SI
SI
discoversearch

We've detected that you're using an ad content blocking browser plug-in or feature. Ads provide a critical source of revenue to the continued operation of Silicon Investor.  We ask that you disable ad blocking while on Silicon Investor in the best interests of our community.  If you are not using an ad blocker but are still receiving this message, make sure your browser's tracking protection is set to the 'standard' level.
Biotech / Medical : HEB, Hemispherx Biopharma (AMEX)NEW -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: afrayem onigwecher who wrote (797)9/26/2003 10:48:17 AM
From: StockDung  Respond to of 857
 
FED PROBE INTO LANCER TIES ASKED By CHRISTOPHER BYRON

September 26, 2003 -- Connecticut officials yesterday called for a federal probe of business ties linking organized crime figure Abraham Salaman figure to the loss of more than $19 million in Connecticut State Pension Fund money via investments in penny stocks controlled by the Lancer hedge funds.
In Miami, meanwhile, a closely watched bribery and kickback trial has begun in which the Lancer fund's second-in-command, Bruce D. Cowen, is expected to testify as a key government witness to charges that he and two others conspired to bribe a federal undercover agent using shares of a Lancer controlled penny stock.

Cowen's arrest in July 2002 as part of an FBI sting dubbed Operation Bermuda Short triggered a series of expose articles by The Post.

The Lancer hedge fund group, which claimed $1 billion of assets under management at the start of this year, sued the Post for libel over its series.

But the suit was dropped after the Securities and Exchange Commission investigated the fund's investment practices and shut the funds down in July, charging that the group's managing director, Michael Lauer, had grossly overstated Lancer's assets and performance to lure in unsuspecting investors.

Meanwhile, sources in the case say that the federal investigation that began with the Operation Bermuda Short probe has now broadened out to include Lancer-related activities in Dallas, Los Angeles and the tax haven island nation of Tortola.

In addition, more than a dozen civil lawsuits have been filed by investors seeking to recover their money from the fund. The government-appointed receiver in the case filed a report earlier this month saying that the fund's books are in such disarray that it has so far been impossible to establish what portfolio assets the fund actually owns.



Now, Connecticut Treasurer Denise Napier has joined the fray, formally requesting both the Securities and Exchange Commission and the U.S. Department of Justice to investigate whether a Windsor, Conn., investment firm called Pioneer Ventures Associates may be involved in Lancer-related activity.

The Pioneer firm first surfaced in a Connecticut state scandal in 1999 when the company invested some $24.7 million of Connecticut State Pension money in three apparently worthless penny stocks.

Last month, The Post reported the companies - Fidelity First Financial, American Interactive Media and NeuroCorp International - were all controlled by Lancer along with Abe Salaman, a twice-convicted federal securities law felon.

The Post further reported that Pioneer had direct ties of its own to Salaman and that Pioneer's managing director, John Ferraro, was a member of the board of directors of Fidelity First Financial until May of this year, when he resigned.



To: afrayem onigwecher who wrote (797)9/29/2003 2:11:40 PM
From: StockDung  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 857
 
SEC target Lancer trades irrational, Kelly trial hears

2003-09-29 13:41 ET - Street Wire

by Erik Schelzig in Miami

James T. Kelly, on trial for securities fraud in the U.S. District Court for the Southern District of Florida in Miami, listened as two more prosecution witnesses took the stand to testify against him on Sept. 25.

Mr. Kelly is accused of conspiring with two former co-defendants in a kickback and stock manipulation scheme involving shares of Lighthouse Fast Ferry Inc. As previously reported by Stockwatch, the Lighthouse Fast Ferry shares that were to be used in the scheme allegedly belonged to the purported $1-billion (U.S.) Lancer Group. (All future amounts are in U.S. dollars.)

In an unrelated civil action, the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) shut down the Lancer operation on July 10, 2003, levelling allegations of massive fraud against Lancer and its principal architect Michael Lauer.

The charges against Mr. Kelly stem from a two-year joint FBI-RCMP undercover sting code-named Operation Bermuda Short that resulted in 23 indictments and charges against 58 individuals from the U.S. and Canada.

Mr. Kelly, the former president of Shamrock Partners Ltd., a brokerage firm based in Media, Pa., was arrested in August of 2002 along with his Shamrock partner Joseph Huard and business associate Bruce Cowen. Mr. Huard and Mr. Cowen copped pleas and are expected to testify against Mr. Kelly.

Mr. Kelly's trial opened on Sept. 23, but because of a longer than anticipated jury selection process the court did not hear opening statements until Sept. 24.

Thomas McCann of the Fraud Section of the U.S. Department of Justice in Washington took over for his co-counsel Thomas Hanusik to conduct the direct examination of two prosecution witnesses on Thursday.

THE LANCER TRADES

Former Shamrock trader John Doyle testified that he made transactions for account number 4736-5997, otherwise known as the Lancer Group.

Under questioning from Mr. McCann, Mr. Doyle said that he made several end-of-month transactions, some even in the last hour of the last trading day of the month.

Lancer was Mr. Kelly's client, Mr. Doyle said, adding that Lancer was also Shamrock's largest client. The end of the month brought the highest activity for the Lancer account, Mr. Doyle said, especially for penny stocks and Lighthouse Fast Ferry in particular.

Mr. Kelly "said that Lancer wanted the stock to be out at a certain price," Mr. Doyle said.

According to Mr. Doyle, the last minute trades at the end of the month made him nervous.

"There was an audit done and in the audit there was concern about Lancer's order forms," Mr. Doyle said. "I talked to Mr. Huard about it."

Mr. Huard told him that he would speak to Mr. Kelly about the audit, Mr. Doyle testified.

Mr. Kelly's lawyer, Norman Moscowitz, challenged Mr. Doyle's account of getting cold feet about the last minute trades, asking whether, in addition to Mr. Huard, he had told any regulatory body, from the SEC through local state authorities about his concerns.

Mr. Doyle said he did not.

Mr. Moscowitz also wanted to know whether there was anything inherently wrong with making trades at the end of the month.

"Is there any SEC rule which prevents traders from buying stock at the end of the month, in hopes that the price would go up?" Mr. Moscowitz asked.

"Not that I know of," Mr. Doyle replied.

Mr. Doyle also agreed with Mr. Moscowitz that trading levels were usually higher at the end of the month.

"It's not just the case for Lighthouse Fast Ferry, correct?" Mr. Moscowitz asked.

"Correct," Mr. Doyle stated.

"It's not just case for Shamrock, correct?" the defence lawyer queried.

"Correct," Mr. Doyle replied.

Mr. Moscowitz probed whether Mr. Doyle expected to gain anything from his testimony, asking whether Mr. Doyle was worried about getting charged by the FBI for his role in the Lighthouse Fast Ferry transactions.

Mr. Doyle said he was still concerned that charges might be brought against him.

Mr. Doyle also acknowledged that he racked up $200,000 in losses in his trader account at Shamrock, and still hadn't paid back Mr. Kelly for his losses.

Returning to a theme from his opening statement, Mr. Kelly asked whether Mr. Doyle found Lighthouse Fast Ferry to be a legitimate operation. Mr. Doyle said he did, and explained that he had traveled to New Jersey to inspect Lighthouse's operation. He even took a ride on one of the ferries, he said.

"You thought this was a good, solid investment in Lighthouse Fast Ferry?" Mr. Moscowitz asked.

Mr. Doyle said he did, explaining that he found it to be a "very professional" operation. He tried to help find $3 million in funding for Lighthouse, of which he would have made a cut, if he had succeeded. Any proceeds would be split equally with Mr. Kelly, Mr. Doyle testified.

Mr. Moscowitz tried several times to ask Mr. Doyle about his perception about Mr. Kelly's health issues, but Judge Cecilia Altonaga sustained the government objections in each instance. Mr. Moscowitz argued, to no avail, that the ailments of Mr. Kelly "go to their relationship." After a sidebar conference, the line of questioning was dropped.

In his opening statement, Mr. Moscowitz indicated that Mr. Kelly's health problems led him to become detached from the every-day dealings of Shamrock and rely on his friends to run the business.

RAISING RED FLAGS

The government's next witness was Robert Lowry, formerly of the SEC's enforcement division. He testified about "red flags" he detected in the trading patterns of Shamrock's client, the Lancer Group.

"I saw that there was a pattern of trading activity that raised, in my opinion, red flags," Mr. Lowry said.

In all but one month between April and December 2001, trading volume spiked on the last day of the month, Mr. Lowry said.

Mr. Lowry tabulated the trading data to show that trading in Lighthouse Fast Ferry stock on the last day of the month during the period under review was almost as high as the rest of the months combined.

From April to December 2001, 620,800 Lighthouse shares were traded during all but the last day of the month. The total shares traded on the last day of the months under review amounted to 605,800 shares.

In April the average daily trading volume of Lighthouse was 4,211 shares. On the last day of the month, that amount jumped to 122,400 shares -- a 2559.5-per-cent increase, Mr. Lowry testified.

In August 2001, the daily average volume was 1,767 shares, which jumped to 92,000 on the last day of the month.

He found another red flag in data that showed a single customer, Lancer Group, accounted for the vast majority of the trades, he said.

Among other things, Mr. Lowry testified that Lancer accounted for 94 per cent of the Lighthouse shares purchased at the end of April. He noted that the previous day's closing price was 90 cents, but by the end of the following day the stock closed at $1.50, a 66.7-per-cent increase.

In September and November, Lancer accounted for more than 97 percent of the month-end Lighthouse trades. On the last day of trading for the other six months, Lancer was responsible for the purchase of all Lighthouse shares, Mr. Lowry testified.

"It was a deliberate effort by Shamrock to raise the price of the stock by the end of the day ... " Mr. Lowry said. "If it was not Lancer's intention to buy the stock, they wouldn't have placed the orders all in one day. By placing a large order at the end of the day for any stock -- but particularly for a stock as thinly traded as Lighthouse -- it was predictable what would happen. It would go up."

Mr. Lowry charted the end-of-day trades to show that Shamrock kept buying Lighthouse stock, even as the price went up.

"Curiously, the bid price remains the same," Mr. Lowry said.

"The market was not competitive," he said. "A competitive market is one where the economic forces of supply and demand determine the price."

Mr. Lowry also argued that it did not make sense for Shamrock to continue buying Lighthouse stock as the price increased, when the next-highest bidder was 40 cents below Shamrock's offer.

"At this time Shamrock's bid was at $1.50, and the next highest bid price was at $1.10," Mr. Lowry said.

"This activity is not economically rational," he said.

Mr. Lowry's assessment of the price increase at the end of the month was that it was an "artificial influence" from Lancer, Shamrock and another broker, Hermitage.

Mr. Moscowitz disputed Mr. Lowry's assertions about manipulating the Lighthouse share price. Writing up the month-end share prices on a poster board, he showed how the month-end prices of the shares weren't always higher than the previous month's close.

"The price goes down seven times, up only five times," Mr. Moscowitz observed. In terms of quarters, the price went up for two and down for two.

Mr. Moscowitz illustrated his example by asking Mr. Lowry to calculate how much money would be earned on an initial investment of 1,000 shares in December 2000, at the price of $2.19. Going month by month, Mr. Moscowitz got Mr. Lowry to say that the thousand share investment would lose money vis-a-vis the initial investment by the end of the period under review.

Given that set of assumptions, "that would be correct," Mr. Lowry said.

On re-direct, Mr. McCann asked Mr. Lowry whether "individuals need to make money on a stock for manipulation to occur?"

"No," Mr. Lowry answered.

The trial schedule took Friday off so a jury member could observe Rosh Hashanah. The trial continues Monday with FBI agent Mike Palasek. Agent Palasek's testimony will include the playing of undercover recordings for the jury.

(With files from Lee M. Webb.)

(More information regarding Mr. Kelly's trial is available in Stockwatch articles published on Sept. 25 and 26, 2003.)



