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To: KLP who wrote (74856)4/26/2004 12:25:42 PM
From: sandintoes  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 225578
 
Here is one part...

Sheriff's loan dealer sued by SEC
Scam alleged: Miami businessman has failed to honor repayment agreements before


By STEVE VISSER, DAVID McNAUGHTON
The Atlanta Journal-Constitution
Published on: 04/24/04

The Miami businessman Fulton County Sheriff Jackie Barrett hoped would help her recoup a failed $2 million investment hasn't repaid the millions he allegedly bilked from investors in the 1990s, the Securities and Exchange Commission charged in a court filing in Atlanta.

The SEC is asking a federal court to hold Andre Brady in contempt for failing to live up to the repayment agreement. In its filing Wednesday, the federal agency took note of Brady's claim on his Web site that he is "a very successful multimillionaire entrepreneur."

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Brady in 1995 agreed to return $13.5 million as part of a settlement in which he neither admitted nor denied the SEC's charge that he operated a pyramid scheme. The amount of the settlement was reduced to $4 million in 1998.

In a recent interview with The Atlanta Journal-Constitution, Brady said he returned "over $10 million." However, court documents filed Wednesday show he has repaid less than $10,000.

In what was described as a desperate move, Barrett on March 12 signed a deal with Brady to leverage about $5 million in public money she controlled to recover $2 million she had lost in an investment with a Florida financial company.

Even though Barrett was entrusting millions to Brady, there is no evidence that the sheriff made any attempt to check his background.

Caudell Jones, the sheriff's chief deputy and a participant in the financial deals, said Barrett knew little about Brady. "I don't think she was aware of Brady's background," Jones said Friday.

Brady was introduced to Barrett by Byron Rainner, the former MetLife broker who directed Barrett's $7.2 million questionable investments, Jones said.

Barrett signed the contract with Brady less than two weeks before her initial questionable investments were made public by a county auditor on March 22.

On the same day she signed the contract to invest $5 million with Brady, the sheriff wrote MetLife demanding a refund of $5.2 million she invested with the firm in 2003, records show. She apparently intended to use the Metlife refund as collateral for a $5 million credit from a Toronto bank, according to loan documents obtained by the Journal-Constitution.

Barrett had invested about $2 million with Provident Capital Investment Inc., which informed her in March that the money had been loaned to other companies and could not be returned.

Brady agreed to place the borrowed money that was to come from Toronto in investments that he promised would produce more than enough income to make up for the $2 million loss in a year. The agreement also would have allowed for Barrett to deposit $2 million from the loan into a bank to cover the missing money.

Brady could not be reached for comment Friday. Barrett's attorney denied any wrongdoing by the sheriff.

At the time she was dealing with Brady, Barrett was desperate to come up with the $2 million before a March 31 deadline set by the county auditor, chief deputy Jones said. "At this point, it was 'Let's see what he can do,' " Jones recalled.

J. Steven Parker, a former state securities regulator, reviewed the documents prepared by Brady for Barrett and said they looked suspicious. "It's pretty obviously a scam," Parker said. "There are a lot of red flags."

The warning signs include the agreement's description of the investment as an "irrevocable letter of undertaking."

"That kind of instrument doesn't exist in the real world," Parker said.

Parker also questioned the return promised on the investment: 1 percent a month. "It's economically impossible to have an investment vehicle with no risk and that rate of return," he said.

Mike Puglise, one of Barrett's lawyers, said he was convinced that Brady and Rainner saw the deal as one last chance to get hold of the $5.2 million that had gone to MetLife.

Puglise said it was clear the sheriff wasn't thinking clearly, in her desperation to recover the $2 million loss before it became public.

"I think panic outweighed logic at that point," the attorney said. "She was trying to find a way to escape the wrath that was going to befall her."

Rainner has been subpoenaed to testify before a federal grand jury in Atlanta that is investigating the case, said Curtis Carlson, one of Rainner's lawyers. Carlson disputed the finding of a Fulton County auditor that the investments with MetLife and Provident were not legal.

Brady's deal with Barrett was through the Royal Institute of Finance, which is owned by Brady.

His problems with the SEC are related to another company, Wealth International Network.

The SEC sued Brady in 1995, accusing him and three associated companies of operating a pyramid scheme in which early investors are repaid with money from new investors.

The agency said Brady and the firms promised returns of 8 percent to 20 percent a month, with little risk. The case was settled when Brady and the firms agreed to pay $13.5 million in reimbursements, later reduced to $4 million.

Brady was supposed to send the U.S. District Court in Atlanta his total income, less $800 a week for living expenses, according to the SEC's filings.

Since the revised order in 1998, only $9,926.83 — including interest on two deposits Brady made — has been repaid, the SEC said.

U.S. District Judge Charles Moye Jr. set a hearing May 12 for Brady to show why he should not be held in contempt, said SEC counsel William Hicks. The judge could sentence him to jail until he pays, if he's found in contempt of the previous order.



To: KLP who wrote (74856)4/26/2004 12:27:06 PM
From: sandintoes  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 225578
 
Here is the sheriff part..

