Is this the same "Robert Pratt" in the anthrax story?
21 Charged in Notorious Stock 'Boiler Room' Brokers Accused of Using Unscrupulous Tactics Feb. 9, 2000
By Carol Huang
NEW YORK (APBnews.com) -- Federal authorities today indicted 21 brokers and dealers who worked for one of Wall Street's most notorious "boiler room" operations before an investigation forced it to close.
Among those indicted were former supervisors and managers at Sterling Foster & Co., which shut its doors in 1997 shortly after the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) obtained a court order that February to suspend the firm's activities.
The investigation into Sterling Foster & Co. unveiled a particularly egregious example of a Wall Street "boiler room," a firm at which brokers push dubious stocks using a variety of unscrupulous tactics and make it virtually impossible for clients to sell their holdings once prices fall.
"At its peak, there were approximately 400 brokers at Sterling Foster, and our investigation is continuing," said Andrew Geist, senior associate regional director for the SEC in New York, whose office has filed civil charges of fraud against 18 of those indicted.
Geist added that some say the firm's notoriety helped inspire Boiler Room, a movie opening this month that depicts the scramble among young brokers pressured to sell questionable stocks.
Company president pleaded guilty
The indictment filed by the U.S. attorney's office for the Southern District of New York accuses the indicted brokers of baiting clients with blue-chip stocks before convincing them to switch into stocks that were being manipulated by the firm. The indictment also alleges that the brokers made unauthorized purchases in their customers' accounts and failed to take and execute customers' requests to sell out of bad holdings.
The indictment said the brokers used these tactics in six public offerings, five of which were underwritten by Sterling Foster. These six public offerings were the same named in a November 1998 indictment against Randolph Pace and Alan Novich, whom investigators say secretly controlled Sterling Foster.
Investigators in that case accused Pace and his associates of earning more than $200 million in illegal profits.
Sterling's president, Adam Lieberman, pleaded guilty to securities fraud in November 1998, Geist said.
The indictment said the brokers worked at Sterling Foster from 1994 to 1997. It accuses the men of other common boiler-room tactics, including the use of scripted pitches to sell stocks and the coercion of clients, who were told they would have to buy a stock after it became available on the market before they were given access to an initial public offering of the stock.
Suspects face five-year sentences
The brokers named in the indictment are Frank Monroig, 39, and Andrew Tursi, 30, of St. James; Timothy Matthews, 39, of Stonybrook; David Abish, 30, of New York City; Christopher Betts, 31, of Kings Park; Mark Charvat, 26, and James Corcoran, 27, of Patchogue; Michael Cohn, 29, of Lawrence; Charles Distefano, 31, of Middle Island; Paul Feeny, 27, of Stamford, Conn.; Joseph Ferrante, 28, and David Weeks, 29, of Huntington; Stephen Gourlay, 28, of Hicksville; Brian Kearney, 31, of Farmingdale; Michael Maccaull, 28, of Hauppage; John Massaro, 33, of Commack; Robert Pratt, 30, of Coram; Dennis Rueb, 27, of Glendale; William Scuteri, 29, of Charlottesville, Va.; Scott Siegel, 28, of Dix Hills; and Donald Turney, 29, of Pompano Beach, Fla.
Five of the brokers indicted also worked at VTR Capital Inc., another firm that has since become defunct, prosecuting attorneys said.
The brokers face one count of securities, mail and wire fraud and five counts of securities fraud. Each faces up to five years in prison for the first charge and $250,000 or more in fines. On the second charge, each count carries a maximum penalty of 10 years in prison and $1 million or more in fines.
Carol Huang is an APBnews.com staff writer (carol.huang@apbnews.com). |