To: afrayem onigwecher who wrote (797)10/1/2003 11:19:25 AM
From: StockDung  Respond to of 857
 
SEC known Kelly hears secret tapes in Miami fraud trial

2003-10-01 10:10 ET - Street Wire

by Erik Schelzig in Miami

and Lee M. Webb

James T. Kelly, on trial for securities fraud in the U.S. District Court for the Southern District of Florida in Miami, listened as secretly recorded telephone conversations about an alleged kickback and stock manipulation scheme were introduced by an undercover FBI agent and played for the jury in Mr. Kelly's Bermuda Short trial on Sept. 29 and 30. If convicted, Mr. Kelly could face a maximum penalty of 25 years in prison.

Mr. Kelly is accused of conspiring with two former co-defendants in a kickback and stock manipulation scheme involving shares of Lighthouse Fast Ferry Inc. As previously reported by Stockwatch, the Lighthouse Fast Ferry shares that were to be used in the scheme allegedly belonged to the purported $1-billion (U.S.) Lancer Group, which was shut down by the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) on July 10 amid allegations of massive fraud. (All future amounts are in U.S. dollars.)

The charges against Mr. Kelly stem from a two-year joint FBI-RCMP undercover sting code-named Operation Bermuda Short that resulted in 23 indictments and charges against 58 individuals from the U.S. and Canada. Mr. Kelly, the former president of Shamrock Partners Ltd., a brokerage firm based in Media, Pa., was arrested in August of 2002 along with his Shamrock partner Joseph Huard and business associate Bruce Cowen.

Mr. Huard, who also faced separate Bermuda Short charges along with Howe Street promoter Les Price in connection with an alleged kickback scheme involving Mr. Price's Medinah Minerals Inc., flipped and pled guilty in both cases on Dec. 18, 2002.

Based largely on Mr. Huard's co-operation following his plea bargain, the grand jury issued a superseding indictment against Mr. Kelly and Mr. Cowen on May 22. In addition to the original charges involving a kickback scheme, the superseding indictment charged Mr. Kelly and Mr. Cowen with stock manipulation involving Lighthouse Fast Ferry.

Mr. Cowen, a key figure in the allegedly fraudulent Lancer Group and close associate of its disgraced leader Michael Lauer, maintained his innocence with respect to the Bermuda Short charges until one month before the trial. On Aug. 21, Mr. Cowen negotiated a plea agreement, leaving Mr. Kelly to face the jury alone. Both Mr. Huard and Mr. Cowen are now on the prosecution's witness list and are expected to testify against Mr. Kelly.

In the prosecution's opening statement on Sept. 24, Thomas Hanusik of the Fraud Section of the U.S. Department of Justice told the jury that greed motivated Mr. Kelly to conspire to engage in securities fraud. As outlined by Mr. Hanusik, in addition to stock manipulation the alleged fraudulent scheme involved a planned $5-million transaction for Lancer-owned restricted shares of Lighthouse Fast Ferry, a $900,000 kickback to a purported corrupt fund manager and a further $600,000 to be equally split among Mr. Huard, Mr. Cowen and Mr. Kelly.

Miami defence attorney Norman Moscowitz, representing Mr. Kelly, said in his opening statement that Mr. Kelly had done nothing wrong. According to Mr. Moscowitz, his client was "going through some very tough mental and physical problems" at the time and was relying on his friends to operate his business. The defence lawyer told the jury that Mr. Kelly's name did not appear on any of the documents that would be introduced by the prosecution and the ailing former Shamrock president only participated in three of the 35 to 40 recorded telephone conversations.

On Monday and Tuesday the jury got to listen to a selection of the conversations recorded by an undercover FBI agent and two co-operating witnesses as the alleged kickback and stock manipulation scheme was hatched and ironed out in the summer of 2001. Special Agent Michael Palasek, who played the undercover role of a corrupt securities trader for a fictitious British mutual fund, introduced the tapes and provided testimony regarding the context of the conversations.

TAPING THE DEAL

Mr. Palasek testified that for most of his 14 years with the Federal Bureau of Investigation he has worked with the White Collar Crime Squad in Miami. The FBI agent told the court that he began working on Operation Bermuda Short in May of 2000, but did not start participating in the active investigation until June of 2001.

Mr. Palasek told the court that two co-operating witnesses, David Jones and Robert Schlien, introduced him to Shamrock's Mr. Huard.

In the prosecution's opening statement, the jury heard that Mr. Jones and Mr. Schlien were co-operating with the government under pressure of pending fraud charges in the Southern District of Florida. Defence attorney Mr. Moscowitz characterized the pair as "swindlers" who ran pump-and-dump stock promotions. As reported by Stockwatch on Sept. 26, Mr. Jones and Mr. Schlien are repeat securities violators well known to regulators.

According to Mr. Palasek, the earliest conversations with Mr. Huard were not taped because he was not yet a target of the investigation.

"The initial conversation with Mr. Huard came after the FBI received a tip about a stock being manipulated," Mr. Palasek testified, drawing a hearsay objection from Mr. Moscowitz. Judge Cecilia Altonaga overruled the defence attorney's objection and Mr. Palasek went on to explain that the allegedly manipulated stock that was the subject of the FBI tip was Medinah Minerals.

In the recorded conversations played for the jury, Mr. Jones and Mr. Schlien operate in tag-team fashion as they discuss the particulars of the scheme with Mr. Kelly and his former co-defendants, Mr. Cowen and Mr. Huard. Undercover FBI agent Mr. Palasek is seldom heard speaking on the tapes. Mr. Palasek told the jury that he spent much of his time during the recorded conversations taking notes.

Mr. Palasek recounted for the jury how the co-operating witnesses and Mr. Huard negotiated the deal for a $5-million purchase of Lighthouse Fast Ferry shares. The government informants initially asked for a 20-per-cent fee on top of the purchase price.

In a June 5, 2001, conversation, Mr. Huard is heard telling Mr. Jones and Mr. Schlien that he had figured out a deal.

"Is Jim (Kelly) happy?" one of the co-operating witnesses asked.

Mr. Huard replied that Mr. Kelly was out of town.

Mr. Palasek testified that a deal was eventually hammered out whereby 18 per cent of the planned $5-million transaction would be paid to the undercover agent and his associates and a further 12 per cent would go to Mr. Kelly, Mr. Huard and Mr. Cowen. On the $5-million transaction the undercover sting operatives would receive $900,000 while Mr. Kelly, Mr. Huard and Mr. Cowen would split another $600,000.

The deal also involved a $10,000 payoff for what the undercover FBI agent referred to as the "due diligence kids" in the Atlanta office of Connelly & Williams Associates Inc., the purported U.S. representative of the fictitious British fund that was supposed to purchase the $5-million worth of Lighthouse Fast Ferry shares.

In the taped conversations the co-operating witnesses told Mr. Huard and Mr. Kelly that the 18-per-cent payment was to be deposited to the account of Southern Star Shipping Ltd., a company registered in Bern, Switzerland.

According to court filings in the case, Southern Star Shipping was purportedly used by the undercover agent to receive kickbacks without the knowledge of the fictitious fund.

(In a separate Bermuda Short money-laundering sting involving disgraced Vancouver lawyer and Howe Street promoter Martin Chambers, dubbed the "Lex Luthor of crime" in Western Canada, Southern Star Shipping was made out to be the account of a cocaine cartel front man. On Sept. 4, a Miami jury found Mr. Chambers guilty on all five counts of money laundering.)

In explaining the Southern Star Shipping deal to Mr. Huard and Mr. Kelly, the role-playing co-operating witness asked whether their conference call was being recorded, and only continued after being assured that it was not being taped.

In an earlier taped conversation with Mr. Cowen, Mr. Jones insisted that "the paperwork cannot and will not mention the 18 per cent put back to Southern Star Shipping." In the same conversation, it was agreed that the $10,000 payoff for the Connelly & Williams due diligence men would be invoiced as consulting fees by the undercover agent for Mr. Mr. Cowen.

According to Mr. Palasek, Mr. Huard and Mr. Kelly told the undercover crew that Lancer would sell the approximately 3.12 million Lighthouse Fast Ferry shares to Berwin Capital or Mr. Cowen's Capital Research for $1.12 per share.

"They would then sell them to us, Connelly & Williams, for $1.60," Mr. Palasek testified, going on to explain that the difference of 48 cents per share made up the total 30 per cent that was going to be taken as undisclosed commission on the deal.

In a July 9, 2001, conversation, Mr. Kelly broaches the subject of the trading in Lighthouse Fast Ferry shares and another fund's involvement in the company. A transcript of portions of that conversation is included in early prosecution court filings. According to the allegations, the other unidentified fund is Lancer and Mr. Kelly is talking about manipulating the month-end share price of Lighthouse Fast Ferry.

"Yeah, we have a retail interest with the clients we also have, uh, the largest holder, and institution that has made a significant investment into it," Mr. Kelly says, according to the transcript. "I'm a partner in a, in a group that filed a 13D in the company and we are active buyers of the stock, uh, and participants in the company along the way here."

"Okay," the co-operating witness responds.

"Uhh there one of the things that we need to understand is what the, the fund, is it the fund's object that it be, is there a, is there a reporting time or a time that they need the price of stock to be at a, uh, significantly higher level, uh, in other words do they mark to the market their portfolio at the end of every month, on the fifteenth of the month is there a certain date that each month or each quarter..." Mr. Kelly continues before being interrupted by another telephone ringing.

"That it's important to have a print at a say, you know or the last trade of the day or the month or the quarter, um, you know how do they normally work their reporting?" Mr. Kelly picks up the conversation.

The co-operating witness advises that the fund that he is involved with reports its investment results at the end of every month.

"Under, understand that the institutions that are, in this deal also have the same they like to, they try to buy the stock as low as they can after month's end, and at month end they like to get it at the highest possible price," Mr. Kelly says.

"Well what, what..." the co-operating witness begins.

"But they have the same objective," Mr. Kelly says.

Mr. Palasek testified that by "they," Mr. Kelly meant Lancer.

In another recorded conversation, the undercover operatives indicated to Mr. Huard, Mr. Cowen and Mr. Kelly that the British fund was concerned that there might be a sell-off of Lighthouse Fast Ferry shares after the $5-million investment was made and that was why it was important for them to know who held shares in the company.

The undercover FBI agent said that Connelly & Williams would open a $300,000 to $400,000 account at Shamrock that would be used to "shore up" Lighthouse Fast Ferry's share price, if it began to slip significantly.

"Is there any chance that Lancer would go crazy when they get the money and not put the money back into the company?" one of the co-operating witnesses asked Mr. Huard in a July 11, 2001, conversation.

"No," Mr. Huard answered.

CONSULTING FOR CAPITAL

Mr. Palasek's testimony under direct examination by Thomas McCann, Mr. Hanusik's co-counsel for the prosecution, continued on Tuesday. In addition to further taped conversations, Mr. McCann introduced a number of documents as evidence.

Using an overhead projector, Mr. McCann displayed an invoice written by Mr. Palasek on July 11, 2001, billing Mr. Cowen's Capital Research $10,000 for "research related to emerging growth companies."

Mr. Palasek testified that this money was meant for the kickback to the purported due diligence men at Connelly & Williams.

Also projected by prosecutor Mr. McCann was a draft of the consulting agreement between Southern Star Shipping and Capital Research, which was a cover for the larger payback in the planned $5-million stock deal, the FBI agent testified.

A recorded July 13 conversation had one of the co-operating witnesses, Mr. Jones, asking Mr. Kelly to "stay on Bruce" to get the documents done.

In a July 16 conversation with Mr. Cowen regarding the consulting agreement, the co-operating witnesses told Mr. Cowen that they "left things vague in there like we usually do," and that this was "boiler-plate language."

