| SEC Wants Tokyo Joe Case to Be Test for Tougher Web Standards 2/16/0 12:27 (New York)
 
 with permission ....
 
 (BTW steve he was not arrested, it is a civil case because the lack of  violations of securities law)
 
 Washington, Feb. 16 (Bloomberg) -- The Securities and
 Exchange Commission wants to toughen standards for dozens of
 Internet stock pickers by securing a landmark court judgment in
 its fraud lawsuit against Web pundit Tokyo Joe.
 ``This will be a good test case,' SEC enforcement director
 Richard H. Walker said.
 Some legal experts, though, say the SEC's effort may violate
 Tokyo Joe's constitutional free-speech rights. Tokyo Joe, in
 distributing stock advice by e-mail to 3,600 paying customers, may
 function like newsletter publishers entitled to First Amendment
 protections, they said.
 ``This could be a difficult case for the SEC to win,' said
 Barry Barbash, a Washington lawyer who was the SEC's top
 investment-adviser regulator from 1993 to 1998. ``It will be a
 tossup between principles of free speech and securities regulation
 on the Web.'
 If the courts decide that Tokyo Joe acts as a publisher
 rather than an investment adviser, the SEC's case could be dashed
 by a 1985 Supreme Court ruling that limited the SEC's authority to
 regulate stock-advice newsletters. On the other hand, if the SEC
 prevails, some Internet stock pickers may have to register with
 the government as advisers and be subject to routine inspections,
 said Barbash, a partner with the Shearman & Sterling law firm.
 One Web stock pundit said that he would quit the business if
 he had to register as an adviser.
 ``This is a labor of love, and if I have to be subjected to
 all kinds of legalities, the game isn't worth a candle,' said
 Charles Radomsky of Clifton, New Jersey, a retired broker who
 picks stocks for the Daily Trader web site. Daily Trader charges
 subscribers $19.95 a month.
 
 Tokyo Joe
 
 The SEC's civil-fraud suit, filed last month in Chicago
 federal court, alleged that Tokyo Joe failed to disclose personal
 trading of stocks that he recommended. It also contended that he
 failed to disclose receiving free shares in exchange for touting a
 stock, and inflated his advertised investment performance on 800
 occasions.
 Tokyo Joe, 50, one of the best-known Web pundits, is
 contesting the charges. He can win on the SEC's claim that he is
 an investment adviser but still incur a fine by losing on some
 other portions of the suit. If that were to happen, the judge's
 findings would have implications for Tokyo Joe alone, but not for
 other Web stock pickers.
 Tokyo Joe, whose real name is Yun Soo Oh Park, is the most
 prominent Web operator and the first Internet stock picker to be
 charged by the SEC in its 18-month battle against manipulation on
 the Internet.
 Walker said the SEC suit seeks to extend the agency's
 authority over Internet stock pickers by exposing them to possible
 prosecution for stock fraud. The SEC contends that Tokyo Joe is an
 adviser who should be subject to the same anti-fraud rules as the
 24,000 investment-adviser firms in the U.S., he said.
 
 Internet Stock Pickers
 
 ``We're concerned about the proliferation of stock gurus who
 charge investors for advice,' Walker said. The SEC has been
 conducting a broad investigation of Internet stock pickers in
 recent months, he said.
 Tokyo Joe is one of at least dozens of Internet stock pickers
 who provide advice to tens of thousands of paying and non-paying
 customers, said John Stark, the SEC's Internet enforcement chief.
 These pundits include electronic publishers, stock pickers who use
 computer algorithms, and ``momentum traders' who try to generate
 customer purchases of a stock they own and recommend, he said.
 Tokyo Joe, a former owner of burrito restaurants and
 condominiums who works out of his Manhattan apartment, said he
 will battle the SEC allegations.
 ``Bring it on,' he said in an e-mail. ``I will fight to
 (the) end.'
 The SEC thinks Tokyo Joe is an adviser because he regularly
 charges customers for stock recommendations, the basic definition
 of an adviser found in the 1940 Investment Advisers Act, Walker
 said.
 
 Supreme Court
 
 The legal benchmark for the Tokyo Joe case is the 1985
 Supreme Court ruling that the investment adviser's law exempted
 the publisher of a stock-advice newsletter from SEC oversight. The
 high court said the SEC couldn't treat publisher Christopher Lowe
 as an investment adviser, or stop him from printing stock tips,
 because he gave only ``nonpersonalized' advice to general
 readers.
 In Tokyo Joe's case, the SEC will contend that the Web stock
 guru offers more personalized advice through Internet chat rooms
 that he runs, agency officials said.
 Tokyo Joe charges as much as $200 a month to 3,600 members of
 his Societe Anonyme club from 18 countries, including Russia,
 Dubai and New Zealand. He said he has made about $10 million from
 fees and investments in the last two years.
 The Internet guru said he posts as many as 20 messages a day
 on his TokyoJoe.com Web site, named after a London nightclub he
 used to frequent. ``I never, never advise individually,' he said.
 Columbia University law professor John Coffee said the SEC
 theory ``is overbroad' in claiming all Web sites are investment
 advisers.  Many of these pundits don't make individual
 recommendations tailored to a customer's portfolio, as traditional
 advisers do, he said.
 
 `Obsolete' Rules
 
 The SEC, instead of pursuing a test case against Tokyo Joe,
 should update its ``egregiously obsolete' rules, which don't
 address Internet stock recommendations, said Coffee, who has been
 a securities-law consultant to SEC Chairman Arthur Levitt and
 President Bill Clinton.
 Tokyo Joe's case presents unsettled legal issues as
 regulators try to protect Internet investors in situations that
 couldn't have been imagined decades ago when the Investment
 Advisers Act was enacted. Today, investors can use Web sites, chat
 rooms and e-mail alerts to get advice from self-anointed experts
 such as Tokyo Joe, who posts his blunt and often insulting
 recommendations on Web  bulletin boards.
 The SEC isn't alone in facing court fights over efforts to
 make existing standards cover the fast-changing investment
 landscape.
 The Commodities Futures Trading Commission is appealing a
 Washington federal judge's ruling last year that said the agency
 violated the First Amendment by moving to make newsletter and Web
 site publishers register as commodity trading advisers. Provisions
 of the federal commodities law that were challenged in that case
 contain similar language as the Investment Advisers Act.
 
 --Neil Roland in Washington (202) 624-1868/bd
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