SEC  OBTAINS FINAL JUDGMENTS AGAINST THE HARTCOURT COMPANIES, INC.,  ALAN  V. PHAN, AND YONGZHI YANG FOR FRAUD AND REGISTRATION VIOLATIONS
       The  Commission announced that the Honorable Lourdes G. Baird, U.S.      District  Judge  for  the Central District  of  California  in  Los      Angeles,  entered final judgments against The Hartcourt  Companies,      Inc., a Utah corporation with executive offices in Shanghai, China,      Alan V. Phan, Hartcourt’s former chairman, president, and CEO,  and      Yongzhi  Yang, a former consultant to Hartcourt and a  resident  of      Irvine,  California.   The judgments against  Phan  and  Yang  were      entered on Feb. 28, 2005, while the judgment against Hartcourt  was      entered on March 11, 2005.            The   final  judgments  imposed  the  following  sanctions  against      Hartcourt, Phan, and Yang:  (1) permanent injunctions against  each      defendant against future violations of the antifraud and securities      registration  provisions of Sections 5(a), 5(c), and 17(a)  of  the      Securities Act of 1933 and Section 10(b) of the Securities Exchange      Act  of  1934 and Rule 10b-5 thereunder; (2) disgorgement  of  ill-      gotten  gains  and  prejudgment  interest  totaling  $832,598  from      Hartcourt  and $189,619 from Yang; (3) civil penalties of  $275,000      against Hartcourt, $55,000 against Phan, and $20,000 against  Yang;      and  (4)  an  order  barring Phan from serving  as  an  officer  or      director of a public company.            In  its  Dec. 14, 2004, order granting the SEC’s motion for summary      judgment,  the  Court  found  that  the  defendants  violated   the      registration  and  antifraud provisions of the  federal  securities      laws  in  connection  with a false Form S-8 registration  statement      filed by Hartcourt on Sept. 7, 1999.  The defendants used a Form S-      8  registration  statement  to issue one million  Hartcourt  common      shares  to Yang’s wife, purportedly to compensate her for providing      bona   fide  consulting  services  to  Hartcourt.   Instead,   Yang      performed  the actual consulting services and, at Phan’s direction,      improperly  sold  or transferred over 836,400 of  those  shares  to      provide  a  benefit  of approximately $819,363 to  Hartcourt.   The      Court  also found that Yang received a personal benefit of $186,604      from  the scheme.  [SEC v. The Hartcourt Companies, Inc.,  Alan  V.      Phan,  and Yongzhi Yang, Civil Action No. 03-3698 LGB (PLAx)  (C.D.      Cal.)] (LR-19133) |