Other documents presented by the government included an E-mail between Mr. Jones and Mr. Cowen with detailed wire instructions for the $16,000 test trade in which $10,000 was allegedly kicked back for the due diligence officers at Connelly & Williams.

Mr. Kelly had some fun at one the co-operating witness's expense in a July 18 phone call to Shamrock. Mr. Jones called Shamrock to ask for Mr. Huard, and Kelly repeatedly asked Mr. Jones to spell his name until finally acquiescing and passing the phone over to Mr. Huard.

By July 19, the test trade had been made, and the co-operating witnesses called Mr. Cowen to organize the payback of $10,000. In a telephone conversation from California, Mr. Cowen said that he would take care of it.

"I'm going to write the cheque now and it'll be there tomorrow morning via FedEx," Mr. Cowen was recorded as saying.

Mr. McCann projected a copy of the $10,000 cheque on the overhead, which was made out to Agent Palasek's undercover identity. In the memo line, Mr. Cowen had written "Consulting."

Asked whether he had provided any consulting to Capital Research, Mr. Palasek replied that he had not.

With the test trade completed and the purported due diligence officers paid off, the undercover agent and the co-operating witnesses began to focus on the larger transaction.

A "BLUNDER" IN NEW YORK

A meeting was set up in New York for July 24, 2001, where the undercover operatives would meet with Mr. Huard and Mr. Cowen, along with two executives from Lighthouse Fast Ferry, and Mr. Lauer, the head of the Lancer Group.

According to Mr. Palasek, the men were told not to mention to the unreported commission to the Lighthouse Fast Ferry officials. Secretly, though, the co-operating witnesses and the agent agreed to bring up Southern Star Shipping to see if the Lighthouse Fast Ferry men knew about the arrangement.

When the co-operating witness Mr. Jones mentioned Southern Star Shipping during the meeting he was quickly cut off by Mr. Cowen and Mr. Lauer.

"Lauer said we'll talk about this later," Mr. Palasek testified.

After the meeting Mr. Schlien acted as if he was upset with Mr. Jones for bringing up Southern Star Shipping.

"It's not their concern about the commissions," Mr. Huard chimed in.

"He was a little disgusted that he brought up the payment in front of (the Lighthouse Fast Ferry principals)," Mr. Palasek testified.

Discussions later that day centred on how the 18 per cent of the deal would be wired back to the Southern Star Shipping account. Eventually they settled on moving the money through Capital Research.

"I can get Jim (Kelly) to do it," Mr. Huard said, referring to the wire transfer. "I'm not authorized, Jim is."

After the New York meeting, the FBI agent and the co-operating witnesses began to devise a way to withdraw from the $5-million deal without letting on that it had been a sting.

In subsequent conversations, Mr. Schlien said that the fictitious partner in the kickback scheme, the British fund manager known only as Nigel, was suffering from a slew of health and personal problems.

Mr. Schlien said that Nigel had been caught cheating on his wife, and after divorce proceedings were begun, he was hospitalized with chest pains, he told Mr. Huard and Mr. Cowen in separate conversations.

Additionally, Mr. Schlien played up the purported "slip-of-tongue" from his partner Mr. Jones in the New York meeting, and that Nigel had become wary that the Lighthouse Fast Ferry representatives might disclose the unreported commission if they were ever investigated by the SEC.

Asked by Nigel what the Lighthouse Fast Ferry managers knew, Mr. Schlien told Mr. Cowen on July 26, "I said they know more than they should know, since our blond fat friend here made a blunder and talked a little too much."

After the meeting in New York Mr. Schlien and Mr. Jones were involved in heated discussion, Mr. Schlien told Mr. Cowen.

"David went a little too far with the Lighthouse people, and in fact we had a little blowup about it later at the Waldorf," he said.

Mr. Cowen tried to assure Mr. Schlien that the Lighthouse Fast Ferry men had not understood what had been said about the Southern Star Shipping account, and that Mr. Lauer "understands the situation."

In ensuing conversations with Mr. Huard and then with Mr. Cowen, Mr. Schlien said he would be travelling to England to meet with Nigel and to try to convince him to make the deal happen.

Even after the trip, though, Mr. Schlien said he was unable to convince Nigel, since he was a "different man."

In calls throughout August and ending on Sept. 5, Mr. Schlien continued to blame Nigel's weariness, health and divorce for being unable to make the deal happen. A worsening economic situation and stock market also didn't encourage investment, he said.

Mr. Palasek testified that the $5-million deal never went off, and Operation Bermuda Short continued on through August 2002.

For the last 30 minutes of the trial day on Sept. 30, Mr. Moscowitz began his cross-examination of Mr. Palasek, which is expected to last through much of Wednesday.

In a sample of things to come, Mr. Moscowitz questioned the FBI agent as to why so little of the recorded conversations included the sole remaining defendant and why Mr. Kelly had not been invited to the New York meeting, the only face-to-face meeting between the agent and the targets in this case.

Stockwatch will continue its coverage of the trial, picking up Mr. Moscowitz's cross-examination of Mr. Palasek tomorrow.

(More information regarding Mr. Kelly's trial is available in Stockwatch articles published on Sept. 25, 26 and 29, 2003.)



To: afrayem onigwecher who wrote (797)10/3/2003 11:26:35 PM
From: StockDung  Respond to of 857
 
SEC known Kelly hears Huard testimony in fraud trial

2003-10-03 18:28 ET - Street Wire

by Erik Schelzig in Miami

James T. Kelly, on trial for securities fraud, listened to the testimony of his former business associate and former co-defendant Joseph Huard in the U.S. District Court for the Southern District of Florida in Miami on Thursday. Mr. Huard negotiated a plea bargain in the case and is now a key prosecution witness. Mr. Kelly faces a possible 25 years in prison if convicted.

The charges against Mr. Kelly stem from a two-year joint FBI-RCMP undercover sting code-named Operation Bermuda Short that resulted in 23 indictments and charges against 58 penny stock players from the U.S. and Canada last year. Mr. Kelly is accused of conspiring with former co-defendants Mr. Huard and Bruce Cowen in a kickback and stock manipulation scheme involving shares of Lighthouse Fast Ferry Inc.

The Lighthouse Fast Ferry shares that were to be used in the scheme were owned by the purported $1-billion Lancer Group. (All amounts are in U.S. dollars.) In a separate civil action, the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) shut Lancer down on July 10, levelling allegations of massive fraud against the hedge fund operation and its disgraced leader Michael Lauer.

Mr. Kelly, the former president of Shamrock Partners Ltd., a Pennsylvania brokerage firm with a checkered history known to U.S. regulators, was arrested in August of 2002 along with his Shamrock partner Mr. Huard and business associate and key Lancer figure Mr. Cowen.

Mr. Huard pled out last December, providing enough information to the authorities for a U.S. grand jury to issue a superseding indictment against Mr. Kelly and Mr. Cowen on May 22. The superseding indictment added charges of stock manipulation to the original kickback conspiracy charges.

On Aug. 21, just one month before the trial was set to open, Mr. Cowen also turned, hammering out his own plea bargain with prosecutors. Mr. Cowen is also on the prosecution's witness list.

As previously reported by Stockwatch, the alleged kickback scheme involved a proposed $5-million transaction for approximately 3.12 million restricted shares of Lighthouse Fast Ferry owned by Mr. Lauer's Lancer. A fictitious British fund operated by a purported corrupt manager known only as Nigel was supposed to ante up the $5-million through another fictitious U.S. company called Connelly & Williams Associates Inc.

As part of the proposed deal, $900,000 was supposed to be kicked back to the undercover sting operatives and another $600,000 was to be split equally among Mr. Cowen, Mr. Huard and Mr. Kelly. The sting also involved a $10,000 payoff to two purported due diligence officers of Connelly & Williams through a $16,000 "test trade." Once the test trade and $10,000 payoff had been executed, however, the planned $5-million transaction was cancelled.

The alleged stock manipulation also involved Lighthouse Fast Ferry shares. According to the prosecution, Lancer used Mr. Kelly's Shamrock Partners to fraudulently run up the price of Lighthouse Fast Ferry by buying blocks of the thinly traded stock at the end of the month, a fraudulent practice known as "marking the close." The rigged month-end price was then used to value Lancer's holdings of Lighthouse Fast Ferry.

According to prosecutors Thomas Hanusik and Thomas McCann of the U.S. Department of Justice Fraud Section, Mr. Kelly was motivated by greed and was a knowing participant in the kickback and stock manipulation scheme.

Norman Moscowitz, representing Mr. Kelly, disputes the government's allegations, claiming among other things that Lighthouse Fast Ferry was a legitimate company and the proposed $5-million transaction was a good deal. In his opening statement, Mr. Moscowitz also claimed that Mr. Kelly was suffering from physical and mental problems at the time and relied upon his friends to operate his business.

Mr. Huard, presumably one of the friends Mr. Kelly claims to have relied on, took the stand to testify against his former Shamrock associate.

DON'T UPSET A GOOD CLIENT

Mr. Huard's testimony, which began late Wednesday afternoon and ran through all of Thursday, began with him admitting his guilt in two separate Bermuda Short cases.

In addition to the case in which he is now testifying, Mr. Huard pled guilty in another stock manipulation sting involving Howe Street promoter Les Price's Medinah Minerals Inc. Mr. Price's Bermuda Short trial is scheduled to begin on Nov. 3.

"I pled guilty, because I was guilty of these charges," Mr. Huard said.

Mr. Huard said he had known Mr. Kelly for 18 years, and that they had worked together at a company that later went out of business. Mr. Huard testified that the co-operating witnesses in the case, David Jones and Robert Schlien, who helped the undercover FBI agent organize the sting, were also employees in a Florida branch office of the now defunct company.

Mr. Huard told the court that he went on to other jobs after that, and eventually started up a brokerage of his own. He sold 100 percent of that brokerage to Mr. Kelly in 1988 for $15,000, Mr. Huard testified.

Mr. Kelly renamed the company Shamrock Partners, and relocated it to Media, Pa., just outside of Philadelphia. Mr. Huard, identifying himself as a Shamrock "employee" to prosecutor Mr. Hanusik, said he then went to work for Mr. Kelly.

"I wore a number of hats at the firm," Mr. Huard said. "I did what had to be done."

Mr. Huard told the court that he deferred to Mr. Kelly on important issues.

"Jim was the boss, he owned the firm," he said. "What he said went."

The most important function that Mr. Kelly had with Shamrock was his relationship with the Lancer Group, Mr. Huard said.

Mr. Hanusik walked Mr. Huard back through the buy tickets he had shown earlier government witnesses to establish that Mr. Kelly orchestrated the Lancer orders for Lighthouse Fast Ferry, especially at the end of the month.

"Primarily they put their orders in at the end of the month, and at first it wasn't so obvious," Mr. Huard said. "But as time went by, it became more obvious that they were buying stock at the end of the month so they could drive up the price."

The handwriting on the buy tickets was that of Mr. Kelly, Mr. Huard testified.

"The primary contact at Lancer was Marty Garvey, the secondary contact was Michael Lauer and after that it was Bruce Cowen," Mr. Huard testified.

Shown the purchase trends of Lighthouse Fast Ferry shares by Shamrock, Mr. Huard showed Mr. Hanusik how the stock was purchased overwhelmingly at the end of the month.

"Mr. Kelly would come out and tell me and Mr. Doyle and anyone else who was still around to go out and buy the stock, so we could reach a target price," Mr. Huard testified.

"Did you think this was wrong?" the prosecutor asked.

"Yes I did," answered Mr. Huard.

Mr. Huard said that when he left Shamrock in January 2002, he was still working with Lancer and expressed his concern about the end of month trades to Mr. Garvey.

Mr. Huard testified that he later received a call from Mr. Kelly to tell him that "Marty was upset, and you shouldn't upset a good client."

