paid monthly fees of up to $600 for his stock picks and market commentary — without disclosing that he had received shares of stock in the company in exchange for his recommendation.
 
 "Those who are in the business of offering investment advice on the Internet may take on the same duties and responsibilities as other investment advisers," Richard H. Walker, director of enforcement at the S.E.C., said. "We will not countenance undisclosed conflicts of interest or other fraudulent conduct from those recommending purchases or sales of securities — whether on the Web or elsewhere."
 
 Ira Lee Sorkin, the lawyer representing Mr. Park, said the government's allegations were still just that. "The court order states there was no hearing and no findings of fact made," Mr. Sorkin said, referring to the approval of the settlement issued by a United States district court judge in Illinois. "For the S.E.C. to claim that this is evidence of wrongful and fraudulent conduct is not consistent with the order entered by the judge."
 
 Even so, Mr. Park chose to settle the case, paying about $325,000 in what the S.E.C. said were ill-gotten gains and another $430,000 in penalties. "It was a settlement that allowed him to move on with his life and continue his business," Mr. Sorkin said. Mr. Park, 51, also agreed to post a link to the court order on his Web site for 30 days.
 
 Before becoming a stock guru on the Internet, Mr. Park owned a string of burrito restaurants. He started his Web site in 1997 and became a force in the markets, propelling the shares of companies large and small on the strength of his recommendations. At one point, he had 4,000 subscribers.
 
 Because Mr. Park never registered with the S.E.C. as an investment adviser, he argued when he was charged last year that he was simply exercising his right to free speech by recommending stocks on his Web site. And to specialists in First Amendment law, the case was intriguing because it promised to explore the problems posed by the kind of freewheeling chat that occurs all over the Internet.
 
 Thomas W. Szromba, senior trial counsel at the S.E.C.'s Chicago office, said the First Amendment did not apply in this case. "Fraudulent speech, which is what he was doing, is not protected and never has been," he said. He said the case was a big advance for regulators: "It adds a significant weapon in the enforcement arsenal that we can use the antifraud provisions of the Investment Advisers Act against people operating on the Internet and doing the sorts of things Tokyo Joe was doing. He moved to dismiss the complaint saying he was not an investment adviser, but the district court completely rejected that argument."
 
 In an interview yesterday, Mr. Park said that when he began making stock picks on the Internet he was naïve and knew little about regulatory requirements. "I thought it was all in good jest and good fun; I never thought people would follow what I said," Mr. Park said. "When the S.E.C. challenged my issues I realized they had a legitimate case. So I went straight a long time ago."
 
 In the year since he was charged with fraud, Mr. Park has made changes to his Web site. For instance, he now discloses to subscribers that he may buy stocks ahead of his recommendations.
 
 Copyright 2001 The New York Times Company
 
 nytimes.com
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