MetLife investigates, quietly
Not talking: Company mum on role in sheriff's investments.

David McNaughton - Staff
Sunday, April 25, 2004

Fulton County Sheriff Jackie Barrett blames former MetLife broker Byron Rainner for talking her into $7.2 million in questionable investments. But the names of three other MetLife employees, including company officers, show up in county records of scheduled meetings between Barrett and Rainner.

The documents --- pages from Barrett's "Diary and Work Record" that go back to May 2001 --- don't explain what role, if any, Rainner's MetLife colleagues played in the investments.

Curtis Carlson, one of Rainner's lawyers, said Friday his client suggested the meetings to make Barrett "comfortable" with MetLife, one of the biggest insurance and financial services companies in the country.

Carlson also insisted that a $5.2 million investment with MetLife and a $2 million investment with Provident Capital Investments in Hollywood, Fla., were proper. Fulton County Auditor Skip Remter said in March the two investments were illegal.

"The county auditor doesn't know what he's talking about," Carlson said from Miami.

He said Rainner gave MetLife and Provident a list of investments that government bodies in Georgia are allowed to make.

A federal grand jury and state regulators are investigating.

MetLife has not commented. "Our [internal] investigation is ongoing," said company spokeswoman Holly Sheffer.

MetLife has returned the $5.2 million it received from Barrett, but the $2 million investment with Provident, which was based on Rainner's advice, has not been returned.

Carlson said the MetLife investment was in short-term government securities, and that if improper investments were made, they were made by Provident.

MetLife has declined to disclose the investments in the annuity it sold to Barrett. An annuity is a contract that promises to pay investors money at specified intervals.

Neither has the company responded to questions about potential regulatory issues, such as a requirement that the company adequately supervises brokerage employees.

"It's premature to talk about a lot of questions, and this area is one of them," said MetLife spokeswoman Sheffer.

Securities industry regulations set by NASD require brokerage firms to supervise employees to prevent violations. Another rule is designed to ensure that customers are not sold unsuitable investments.

Penalties for violating the regulations range from fines to the loss of the right to do business.

Whether MetLife has protential problems in those areas is open to debate.

Some attorneys say MetLife probably has no liability. One lawyer, however, raised the possibility that Fulton County might be able to sue to recover $2 million Barrett invested with Provident Capital Investments. That investment also was based on Rainner's advice.

Rainner worked for MetLife from February 2000 to January 2004. He is licensed as an insurance agent in Georgia as well as in Florida.

Georgia Insurance Commissioner John Oxendine's office said it is investigating Rainner, but not MetLife.

Glenn Allen, a spokesman for Oxendine, said the insurer is not being investigated because "there's no evidence of criminal intent, at this time." Allen added, "MetLife acted in good faith" by returning the $5.2 million investment "once they learned of possible wrongdoing."

MetLife initially kept more than $360,000 for an early withdrawal penalty. After the sheriff complained, the company also returned that money to Barrett. MetLife did not have to do so, Allen said.

Besides the initial investment, the sheriff's office received more than $153,000 in interest from the MetLife investment. The department has received nothing from its dealings with Provident.

The sheriff's calendar notes that Barrett was to meet Rainner and Eugene Marks of MetLife on April 10, 2003, but a notation said the meeting would be rescheduled. Marks was identified as a MetLife senior vice president.

On April 28, Barrett wrote the $5.2 million check to the insurer.

The next scheduled meeting with MetLife representatives was May 6, with Aris "Art" Harduvel and Diana MacGeorge, along with Rainner.

Harduvel said Tuesday he is a company vice president but referred all questions to MetLife headquarters in New York. Public records show Harduvel is a licensed insurance agent and stockbroker.

MacGeorge, who could not be reached for comment, is listed in Barrett's calendar as a regional vice president, and her name appears as "Dianne George."

MetLife confirmed that Marks, Harduvel and MacGeorge are employees, but declined to comment further.

MetLife also has not addressed:

> The number of MetLife employees involved with the $5.2 million investment.

> The amount of commission Rainner received for selling the annuity.

> Whether the company has a process to determine if investments sold to government agencies are permitted.

> Whether securities regulators have contacted MetLife.

> Whether MetLife will disclose the results of its internal investigation.

Based on what's known, former Securities and Exchange Commission attorney Jacob Frenkel says it's "extremely unlikely" MetLife "would have any liability related to this transaction."

Frenkel, who now heads the Smith, Gambrell & Russell law firm's white-collar crime division, said that is because MetLife is careful to offer low-risk investments to clients like the sheriff's office.

Steven Parker disagrees. "They really do have a possible liability," said the former director of the Securities and Business Regulation Division for Georgia Secretary of State Cathy Cox. He is now with Page Perry, an Atlanta law firm.

"Violation of an NASD rule . . . could give rise to civil liability as a result of a private action or arbitration filed by Fulton County," Parker said. "This would usually be asserted as a claim for negligence, breach of fiduciary duty, fraud, breach of contract, and/or violations of state securities laws."