BLATANTLY ILLEGAL

Mr. Huard recounted how he heard from the co-operating witnesses Mr. Jones and Mr. Schlien for the first time when they called to ask whether they could get in on a deal with Medinah Minerals.

Mr. Huard said he called Mr. Price to find out whether he was interested in investors, but at the time Mr. Price said he was not.

"They called me back and I told them that Mr. Price at Medinah had no interest, and they said is there anything else that you're working on, anything else we can do," he said.

Mr. Huard told the court that Mr. Kelly encouraged him to pitch Lighthouse Fast Ferry to Mr. Jones and Mr. Schlien.

"Jim said show them Lighthouse and see if they're interested," Mr. Huard said.

Mr. Kelly was informed about the proposed unreported commission of 15 per cent to 30 per cent, Mr. Huard said.

"He said check it out with Bruce first," Mr. Huard said. "I called Bruce Cowen and I told him Jim said 'I had to talk to you.' And he said, 'Yeah, let's do it.'

"He said he wanted to get it done in the next 10 days. He suggested that we ask for 12 per cent, which we would split four-four-four between Cowen, Mr. Kelly and myself."

The next day, when he called to tell the co-operating witnesses that he could make the deal work, he said he was "shocked" to hear that they also wanted a $10,000 kickback on a test trade to pay off due diligence officers.

"It was obvious they wanted to get some sort of payoff," Mr. Huard said. "I was thinking out loud and said I had to find out if this was legal and appropriate ... because this was blatantly illegal," Mr. Huard testified.

Mr. Huard said that Mr. Kelly responded by telling him to check it out with Mr. Cowen, which he did, and Mr. Cowen said he checked and it was okay.

In a later teleconference with Mr. Kelly and Mr. Huard, the undercover team spoke openly about their need to get their undisclosed payment returned to a Swiss company called Southern Star Shipping Ltd. Before going on, they asked whether they were speaking on a call recorded by Shamrock. Mr. Huard was recorded as saying the call was not being taped.

Mr. Moscowitz had earlier challenged the undercover FBI agent as to whether there was any certainty that Mr. Kelly was even in the room when this conversation had taken place. The agent said he could not guarantee it.

In court on Thursday, Mr. Huard testified that Mr. Kelly was in the room with him during that conversation.

COWEN'S "LAWYER" TALK

Under Mr. Hanusik's direct examination, Mr. Huard's testimony with respect to his reservations regarding the legality of the deal and his subsequent call to Mr. Cowen to check it out caused something of a kerfuffle. In fact, that matter was the subject of a number of pretrial pleadings.

The court had earlier granted the prosecution's motion to exclude testimony that Mr. Cowen purportedly checked with a lawyer about the proposed transaction. Just five days before the trial opened, however, Mr. Moscowitz filed another motion to admit that evidence in support of a "good faith defence."

Put simply, a good faith defence addresses the matter of intent. Evidently Mr. Moscowitz wanted the evidence admitted in order to show that Mr. Kelly had been told by Mr. Huard that Mr. Cowen had checked the deal out with a lawyer and it was legal.

Mr. Moscowitz argued that it did not matter whether Mr. Cowen had really checked with a lawyer. In effect, Mr. Kelly did not intend to be involved in an illegal deal, but in good faith had accepted Mr. Cowen's passed-on claim that a lawyer had vetted the deal.

The prosecution countered that Mr. Kelly was simply attempting "an end-run around the requirements of the Advice of Counsel defense by claiming a Good Faith defense based upon advice of counsel." The government also argued that the matter would just confuse the jury.

In its pretrial pleading, the government also disputed the claim underpinning the defence motion.

"Defendant claims that Huard and Cowen told Kelly of comments by an attorney," the prosecution stated. "This is not true. Neither Cowen nor Huard told Kelly of an attorney's opinion of the undercover kickback scheme."

Another twist was added to the whole matter in a defence filing on Sept. 22, just one day before the trial started. In that filing Mr. Moscowitz reported that on Saturday, Sept. 20, the prosecution turned over a memo recording a prior statement made by Mr. Cowen regarding having checked with a lawyer about the deal.

The document submitted by Mr. Moscowitz was an undated memo to file by a Lancer lawyer, Frank Fico, regarding a Sept. 12, 2002, conversation with Mr. Cowen.

"Mr. Cowen stated that Lighthouse's SEC legal counsel verified the transaction in which he was arrested and gave their authorization," the memo states in part.

The matter was still unresolved when the trial opened on Sept. 23. In a hearing without the jury present on the first day of the trial, Mr. Huard testified before Judge Cecilia Altonaga that upon hearing that the undercover team wanted a $10,000 payment, he called Mr. Cowen to find out whether that would be legal.

Mr. Huard testified that Mr. Cowen had told him that he checked with a lawyer who said it was okay to make the deal.

After the Sept. 23 hearing, Judge Altonaga ruled that statements about Mr. Cowen's legal counsel would not be admissible into trial.

On Oct. 2, the jury was again ushered out while Mr. Moscowitz argued that since Mr. Hanusik's direct examination of Mr. Huard had raised the subject of the telephone call to Mr. Cowen to check out the deal, the door was now open to asking the witness about why Mr. Cowen said the deal could take place.

Mr. Hanusik became animated at Mr. Moscowitz's request. "I saw this coming a mile away," the prosecutor said.

Mr. Hanusik argued that if suddenly Mr. Moscowitz were allowed to ask Mr. Huard about the lawyer that Mr. Cowen allegedly spoke to, it would make it seem as if the government had tried to hide something from the jury, "even though we were following the judge's ruling."

"It's not fair for the jury to think we left this out on purpose," he said.

Judge Altonaga was not convinced.

"So you want to tell them about one part of the conversation, but not about another?" she asked.

"We were operating under orders of the court," Mr. Hanusik said.

The judge said that the versions of the stories had changed with Mr. Huard's testimony.

"What I heard outside the jury's presence was very different from what I heard in the presence of the jury," she said.

Mr. Moscowitz argued that the government had gone into the telephone call with Mr. Cowen knowing that the defence attorney would not be allowed to explore it further.

"It think it's only fair that the jury hear the full extent of the conversation," he said.

The judge reserved judgment on the issue to give the attorneys time to file motions on the issue overnight.

Mr. Moscowitz moved on to other issues for the remainder of the day.

EMPLOYEE OR EQUAL?

In cross-examination, Mr. Moscowitz asked whether Mr. Huard considered himself a loyal business partner and friend of Mr. Kelly's. Mr. Huard said he did.

Mr. Moscowitz then went on to outline other business deals that Mr. Huard had involved himself in, outside of his relationship with Mr. Kelly and Shamrock. On a number of occasions Mr. Huard had to be handed documents about possible deals to refresh his memory before trying to explain them.

Mr. Moscowitz did not appear to be interested in the details, often cutting Mr. Huard off before he finished a response.

Mr. Moscowitz asked Mr. Huard about his understanding about his plea agreement with the government.

In return for pleading guilty to one count each in both of his indictments, he could expect a sentence of 46 to 57 months, Mr. Huard acknowledged.

The only way he could expect a sentence of less than 46 months was if the prosecutors thought he did a good enough job as a witness to warrant a recommendation for a lower sentence, he agreed.

Mr. Huard was far more than the "employee" of Shamrock as he had portrayed himself during direct testimony, Mr. Moscowitz suggested. He showed Mr. Huard documents where he had referred to himself as a partner, founder, vice-president and chief financial officer of Shamrock.

Mr. Huard acknowledged that he had used those terms. He also acknowledged that he was responsible for compliance and clearance issues within Shamrock.

"In fact as far as your responsibilities at the firm, you ultimately considered yourself equal to Mr. Kelly, did you not?" Mr. Moscowitz asked.

"Not equal, but close," Mr. Huard replied. "He owned the firm."

Mr. Kelly did not want his names on many of the official forms; he wanted Mr. Huard and others to deal with everyday affairs, Mr. Moscowitz said.

"Mr. Kelly's favorite thing to do was to get on the phone, get on the machines, and make trades, correct?" Mr. Moscowitz asked.

"Yes, that was his favorite pastime," Mr. Huard replied.

PHONE RECORDS

Towards the end of the afternoon's questioning, Mr. Moscowitz returned to the original deal between the co-operating witnesses and Shamrock.

Mr. Moscowitz asked Mr. Huard if he "started out here trying to commit a crime" when he suggested to Mr. Jones and Mr. Schlien that they might be interested in Lighthouse Fast Ferry.

Mr. Huard replied that he had not, and acknowledged that it was only after preliminary calls with the co-operating witnesses that the two men said they needed an undocumented payment.

"What they tell you is 'the only negative' in this deal is you will have to pay them to get the deal done," Mr. Moscowitz said. "That didn't make you comfortable did it?" Mr. Moscowitz asked.

Mr. Huard said it did not.

"But with approval you'd go through with it, correct?" the defence lawyer asked.

Mr. Huard answered that he would.

Mr. Moscowitz moved on to a series of questions regarding telephone calls and records of those calls.

Mr. Huard acknowledged that once he agreed to cooperate with the government he had reconstructed his telephone conversations during the sting operation with the help of Shamrock phone records.

Those phone records showed numerous telephone conversations with Mr. Cowen in California, but not with Mr. Kelly at his beach home. Mr. Huard explained that this had to do with a certain phone line in the office that did not keep records when he called Mr. Kelly.

Mr. Moscowitz said that after the original discussion of the 18-per-cent payment took place, phone records showed Mr. Huard called Mr. Cowen to discuss it.

"You have no record that you called Jim Kelly, do you?" Mr. Moscowitz asked.

"No, I don't," Mr. Huard replied.

Wrapping up his questioning for the day, Mr. Moscowitz asked whether Mr. Huard had expressed his negative feelings about the $10,000 kickback to Mr. Kelly.

Mr. Huard said he did.

"You expressed to Jim Kelly that you had concerns about this deal that were legal?" Mr. Moscowitz asked.

"No, I did not," Mr. Huard conceded.

The trial continued Friday with the remainder of Mr. Huard's cross-examination and the government redirect. Mr. Cowen is expected to be the next witness.

(With files from Lee M. Webb.)

(More information regarding Mr. Kelly's trial is available in Stockwatch articles published on Sept. 25, 26 and 29; and Oct. 1 and 2, 2003.)



To: afrayem onigwecher who wrote (797)10/7/2003 10:48:02 AM
From: StockDung  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 857
 
SEC known Kelly hears Huard crossed in fraud trial

2003-10-07 09:39 ET - Street Wire

by Erik Schelzig in Miami

James T. Kelly, on trial for securities fraud in the U.S. District Court for the Southern District of Florida in Miami, listened as his defence attorney Norman Moscowitz wrapped up his cross-examination of Mr. Kelly's former business associate and former co-defendant Joseph Huard on Oct. 3. If convicted, Mr. Kelly could face 25 years in prison.

Mr. Kelly, the former head of Pennsylvania-based Shamrock Partners Ltd., is accused of conspiring with former co-defendants Mr. Huard and Bruce Cowen in a kickback and stock manipulation scheme involving shares of Lighthouse Fast Ferry Inc. All three were arrested in August of last year as part of Operation Bermuda Short, a two-year joint FBI-RCMP undercover sting. Mr. Huard and Mr. Cowen negotiated separate plea bargains in the case and are key prosecution witnesses against Mr. Kelly.

On Thursday, Mr. Huard was the first to take the stand to testify against his former Shamrock brokerage boss. Mr. Moscowitz picked up his cross-examination of Mr. Huard on Friday, questioning the witness for about two hours before U.S. prosecutor Thomas Hanusik took over for a 15-minute redirect.

GOING FISHING

Early in his cross-examination, Mr. Moscowitz displayed for the jury a promotion agreement between Shamrock and Lighthouse Fast Ferry inked in January of 2001. Under the terms of the agreement, Shamrock was to receive 10 per cent of any investment in Lighthouse Fast Ferry. Mr. Huard signed the contract on behalf of Shamrock.

