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Non-Tech : Paradise Entertainment (PDSE) -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Jack Hartmann who wrote (201)6/12/2000 5:34:00 PM
From: Jack Hartmann  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 208
 
SEC and Dana, old update
SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION

Litigation Release No. 16499 / April 3, 2000

SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION v. DANA C. GIACCHETTO and THE CASSANDRA GROUP, INC., U.S. District Court, S.D.N.Y., No. 00 CIV 2502 (LMM)

The Securities and Exchange Commission today charged a Manhattan investment adviser with a fraudulent scheme to divert $20 million (more than $4 million of which has been misappropriated) from the accounts of his clients, many of whom are prominent figures in the arts and entertainment industry. Simultaneously, the United States Attorney for the Southern District of New York unsealed a criminal complaint containing similar charges against Dana C. Giacchetto.

Named in the Commission's Complaint filed in the U.S. District Court for the Southern District of New York are:

Dana C. Giacchetto, age 37, of Manhattan; and

The Cassandra Group, Inc., a registered investment adviser located in Manhattan, which is solely owned by Giacchetto.
The Complaint alleges, and litigation papers filed by the Commission in support of its request for emergency relief set forth evidence, as follows:

Giacchetto targeted prospective clients from the arts and entertainment industries, and Cassandra's clients include many artists and film and music stars. In promoting his services, Giacchetto claimed that Cassandra followed a"conservative" investment strategy. Giacchetto also touted the purported safety of entrusting funds to him by claiming that Cassandra never took custody of client assets, but left them instead in the hands of an independent custodian.

From September 1997 to the present, Giacchetto unlawfully gained possession of at least $20 million in client funds. While Giacchetto used some of this money to make investments for clients, he diverted substantial funds - totaling more than $4 million - to pay Cassandra's operating expenses and Giacchetto's own living expenses, and to compensate other clients who had been defrauded earlier in the scheme. Giacchetto also used more than $12,000 in client funds to make the down payment on a Mercedes Benz automobile for a law enforcement officer.

Giacchetto stole money by diverting checks issued from his clients' individual accounts at a registered broker-dealer, Brown & Co., which served as the independent custodian for most of Cassandra's clients. On numerous occasions from at least June 1997 through the present, Giacchetto directed Brown to issue checks payable to particular Cassandra clients, drawing on funds held in those clients' Brown accounts. Rather than having those checks sent to the unsuspecting clients who were the named payees, Giacchetto caused Brown to deliver the checks to Cassandra. Giacchetto then endorsed the checks himself, in his own name, and deposited the funds in Cassandra's corporate bank accounts at U.S. Trust Co. In recent months, as some clients began to question activity in their accounts, Cassandra became little more than a giant "asset-kiting" scheme, as Giacchetto paid complaining clients with funds stolen from other clients. To conceal his diversion of funds, Giacchetto told a variety of lies to his clients, including:

Misrepresenting to clients that Cassandra had invested their money in securities transactions that never took place, including non-existent bond purchases;

Telling clients that their funds were invested in various "private placements," when in fact the money was deposited in Cassandra's own bank account;

Providing false order tickets and portfolio statements to some clients who inquired about investments; and

Falsely stating that client assets were held in "trust" or "escrow" accounts that did not, in fact, exist.
Giacchetto also induced or caused clients to invest substantial funds in high-risk securities issued by Paradise Music & Entertainment, Inc., a company with little operating history. Giacchetto made or solicited these investments despite a host of undisclosed conflicts of interest, including a personal stake in Paradise stock and warrants. In some instances, Giacchetto purchased Paradise securities at escalated market prices for clients who had earlier told him they did not want to buy Paradise securities at the substantially lower prices that had been available in a private placement.

Giacchetto also lied repeatedly to the staff of the Commission during a recent examination of Cassandra's operations, withheld from the staff books and records that he was legally obligated to produce, and provided falsified documents to the staff. Agents of the United States Attorney's Office for the Southern District of New York and the Federal Bureau of Investigation executed a search warrant and discovered certain of the wrongfully withheld records in Giacchetto's residence.

The Complaint charges Giacchetto and Cassandra with violations of Section 17(a) of the Securities Act of 1933, Section 10(b) of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 and Rule 10b-5 thereunder, and Section 207 of the Investment Advisers Act of 1940 ("Advisers Act"). The Complaint also charges that Cassandra, aided and abetted by Giacchetto, violated Sections 204, 206(1), 206(2), and 206(4) of the Advisers Act and Rules 204-2, 206(4)-2 and 206(4)-4 thereunder. The Commission seeks temporary, preliminary and permanent injunctions, an asset freeze, disgorgement of ill-gotten gains plus prejudgment interest, and civil monetary penalties against both defendants, as well as appointment of a receiver for Cassandra.

The Commission acknowledges the valuable assistance of the United States Attorney's Office for the Southern District of New York and the Federal Bureau of Investigation in bringing this case.

sec.gov
Last update: 04/05/2000
*********************
One man ruined this stock.
Jack



To: Jack Hartmann who wrote (201)2/7/2003 12:15:56 AM
From: Jack Hartmann  Respond to of 208
 
Former 'Broker to the Stars' Gets Out of Prison
February 6, 2003

By Colleen DeBaise
Dow Jones Newswires

NEW YORK -- Former "broker to the stars" Dana Giacchetto has won an early release from federal prison.

Mr. Giacchetto, who adopted the glamourous, club-hopping lifestyle of his Hollywood A-List clients before his April 2000 arrest on fraud charges, recently got two years wiped off his nearly five-year prison sentence.

"He was a model prisoner," explains his lawyer, Ronald P. Fischetti.

Mr. Giacchetto rose to Tinseltown prominence in the late 1990s, when he parlayed friendships with Leonardo DiCaprio, Cameron Diaz, Ben Affleck and others into a lucrative investment advisory business. But the high-flying life ended when he was charged and later convicted of swindling his luminary clients out of nearly $10 million.

According to his lawyer, Mr. Giacchetto was picked up last Thursday by his longtime fiancee, Allegra Brosco, at the prison in Allenwood, Pa., and driven to a halfway house in the Bronx, N.Y., which will be his home for the next six months. He'll be permitted to work at a regular job, but, alas, he's "not allowed to go out to dinner or the movies," Mr. Fischetti said.

Already, rumors are swirling about a book deal, appearances on late-night comedy shows, and renewed friendships with Leo and others.

Mr. Fischetti wouldn't comment except to say Mr. Giacchetto has received "a number of letters and calls of support" from friends and celebrities. Mr. Giacchetto, incidentally, blamed many of his missteps on drug problems, and got one year off his sentence because he was admitted into a drug rehabilitation program.

What's ahead for the one-time money manager, who at his February 2001 sentencing tearfully said he "crashed and burned?"

"He is an extremely intelligent young man who I think -- when this is all behind him -- will go back to being someone who is very successful in the entertainment world," Mr. Fischetti predicts.

Advising stars about their money is no longer an option for Mr. Giacchetto, who ran the firm Cassandra Group. He has been permanently barred from the investment business by the Securities and Exchange Commission.

-Colleen DeBaise, Dow Jones Newswires; 212-227-201
smartmoney.com

He is a dumbass that should be selling used cars.

Jack