Mr. Huard agreed with Mr. Moscowitz's characterization of the agreement as "a standard compensation deal."

The defence lawyer went on to offer an analogy, suggesting that the agreement between Shamrock and the ferry company was similar to closing a deal on a house where both the agent for the seller and the agent for the buyer receive a cut on the deal.

"Could be 10 per cent for you and 10 per cent for them, correct?" Mr. Moscowitz asked.

Mr. Huard agreed.

Just as he had done in his cross-examination of undercover FBI agent Michael Palasek, Mr. Moscowitz challenged Mr. Huard as to whether there was any way to tell that Mr. Kelly heard the discussion in which the undercover team laid out the details of their kickback and undisclosed payment scheme.

Under direct examination, Mr. Huard had testified that Mr. Kelly was in the room during the conference call in which those details were discussed. Mr. Moscowitz again pointed out, however, that there was no recorded vocal participation from Mr. Kelly during that part of the taped discussion.

Walking Mr. Huard through the transcript of the conversation, Mr. Huard acknowledged that while Mr. Kelly had been an active participant in earlier segments of the taped conference call, he was not heard responding to any parts of the undercover team's discussion of the kickbacks and secret payments.

Mr. Huard's attempts to explain that despite his voice not appearing on the tapes Mr. Kelly was in the room were cut off by Mr. Moscowitz as not part of his questions.

Mr. Moscowitz also raised questions about just how much Mr. Kelly really knew about the deal by again bringing attention to the fact that when the undercover operatives were calling around to advise the sting targets that the planned $5-million Lighthouse Fast Ferry share transaction had been cancelled, they did not call Mr. Kelly directly.

"Schlien asks, 'How is Jim?' and you say, 'Jim is considering going fishing,'" Mr. Moscowitz said, pointing out that Mr. Huard did not take the opportunity to give the Mr. Schlien an assessment of Mr. Kelly's feelings about the deal falling through.

"I had been keeping Jim updated -- " Mr. Huard started to respond before being cut off by Mr. Moscowitz.

"That's not my question," the defence lawyer interrupted. "You don't take the opportunity to tell them about Jim's feelings."

Mr. Huard said he did not.

Mr. Moscowitz moved on to challenge earlier government displays in which Mr. Huard testified that Mr. Kelly's handwriting was on Shamrock order tickets for purchases of Lighthouse Fast Ferry stock. Mr. Moscowitz had Mr. Huard read several other tickets and the witness acknowledged that many were in his and other Shamrock employees' handwriting.

Mr. Moscowitz also challenged Mr. Huard's motivation for testifying against Mr. Kelly. Mr. Huard drew back from agreeing with Mr. Moscowitz that he had signed his co-operation agreement to say that he would implicate Mr. Kelly fully as a participant in the kickback and stock manipulation scheme.

The defence lawyer went on to question Mr. Huard about his earlier claims of innocence regarding the scheme.

"You told people, other than your lawyer, that you hadn't done anything wrong," Mr. Moscowitz suggested.

Mr. Huard agreed that he had made those earlier claims.

"You felt that Schlien and Jones set you up, didn't you?" Mr. Moscowitz asked, referring to the co-operating witnesses David Jones and Robert Schlien.

"They set me up, but I went along with it when I should have hung up," Mr. Huard replied.

Mr. Moscowitz later asked, "But you thought what they did was wrong?"

"Yes I did," Mr. Huard answered.

Toward the end of Mr. Moscowitz's cross-examination there was a sidebar discussion, presumably with respect to the defence lawyer's earlier attempt to question Mr. Huard about Mr. Cowen's claim that he had checked the deal out with a lawyer and determined that it was legal. On Thursday, the prosecution had objected vigorously to Mr. Moscowitz attempt to pursue that line of questioning.

With the jury still present on Friday, Judge Cecilia Altonaga did not issue a public ruling on the sidebar discussion. Given that Mr. Moscowitz did not question Mr. Huard about the matter, however, it is likely that the judge would not allow him to pick up those questions in his cross-examination.

In a relatively brief redirect, Mr. Hanusik tried to show that Mr. Moscowitz's theory that Mr. Kelly was not in the room during the conference call in which the details of the alleged kickback scheme were being discussed was false, again drawing testimony from Mr. Huard that Mr. Kelly was indeed present.

Mr. Hanusik also challenged Mr. Moscowitz's earlier suggestion that Mr. Huard was more than just an employee of Shamrock.

In his cross-examination on Thursday, the defence lawyer had presented Mr. Huard with documents that identified him as a partner, founder, vice-president and chief financial officer of Shamrock.

"Was Shamrock Partners a corporation or a partnership?" Mr. Hanusik asked.

Mr. Huard replied that it was a Pennsylvania corporation. He also explained that he was neither a partner nor even a salaried employee; he said he was a contract worker who had to pay his own taxes and health insurance.

"Did you control Jim Kelly?" the prosecutor asked.

"No I did not," Mr. Huard replied with a laugh.

The trial continues. (

With files from Lee M. Webb.)

(More information regarding Mr. Kelly's trial is available in Stockwatch articles published on Sept. 25, 26 and 29; and Oct. 1, 2 and 3, 2003.)



To: afrayem onigwecher who wrote (797)10/8/2003 5:46:34 PM
From: StockDung  Respond to of 857
 
Zi booster Cowen takes the stand in Kelly fraud trial

2003-10-08 13:26 ET - Street Wire

Also Street Wire (C-ZIC) Zi Corp
Also Street Wire (U-ZICA) Zi Corp

by Erik Schelzig in Miami and Lee M. Webb

James T. Kelly, on trial for securities fraud in the U.S. District Court for the Southern District of Florida in Miami, listened as a second former co-defendant and business associate, Bruce Cowen, took the stand to testify against him. If convicted on all seven counts relating to wire, mail and securities fraud, Mr. Kelly could face 25 years in prison.

Mr. Kelly, the former head of Pennsylvania-based Shamrock Partners Ltd., is accused of conspiring with former co-defendants Mr. Cowen and Joseph Huard in a kickback and stock manipulation scheme involving shares of Lighthouse Fast Ferry Inc. All three were arrested in August of last year as part of Operation Bermuda Short, a two-year joint FBI-RCMP undercover sting that led to the arrests of 58 U.S. and Canadian penny stock players.

Mr. Huard and Mr. Cowen negotiated separate plea bargains in the case and are key prosecution witnesses against Mr. Kelly. As reported by Stockwatch, Mr. Huard has already testified against his former Shamrock associate.

While Mr. Huard copped a plea in December of last year, Mr. Cowen maintained his innocence until just one month before the trial. After filing more than 750 pages of motions and pleadings, Mr. Cowen hammered out a plea agreement on Aug. 21.

Mr. Cowen's deal with the government included a non-prosecution agreement for his wife, Kathryn Cowen, also identified as Kathryn Braithwaite in regulatory filings.

Court filings and earlier testimony suggest that Mr. Cowen played a key role in the alleged kickback and stock manipulation scheme that included a planned transaction involving $5-million worth of Lighthouse Fast Ferry shares. (All amounts are in U.S. dollars.)

The proposed sting transaction involved approximately 3.12 million Lighthouse Fast Ferry shares owned by the purported $1-billion Lancer Group. In a separate civil action, the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) shut Lancer down on July 10, levelling allegations of massive fraud against the hedge fund operation and its disgraced leader Michael Lauer. Lancer's assets are now under the control of a court-appointed receiver.

"Lauer and Lancer Management swindled hundreds of millions of dollars from unsuspecting investors and reaped tens of millions of dollars in fraudulent management fees," the SEC claims in a Sept. 8 court filing. Mr. Lauer has denied the substantive allegations in the SEC civil complaint.

According to court documents filed by the SEC in that action, Mr. Cowen is identified as a managing director of Lancer. The U.S. regulator has described Mr. Cowen as "Lauer's right hand man." Mr. Cowen's plea agreement in the Bermuda Short case resolves any federal criminal liability with respect to his involvement with Lancer.

Notwithstanding the fact that he is identified on Lancer documents as a managing director of the hedge fund operation, Mr. Lauer claims that Mr. Cowen was just a consultant to the firm. Whatever the exact nature of Mr. Cowen's relationship with Lancer, his connections to the allegedly fraudulent operation and Mr. Lauer as revealed in court and regulatory filings are extensive.

Among other things, Mr. Cowen and his wife were participants in a number of penny stock companies that made their way into the Lancer portfolios allegedly stuffed with large concentrations of massively overvalued shares of virtually worthless OTC Bulletin Board and pink sheet companies.

According to the SEC allegations, Lancer and Mr. Lauer engaged in fraudulent manipulative trading practices, "marking the close" of a number of stocks in the Lancer portfolios, including thinly traded Lighthouse Fast Ferry. In the separate Bermuda Short criminal case now being heard in Miami, Mr. Kelly is also charged with stock manipulation involving Lighthouse Fast Ferry on behalf of Lancer.

As first reported by Stockwatch on Aug. 6, documents filed in connection with the SEC complaint against Lancer indicate that Mr. Lauer's hedge funds held a massive undisclosed stake in Zi Corp., a money-losing Canadian technology company headquartered in Calgary. Those court filings show that Lancer peeled off more than $97.6-million to sponge up an unreported 18.6 million Zi shares.

In addition to Lancer's staggering Zi holdings, Mr. Lauer also anted up more than $18.1-million to personally acquire an undisclosed 2.87 million shares of Zi. All told, court filings now indicate that Mr. Lauer controlled approximately 21.6 million Zi shares or almost 55 per cent of the company's outstanding shares. Zi claims ignorance regarding the extent of Lancer's stake in the company.

Mr. Cowen evidently had more than a passing interest in Zi, too, given his participation in a number of the company's conference calls along with Mr. Lauer. Mr. Cowen, who variously identified himself as a representative of Capital Research Ltd. and Sterling Technology Partners, claimed to be a major Zi shareholder and served up boosterish comments about the company and its prospects in several conference calls.

Capital Research, Mr. Cowen and his wife, then identified as Kathryn Braithwaite, featured in another Lancer deal involving Zi. According to regulatory filings, Mr. Cowen and Capital Research were instrumental in brokering a deal whereby Mr. Lauer, operating under the auspices of Alpha Omega Group, acquired 82-per-cent control of an American Stock Exchange (AMEX) shell company subsequently renamed JKC Group Inc. for $1.5-million. Following the transaction, Ms. Braithwaite was briefly appointed to the company's board of directors.

Shortly after Mr. Lauer took control of JKC last year, the fortuitously primed AMEX shell acquired a Zi subsidiary in a promissory note and share transaction and changed its name again to Magic Lantern Group Inc. Richard Geist, a penny stock tout and Lancer director, was appointed to Magic Lantern's board of directors along with three Zi directors. Once the dust settled, Lancer and Zi each held approximately 45 per cent of the outstanding Magic Lantern shares.

The jury in Mr. Kelly's fraud trial will not hear much about Mr. Cowen's many connections to Mr. Lauer and Lancer or anything at all about his Zi boosting or his own regulatory baggage.

As previously reported by Stockwatch, in 1999 the SEC enjoined, fined and barred Mr. Cowen from acting as an officer or director of any public company for five years for his fraudulent conduct, including misallocating securities to himself while acting as chief financial officer and then president of TRC Companies Inc.

Mr. Cowen was sworn in following Mr. Huard's testimony on Friday, Oct. 3. The court did not sit on Monday, allowing a jury member to observe Yom Kippur, and Mr. Cowen took the stand again on Tuesday.

GUILTY AND ASHAMED

U.S. prosecutor Thomas McCann called Mr. Cowen to the stand after Mr. Huard's testimony concluded on Friday afternoon. Among his early questions, Mr. McCann asked Mr. Cowen why he had entered a plea of guilty to the kickback and stock manipulation conspiracy charge.

"I pled guilty because I was guilty," said Mr. Cowen, who pleaded guilty just weeks before the trial opened. "I came to terms with something I was ashamed of, and want to put this behind."

Mr. McCann went on to ask about the deal received by Mr. Cowen's wife.

"It's called a non-prosecution agreement," Mr. Cowen said. "That non-prosecution agreement basically gives her immunity."

(In his opening statement on Sept. 24, Mr. Kelly's defence attorney Norman Moscowitz hammered at the non-prosecution deal signed by Mr. Cowen's wife on the same day that Mr. Cowen inked his plea bargain with the prosecutors. Making the argument that Mr. Cowen had much to gain by pleasing the prosecution, Mr. Moscowitz told the jury that the deal with Mr. Cowen's wife included a clause that said her agreement depended on her husband's full co-operation with the government.)

Under Mr. McCann's questioning, Mr. Cowen described himself as a "management consultant" who owned his own company called Sterling Technology Partners. He went on to testify that he began his career with Price Waterhouse in 1974 as an auditor accountant. Over his five years with the company, Mr. Cowen said that he was promoted to senior accountant and finally manager.

Mr. Cowen told the court that he left Price Waterhouse in 1979 to join a subsidiary of TRC Companies where he worked as controller. In 1980 he was promoted to accountant of the parent company and later worked through the vice-president ranks to become president of TRC Companies.

Mr. Cowen testified that his relationship with Mr. Kelly dated back to 1979 or 1980 when Mr. Kelly was a stockbroker. Moving forward, Mr. Cowen said that he later met with Mr. Kelly in 1998 to talk about consulting possibilities.

"He told me that there might be a fit between myself and Michael Lauer," Mr. Cowen said.

According to Mr. Cowen, founding Capital Research was Mr. Kelly's idea.

"Capital Research was his brainchild," Mr. Cowen testified. "He had a vision that Capital Research could provide a good network for us and, as a result, the company was founded as a consulting group."

Mr. Kelly, Mr. Cowen, Mr. Lauer, through a Lancer-affiliated corporation called Alpha Omega, and another Lancer man, Martin Garvey, became four-way partners in Capital Research after another original partner was pushed out in January of 1999, Mr. Cowen said.

Mr. Cowen testified that Mr. Lauer introduced him to the principals of Lighthouse Fast Ferry in March of 2000.

"That meeting resulted in a contract between Lighthouse Fast Ferry and Capital Research," he said.

LANCER, LAUER AND LIGHTHOUSE

Mr. Cowen told the court that he became a consultant to Lancer in August of 2000. He was even issued a business card bearing the title managing director, though he said on the stand that he had no formal management responsibilities.

"I would characterize myself initially as a designated hitter," Mr. Cowen said in describing his association with Lancer.

"Lancer was not your typical hedge fund," Mr. Cowen testified. "They made a lot of investments in microcap companies, which I would characterize as high risk," he said.

As a consequence Lancer would give higher interest rates loans to companies, for which Mr. Lauer preferred to receive shares, Mr. Cowen said.

"Lauer lent money to Lighthouse, and what he received in return were free unregistered shares," he said.

Mr. Cowen calculated that by December of 2001, Mr. Lauer held "in excess of seven million shares" of Lighthouse Fast Ferry.

Capital Research, meanwhile, accumulated the equivalent of 1.2 million shares of Lighthouse Fast Ferry, Mr. Cowen said. Since Mr. Kelly at this point held about 22 per cent of Capital Research, he controlled an equivalent of 240,000 shares of the ferry company, Mr. Cowen testified.

The Capital Research shares brought Mr. Kelly's total holdings in Lighthouse Fast Ferry to 415,000 shares at the end of 2001, said Mr. Cowen. He calculated that with a 2001 year-end closing price of $1.80 per share, Mr. Kelly's total holdings of the company would have been worth $750,000. According to Mr. Cowen, a $100,000 loan from Mr. Kelly to Lighthouse Fast Ferry would remain on the books in addition to his share position.

Mr. Cowen said that the end-of-month purchases of Lighthouse Fast Ferry by Mr. Lauer through Shamrock became obvious to him in April of 2001. He identified Mr. Garvey and Mr. Lauer as being behind the purchases.

Mr. Garvey "had faith in Jim Kelly to execute his wishes, but didn't have the same faith in the other employees at Shamrock," Mr. Cowen said.

Mr. Cowen testified that the attempts to drive up the Lighthouse Fast Ferry share price at the end of the month did not make economic sense.

"Lauer was purchasing shares in the open market at a price that was substantially higher than the price they were getting from the company for extending loans," Mr. Cowen testified. "They could have gotten the shares for substantially less by going to the company and buying shares directly from them."

The strategy by Mr. Lauer was "to buy enough stock to move the price up, but to buy as few shares as possible," Mr. Cowen said.

Vast fluctuations in Lighthouse Fast Ferry share prices were not out of the ordinary, Mr. Cowen said.

"It wouldn't be unusual for the stock to be up to 30-per-cent lower during the month, and 30-per-cent higher at the end of the month," he said.

Mr. Cowen testified that after Mr. Huard had come to him and Mr. Garvey with concerns about the month-end trading, he had called up Mr. Kelly.

"I informed Jim Kelly about Joe Huard's concerns," Mr. Cowen testified. "I told him that Huard had spooked Mr. Garvey, and that he would probably be hearing from Mr. Garvey about it. And his response was: 'Don't worry about it; I'll handle it. Joe's a worrier.'"

Asked whether Lighthouse Fast Ferry was successful in finding any investors outside of Lancer and the undercover team, Mr. Cowen said they were not.

"Absolutely zero," Mr. Cowen said. "They were totally unsuccessful at getting any other investors."

Asked for his overall assessment of what turned out to be the undercover sting operation and whether it was a legitimate deal, Mr. Cowen said it "was definitely illegitimate."

Following the extended weekend break, Mr. McCann picked up his direct examination of Mr. Cowen on Tuesday.

The U.S. prosecutor displayed for the jury a term sheet of loans from Lancer to Lighthouse Fast Ferry, for which the ferry company gave unregistered shares to Lancer.

At the end of the year, Lancer kept track of two values of Lighthouse shares on their books, Mr. Cowen testified.

"One, what the cost of the shares was, which they had as zero," Mr. Cowen said. "And the other, which was the market price at the end of the year, which I believe was $1.90."

Mr. McCann asked whether multiplying the number of shares by the year-end trading price of the stock "was an accurate value."

"It wasn't a value that could be realized because they were restricted shares, and there was no liquidity," Mr. Cowen replied.

Mr. Cowen said that for the four funds that made up the Lancer Group, none reported the unit cost of Lighthouse Fast Ferry shares to be higher than 44 cents.

MAKING THE DEAL

Mr. Cowen testified that Mr. Kelly was the first person he heard from regarding the British fund that would later turn out to be a fictitious entity used by the undercover team as part of the sting operation. He subsequently learned more about the British fund from Mr. Huard.

"The initial consultation that I had was with Mr. Huard," Mr. Cowen said. "He stated that there was a British fund, he did not know the name..." Mr. Cowen went on. "They were looking to make an investment up to $8-million. They typically looked to make an investment through an existing shareholder because their fee of 30 per cent could not be disclosed."

"Did this undisclosed payment seem legal to you?" Mr. McCann asked.

"It did not sound proper," the witness answered.

Mr. Cowen responded in a similar fashion to Mr. McCann's question about a $10,000 kickback to two purported due diligence officer, remarking that it "didn't sound appropriate."

Mr. McCann moved to another line of questioning directed toward the alleged stock manipulation of Lighthouse Fast Ferry.

"They told us early on that they were going to open an account at Shamrock, and that they thought the share price could rise to $2.50 or $3, so it was our impression that they were going to make the price go up," Mr. Cowen testified when asked about the undercover team's plans for Lighthouse Fast Ferry.

Mr. Cowen said that he spoke to Mr. Kelly about the time of the month that the British fund liked to have the price the highest, which was at the end of the month.

Mr. Kelly "sounded very upbeat" on the phone when he told him about it, Mr. Cowen said.

"How did you know Lancer was pushing up the price of Lighthouse stock to offset the fall in price of other stock in its portfolio?" Mr. McCann asked.

Mr. Moscowitz objected to that question before Mr. Cowen could respond. The attorneys met with Judge Cecilia Altonaga in a sidebar discussion out of hearing of the jury. When the judge returned to the bench, Mr. Cowen was allowed to answer the question.

"I observed it," he said. "I overheard telephone conversations, I was in the room when it was discussed."

"Did you hear anyone talk about this with the defendant?" the prosecutor asked.

"I heard a conversation where Martin Garvey was speaking to Mr. Kelly," Mr. Cowen said.

Mr. Cowen reiterated that his understanding was that the deal was illegal. Asked by Mr. McCann whether Mr. Kelly had the same understanding, Mr. Cowen said he did.

That statement was struck from the record by Judge Altonaga when Mr. Moscowitz objected to asking the witness about what Mr. Kelly's "understanding" of things might have been.

"Did the defendant seem concerned," Mr. McCann asked, trying a different approach.

"No, he did not," Mr. Cowen said.

Mr. McCann asked whether Mr. Cowen ever told Mr. Kelly about the undisclosed payments that comprised part of the deal with the undercover operatives. Mr. Cowen replied that "at some point" he did.

Mr. Cowen said he tried to get out of paying the $10,000 kickback to the undercover team.

"I didn't want to pay the $10,000 out of Capital Research," Mr. Cowen testified. "I thought it should be paid by Shamrock and Joe Huard. Jim told me that Joe didn't have the $10,000 and that Capital Research should pay and be reimbursed."

Mr. Cowen said he had discussed "papering" the agreement with the Mr. Kelly. Asked by Mr. McCann what he meant by papering it up, Mr. Cowen said "covering up."

Following Mr. McCann's direct examination of Mr. Cowen, Mr. Moscowitz cross-examined the witness.

NAMES ON DOCUMENTS

Just as he had with Mr. Huard earlier in the trial, Mr. Moscowitz attacked Mr. Cowen's motivations and actions regarding his guilty plea in the case.

"You told other people that you were not guilty of anything, correct?" Mr. Moscowitz asked about Mr. Cowen's behaviour before pleading in the case.

"That is correct," Mr. Cowen said after a brief sidebar between the lawyers and the judge.

"In fact you told other people that the case had no merit and would be dropped before going to trial?" the defence lawyer queried.

"I'm not sure if those were my exact words, but that's basically correct," Mr. Cowen replied.

Mr. Moscowitz asked a series of questions about Mr. Cowen's plea agreement and about what he had to gain by co-operating with the government.

Mr. Cowen agreed with Mr. Moscowitz that he could not receive a lighter sentence than five years, if the prosecutors did not make any recommendations to the judge.

And the prosecutors' decision about whether to make that recommendation was not reviewable, Mr. Moscowitz said, meaning that Mr. Cowen would have no recourse if they decided not to extend the recommendation. Mr. Cowen agreed that this was his understanding of the agreement.

Mr. Moscowitz moved on to another line of questioning regarding evidence of Mr. Kelly's involvement in the scheme or lack thereof.

Mr. Cowen acknowledged that he was on far more telephone recordings than Mr. Kelly and that his name appeared on far more documents in evidence than Mr. Kelly's did.

Mr. Moscowitz challenged Mr. Cowen's earlier testimony about having told Mr. Kelly about certain aspects of the undisclosed payments.

"There's no indication that you have any record of it, correct?" Mr. Moscowitz asked.

Mr. Cowen agreed that no record existed.

"You understand that what you have said here makes Jim Kelly more of a full participant in what you and Joe Huard have already pled guilty to?" Mr. Moscowitz asked.

Mr. Cowen said that was correct.

Mr. Moscowitz questioned Mr. Cowen about the agreement that his wife signed on the same day as he signed his deal with the government.

Mr. Cowen said that he had installed his wife as a board member and her non-prosecution agreement was contingent upon him fully co-operating in the investigation.

"Her involvement with this matter is entirely of your own doing?" Mr. Moscowitz asked.

"That is correct," Mr. Cowen replied.

Mr. Moscowitz asked whether he wanted to see his wife prosecuted, to which Mr. Cowen replied that he did not.

"You testified that ultimately you didn't want to write the cheque, correct?" Mr. Moscowitz asked, a reference to the $10,000 kickback to the purported due diligence officers.

"Correct," Mr. Cowen replied.

"But you never told that to Schlien and Jones," Mr. Moscowitz said. "In fact, you said, 'I'll take care of that.'"

Mr. Cowen explained that his thoughts on the matter were different than what he said to the co-operating witnesses.

Mr. Moscowitz asked Mr. Cowen whether there was anything illegal about Mr. Kelly making a personal $100,000 loan to Lighthouse Fast Ferry. Mr. Cowen replied that there was not.

Mr. Moscowitz challenged Mr. Cowen's direct testimony about the co-operating witnesses seeking to jack up the price of Lighthouse Fast Ferry with the assistance of Lancer.

Directing Mr. Cowen to segments of the transcripts not included in the evidence entered by the government, Mr. Moscowitz showed that members of the undercover team were concerned about the price going too high, and that there was no indication that Mr. Lauer agreed to pump up the price.

Mr. McCann objected to the questions about the transcripts not in evidence, but after a sidebar conference Mr. Moscowitz was allowed to continue his questioning.

"Michael Lauer said the price is going to go where it's going to go," Mr. Moscowitz said. "Lauer is not agreeing to controlling the price of the shares," the lawyer suggested.

Mr. Cowen said he did not understand the questions.

"He says he will not agree with them to control the price of the stock," Mr. Moscowitz said, not quite forming a question.

"I don't see it the way you describe it," Mr. Cowen replied.

"Do you recall Lauer saying, 'Where the price will be is a matter of supply and demand?'" Mr. Moscowitz asked.

Mr. Cowen said he did.

"And then he says, 'I say, let it go.'" Mr. Moscowitz added. "He's saying he's not willing to control the price to where they want it to be," Mr. Moscowitz offered.

Mr. Moscowitz wrapped up his two-hour cross-examination by asking Mr. Cowen about his remuneration from Lancer and his retirement benefits from Capital Research.

Mr. Cowen pegged his Lancer remuneration at $500,000 per year and said that his Capital Research benefits amounted to about $300,000.

NO CLUE

Mr. McCann quickly pointed his redirect examination toward a meeting between the co-operating witnesses and Mr. Lauer and Mr. Cowen.

"In that conversation with Mr. Lauer, what was he saying about his willingness to control Lighthouse stock?" Mr. McCann asked.

"He basically says if the stock goes beyond $2.50, he said it's going to go, there's nothing he can do about it," Mr. Cowen replied.

"So he says won't stop it from going up," Mr. McCann offered. "Does he say anything about the price going down?"

"No, he does not," Mr. Cowen answered.

Mr. McCann asked whether the Lancer shareholders knew about the details of Lancer's dealings with Lighthouse Fast Ferry.

"They didn't have a clue," Mr. Cowen said.

Mr. McCann went over the valuation of Lighthouse Fast Ferry stock held by the Lancer Group. Over the course of 2001, the Lancer group had acquired between three million shares and 3.3 million shares of Lighthouse Fast Ferry through loans and loan extensions, Mr. Cowen had testified.

Using Lighthouse's closing price on December 31, 2000, Lancer's Lighthouse Fast Ferry shares would have been worth $7.3-million. By June 30, 2001, Lancer's stake had risen to 4.84 million shares valued at $8.2-million based on the month-end price. By the end of the year, Lancer held approximately 7.2 million shares, which at $1.90 per share would have been worth $13.7-million, Mr. Cowen calculated.

Mr. McCann wrapped up his 20-minute redirect by asking why Mr. Cowen had told people he was innocent before he pleaded guilty a month before the trial.

Mr. Cowen said it was typical for people going to trial in a case to say they were innocent, even if it was not true.

In a brief recross by Mr. Moscowitz, Mr. Cowen explained that Lancer did not report earnings on its portfolio holdings to investors directly. Mr. Cowen said that Lancer did not report the performance of individual companies in the portfolio.

THE PROSECUTION RESTS

After Mr. Cowen's testimony was completed late Tuesday afternoon, the prosecution called Thomas Capocci, an employee of the criminal prosecution assistance group for the National Association of Securities Dealers (NASD).

Mr. Capocci briefly testified about the defendant's NASD certifications, telling the court that Mr. Kelly had four certifications: a Series 1; a Series 24; a Series 55; and a Series 63.

Mr. McCann asked whether in being certified Mr. Kelly would have learned all the requisite rules and regulations regarding trading securities.

Mr. Capocci said that Mr. Kelly would have learned all those rules.

After a quick sidebar with the judge, Mr. McCann announced that the government would rest.

Mr. Moscowitz, who may well have been looking forward to cross-examining David Jones, the co-operating government informant identified as a potential prosecution witness who has already been the subject of many credibility challenges by Mr. Kelly's lawyer, will open his presentation of the defence case on Wednesday.

(More information regarding Mr. Kelly's trial is available in Stockwatch articles published on Sept. 25, 26 and 29; and Oct. 1, 2, 3 and 7, 2003.)



To: afrayem onigwecher who wrote (797)10/9/2003 7:35:04 PM
From: StockDung  Respond to of 857
 
SEC known Kelly defence mounted in Miami fraud trial

2003-10-09 16:55 ET - Street Wire

by Mort Lucoff in Miami and Lee M. Webb

James T. Kelly, on trial for securities fraud in the U.S. District Court for the Southern District of Florida in Miami, listened as his attorney Norman Moscowitz presented the case for the defence on Oct. 8. Mr. Kelly, who could face 25 years in prison if convicted on all seven counts relating to wire, mail and securities fraud, did not take the stand to testify in his own defence.

Mr. Kelly, the former head of Pennsylvania-based Shamrock Partners Ltd., is accused of conspiring with former co-defendants Bruce Cowen and Joseph Huard in a kickback and stock manipulation scheme involving shares of Lighthouse Fast Ferry Inc. All three were arrested in August of last year as part of Operation Bermuda Short, a two-year joint FBI-RCMP undercover sting that led to the arrests of 58 U.S. and Canadian penny stock players.

Mr. Huard and Mr. Cowen negotiated separate plea bargains in the case and testified as key prosecution witnesses against Mr. Kelly. The government called its first witness following opening statements on Sept. 24 and rested its case on Oct. 7.

According to prosecutors Thomas McCann and Thomas Hanusik of the U.S. Department of Justice Fraud Section, Mr. Kelly was motivated by greed and was a knowing participant in the kickback and stock manipulation scheme.

The alleged kickback scheme involved a proposed $5-million transaction for approximately 3.12 million restricted shares of Lighthouse Fast Ferry owned by the Lancer Group, an allegedly fraudulent hedge fund operation run by Michael Lauer that was shut down by the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission on July 10. (All amounts are in U.S. dollars.)

As part of the undercover sting operation, a fictitious British fund operated by a purported corrupt manager known only as Nigel was supposed to ante up the $5-million for the Lighthouse Fast Ferry shares through another fictitious U.S. company called Connelly & Williams Associates Inc. Under the proposed deal, $900,000 was supposed to be kicked back to the undercover sting operatives and another $600,000 was to be split equally among Mr. Cowen, Mr. Huard and Mr. Kelly.

The sting also involved a $10,000 payoff to two purported due diligence officers of Connelly & Williams through a $16,000 "test trade."

The alleged stock manipulation also involved Lighthouse Fast Ferry shares. According to the prosecution, Lancer used Mr. Kelly's Shamrock Partners to run up the price of Lighthouse Fast Ferry by buying blocks of the thinly traded stock at the end of the month, a fraudulent practice known as "marking the close." The rigged month-end price was then used to value Lancer's holdings of Lighthouse Fast Ferry.

In his opening statement on Sept. 24 and throughout his cross-examination of the prosecution witnesses, Mr. Moscowitz disputed the government's allegations, claiming among other things that Lighthouse Fast Ferry was a legitimate company and the proposed $5-million transaction was a good deal.

Pointing out that his client participated in few of the secretly recorded discussions about the deal and that his name did not appear on the documents related to the allegedly fraudulent kickback scheme, the defence lawyer also claimed that Mr. Kelly was suffering from physical and mental problems at the time and relied upon his friends to operate his business.

Because of Mr. Kelly's documented health problems, Judge Cecilia Altonaga instituted abbreviated trial sessions running from 11:30 a.m. to 5 p.m. Taking into account that the court did not sit on Sept. 26 or Oct. 6 in order to allow a jury member to observe Rosh Hashanah and Yom Kippur, it took Mr. McCann and Mr. Hanusik eight abbreviated trial days to lay out the government's case.

Mr. Moscowitz, who confronted the prosecution witnesses with some close cross-examination during the course of their testimony, called his witnesses and wrapped up the defence case in less than three hours on Wednesday.

The defence witnesses included Professor Steven Thel, a former SEC attorney who teaches securities law at Fordham University. Prof. Thel is a widely acknowledged and oft-cited expert on the subject of stock manipulation.

Two of the defence witnesses, Dr. Richard Eisner and Daniel Tunkel, were the subjects of pretrial motions by the prosecution to exclude their testimony.

Even as the trial opened, prosecutors argued that the evidence of Dr. Eisner, a neurologist from Bryn Mawr, Pa., should not be admitted. The government lawyers claimed that Mr. Kelly was attempting to back into "a diminished capacity defence" by introducing evidence "that he complained to his doctor in 2001 that he suffered from memory loss, inability to focus, and various severe physical ailments."

According to the government, Dr. Eisner's proposed evidence would have the "unfairly prejudicial effect of swaying the jury to sympathize with what is presented as a suffering, infirm defendant who is constantly in physical agony and mental confusion." The prosecution attempts to exclude that evidence were not successful.

The prosecution was also unsuccessful in its motion to exclude the evidence of Mr. Tunkel, a British lawyer who authored a practitioner's guide entitled "Managed Funds."

"The purpose of Mr. Tunkel's testimony will undoubtedly be to confuse the jury by testifying about English law which is completely irrelevant to this case," prosecutors claimed in a motion filed on Sept. 29. "Such testimony will be confusing to a United States jury sitting in judgment of a United States citizen who is alleged to have violated United States laws through a series of transactions and acts that occurred wholly within the United States."

Judge Altonaga disagreed with the prosecution's claim that the prejudicial impact of such testimony outweighed any probative value, allowing Mr. Moscowitz to call the British lawyer.

DEFENCE MOTIONS DENIED

Before calling his first defence witness, Mr. Moscowitz asked Judge Altonaga for either a directed judgment of acquittal or a mistrial.

The defence lawyer argued that the prosecution had failed to prove that Mr. Kelly had breached his fiduciary duties and had not proven any intent to do so by the defendant. Nor did the prosecution show that the British fund was a "pump-and-dump" scheme or that the kickbacks with which Mr. Kelly was allegedly involved were in violation of English common law.

There were no misrepresentations, no acts of concealment in the selling of stock, Mr. Moscowitz argued. The government case is irretrievably defective, he said.

"The law is clear," Mr. Hanusik countered. "When a criminal acts, he takes his chances." The prosecutor argued that Mr. Kelly was caught on tape participating in the conspiracy.

Mr. Hanusik called the defence "window dressing." According to the prosecutor, Mr. Kelly was involved in "paying and receiving undisclosed commissions, was involved in ongoing manipulation and paying undisclosed fees and kickbacks."

In denying Mr. Moscowitz's motions for acquittal or a mistrial, Judge Altonaga said she "carefully considered his arguments, but they are not persuasive."

With the defence motions denied, Mr. Moscowitz called his witnesses.

BENIGN PROGNOSIS

Neurologist Dr. Eisner was called to the stand to testify about Mr. Kelly's complaints of health problems dating back to 1990. Dr. Eisner told the court that he last saw Mr. Kelly as a patient on May 21, 2001.

According to Dr. Eisner, Mr. Kelly complained of memory loss, losing his thought in mid-sentence and sometimes forgetting where he was going while he was driving. The neurologist also testified that Mr. Kelly complained of errors that he was making in his brokerage business.

On cross-examination, Dr. Eisner said that Mr. Kelly had "a benign prognosis," which he defined as ailments "not leading to death or marked disability."

Also testifying for the defence on the subject of Mr. Kelly's health was Kevin Barr. Mr. Barr, a financial consultant, worked for Mr. Kelly at Shamrock Partners from May of 1997 to mid-May of 2001. Mr. Barr testified that he observed Mr. Kelly's deteriorating health and that as time went on Mr. Kelly had more medical appointments and spent more time out of the office.

NO CROSS

Mr. Moscowitz called another of Mr. Kelly's former business associates, Conrad Huss, to the stand. Mr. Huss, an investment banker from Suffren, N.Y., testified that in early 2001 he had tried to structure a deal with Mr. Kelly.

According to Mr. Huss, Mr. Kelly was supposed to invest about $250,000 and take an equity position in the proposed deal. Eventually, he said, Mr. Kelly invested "approximately $50,000 to $60,000." However, the deal was never finalized and Mr. Kelly's investment became a loan, Mr. Huss said. According to the investment banker, Mr. Kelly "has never asked for his money back."

U.S. prosecutor Mr. Hanusik allowed Mr. Huss to leave the witness stand without any cross-examination.

THE PROFESSOR

Prof. Thel, an acknowledged expert in securities law and corporate and contract law, was the key defence witness on Wednesday.

The Fordham University law professor testified that his reading of the indictment against Mr. Kelly did not show any stock manipulation. Prof. Thel added that he had made no close and factual reading of the evidence in the case.

The professor, who is being paid $450 per hour for his defence testimony, was questioned extensively about the regulation of hedge funds. Prof. Thel said that hedge funds were typically investments of the wealthy and were not subject to more than minimal regulation.

Mr. Moscowitz asked Prof. Thel if hedge fund managers could be compensated from investments that they intend to buy for their own funds.

Yes, Prof. Thel replied, as long as it is part of their agreements or employment contracts with their investors.

Wealthy investors aren't concerned about their manager's compensation, the professor said. "They're interested in whether their investments have substantial returns," Prof. Thel testified.

The defence lawyer invited Prof. Thel to suppose that the hedge fund manager causes the payment of higher commissions and fees.

Yes, he replied. It is what known as the "soft dollar."

Prof. Thel also testified that hedge fund managers can have accounts with other agencies and accept compensation.

On cross-examination, Mr. Hanusik questioned Prof. Thel about disclosure, drawing testimony regarding the limited disclosure requirements of hedge funds.

Failure to disclose is not fraud, Prof. Thel testified. According to the professor, fraud requires false statements. Promising to sell without the intent to sell is fraud, Prof. Thel said.

ENGLISH LAW

The last witness to testify was the British lawyer Mr. Tunkel, a partner in the London firm of SJ Berwin, which provides financial services to investment companies. He said his field was in the regulation of funds and in advising investment managers.

Mr. Tunkel testified the British equivalent of mutual funds was closely regulated, but hedge funds or investments by private institutions were not.

Mr. Tunkel said that he knew of agreements in which fund managers were allowed to accept compensation from investments they were buying for their funds and the compensation was legal under English law.

With the testimony finished, the prosecution and defence will make their closing arguments on Thursday. Following instructions from the judge, the jury will begin deliberations.

(More information regarding Mr. Kelly's trial is available in Stockwatch articles published on Sept. 25, 26 and 29; and Oct. 1, 2, 3, 7 and 8, 2003.)



To: afrayem onigwecher who wrote (797)10/12/2003 8:45:41 PM
From: StockDung  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 857
 
SEC known Kelly jury hears closing arguments

2003-10-10 15:16 ET - Street Wire

by Mort Lucoff in Miami and Lee M. Webb

James T. Kelly, on trial for securities fraud in Miami, is either a crook "driven by greed" or an innocent victim "set up" by his one-time partners and friends, according to diametrically opposed closing arguments delivered by prosecution and defence lawyers. Mr. Kelly faces a possible 25 years in prison, if convicted on all seven counts relating to wire, mail and securities fraud.

Mr. Kelly, the former president of Pennsylvania-based Shamrock Partners Ltd., a brokerage firm with a checkered history known to the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC), is accused of conspiring with former co-defendants and business associates Joseph Huard and Bruce Cowen in a kickback and stock manipulation scheme involving shares of Lighthouse Fast Ferry Inc.

All three were arrested last year on charges arising from Operation Bermuda Short, a two-year joint FBI-RCMP undercover sting that led to indictments against 58 penny stock players from the U.S. and Canada.

Mr. Huard and Mr. Cowen negotiated separate plea bargains in the case, flipping to become key prosecution witnesses against Mr. Kelly.

(As previously reported by Stockwatch, the Lighthouse Fast Ferry shares at the centre of the alleged kickback and stock manipulation scheme were owned by the Lancer Group, a purported $1-billion hedge fund operation run by former star Wall Street analyst Michael Lauer. (All amounts are in U.S. dollars.). In a separate civil action, the SEC shut Lancer down on July 10, levelling allegations of massive fraud against the hedge fund operation and Mr. Lauer.)

Mr. Kelly's Bermuda Short trial in the U.S. District Court for the Southern District of Florida in Miami opened with jury selection on Sept. 23. Because of Mr. Kelly's documented health problems, including diabetes, Judge Cecilia Altonaga instituted abbreviated trial sessions running from 11:30 a.m. to 5 p.m.

U.S. prosecutors Thomas McCann and Thomas Hanusik laid out the government's case against Mr. Kelly over eight half-day court sessions, calling their final witness on Oct. 7. Mr. Kelly's Miami defence lawyer Norman Moscowitz called the defence witnesses and wrapped up the testimony in less than three hours on Oct. 8.

On Thursday, the jury heard final arguments from the prosecution and defence, with U.S. prosecutor Mr. McCann leading off for the government. Mr. McCann addressed the jury for approximately 90 minutes.

ABOUT GREED

"Greed is what this case is all about," was the opening remark from Mr. McCann to the jury.

"What drove them?" Mr. McCann asked rhetorically. "They did it for money. This defendant was fully involved, directly and indirectly."

Mr. McCann noted that two former co-defendants, Mr. Huard and Mr. Cowen, had pled guilty in the kickback and stock manipulation scheme and had testified for the prosecution against Mr. Kelly. Mr. McCann told the jurors that "all of them had had a lot to gain" in the scheme. "And all of them knew their conduct was wrong," the prosecutor said.

Mr. McCann laid out for the jurors in detail Mr. Kelly's part in the conspiracy involving kickbacks and stock manipulation involving shares of Lighthouse Fast Ferry Inc. between April and December of 2001.

"Jim Kelly was actively engaged in the schemes," Mr. McCann told the jury. "Mr. Kelly knew what was going on. The purpose was to control the stock of Lighthouse Ferry through fraudulent means. No doubt about it."

Anticipating that Mr. Moscowitz would attack the credibility of the testimony of Mr. Huard and Mr. Cowen because of their plea deals, Mr. McCann said that they had a lot to lose if they did not tell the truth.

"Their co-operation agreements would be torn up," he said. "All they can do is tell the truth and let the chips fall where they may."

Mr. McCann ended his argument by telling the jurors that Mr. Kelly knew what was going on.

"He was solidly involved throughout," Mr. McCann said. "Use your common sense. We have shown his direct involvement in these crimes."

AN AILING VICTIM

Not so, said Mr. Moscowitz in his closing argument to the jury on Thursday.

"Jim Kelly did not do this deal," Mr. Moscowitz said. "It was done by Joseph Huard and Bruce Cowen. They set up the transactions, did the documents, the transactions, the E-mails. Jim Kelly had no involvement."

The defence attorney made much out of what he said were the few statements of Mr. Kelly caught on tape recordings in the undercover FBI investigation of the stock manipulation and kickback scheme.

"They're making a judgment on his silence," Mr. Moscowitz told the jurors.

The defence lawyer went on to challenge the credibility of Mr. Cowen and Mr. Huard. The prosecution was asking the jurors to "rely on two friends whom he (Mr. Kelly) had trusted," Mr. Moscowtiz said.

"What they testified to at the trial was to benefit themselves," the defence lawyer told the jury. "They cannot be believed."

Mr. Moscowitz then turned to the prosecution's claims regarding the month-end manipulation of Lighthouse Fast Ferry's share price. Mr. McCann had shown the jury charts tracking the end of the month pumping up of Lighthouse Fast Ferry stock and the slump in its prices during the rest of the month.

Mr. Moscowitz countered that these same charts showed that the stock was down seven months and up only in five months.

"If you look at the whole year, the price began at $2.18 a share and ended the year at $1.90," Mr. Moscowitz told the jurors. "If it's down, what's the point of manipulation?"

Mr. Moscowitz told the jury that Lancer, which owned the Lighthouse Fast Ferry shares, was a hedge fund and hedge funds are far less regulated than mutual funds. The defence lawyer said that the law governing hedge funds is vague and ambiguous.

"If the law isn't clear, it isn't a crime," Mr. Moscowitz argued.

Mr. Moscowtiz characterized Mr. Kelly as man with two passions.

"He is a trader," the defence lawyer said. "His other passion is fishing."

Mr. Moscowitz said Mr. Kelly suffered from "very severe medical and mental problems" during the period that the government says he was a key participant in the stock manipulation and kickback scheme.

"His health was getting worse," Mr. Moscowitz said, going on to tell the jury that Mr. Kelly was "letting things go."

"He had real problems," the defence lawyer said. "He was relying on his partners and they took advantage of him."

Concluding his closing argument, Mr. Moscowitz turned to the jury. "All I ask you for is justice," Mr. Moscowitz said.

ON HIS GAME

Following Mr. Moscowitz's closing argument, which also lasted about 90 minutes, co-prosecutor Mr. Hanusik rose to conclude the government's case with an hour-long rebuttal of the defence argument.

Mr. Hanusik scoffed at the claim that Mr. Kelly's physical and mental problems put him out of the picture. The prosecutor wondered at the timing of these problems, occurring during the months of the alleged kickback and stock manipulation scheme.

Mr. Hanusik pointed out that Dr. Richard Eisner, the neurologist Mr. Kelly had seen in March of 2001, wrote in his medical record that "his prognosis was benign."

"There is no evidence that his health deteriorates, gets worse," Mr. Hanusik said. "All the medical evidence is quite irrelevant. Look to the tapes. Hear Mr. Kelly on the big tape. He's involved in complex securities transactions. He's lucid, alert, on his game."

With the closing arguments wrapped up on Thursday, Judge Altonaga delivered her instructions and handed the case over to the jury on Friday morning.

Because of a juror scheduling conflict, deliberations broke off at 1 p.m. on Friday. U.S. courts will be closed on Monday for the Columbus Day holiday, so the jury will not resume deliberations until Tuesday, Oct. 14.

(More information regarding Mr. Kelly's trial is available in Stockwatch articles published on Sept. 25, 26 and 29; and Oct. 1, 2, 3, 7, 8 and 9, 2003.)