SEC charges 5 individuals for $58 million scheme with penny stocks
The SEC states defendants were paid approximately $10 million for promoting thinly traded stocks, which they misled investors to believe had high prospects for success.
The Securities and Exchange Commission has charged five individuals for allegedly operating a call center in Medellin, Colombia.
The SEC announced charges against U.S. citizen Chester Alvarez, Canadian citizens Francis Biller, Raymond Dove, and Troy Gran-Brooks, and Dutch citizen Justin Plaizier.
Using high-pressure sales tactics and making false and misleading statements, the five individuals convinced retail investors to buy stocks of small companies trading in the U.S. markets, also konwn as penny stocks.
Pump-and-dump scheme generated over $58 million
The charged individuals set up as phony investment management firms, with fake names, websites, and phone numbers, according to the financial watchdog, which added that the defendants orchestrated a pump-and-dump scheme and made false and misleading statements when they promoted the stock of at least 18 issuers and that they generated more than $58 million in trading from this scheme.
Defendants were paid approximately $10 million for promoting thinly traded stocks, which they misled investors to believe had high prospects for success, the order stated.
Paul Levenson, Director of the SEC’s Boston Regional Office, said: “These scam artists went to great lengths – using bogus companies, aliases, and spoofing their phone numbers – to defraud and mislead investors into a pump-and-dump scheme. We urge investors to read the investor education materials about fraud in the ‘penny stock’ market, which are available at Investor.gov.”
SEC goes after AVG for misleading marketing
The SEC has most recently gone after venture capital fund adviser Alumni Ventures Group (AVG) for alleged misleading statements about its management fees as well as inter-fund transactions in breach of fund operating agreements. Michael Collins, Chief Executive Officer at AVG, was charged with causing AVG’s violations.
AVG settled charges by repaying $4.7 million to affected funds and agreed to pay a $700,000 penalty, whereas Collins agreed to pay a $100,000 penalty, according to the announcement.
AVG’s website and other marketing communications said the management fee for its venture capital funds was the “industry standard ‘2 and 20.’”
This was found to be misleading because AVG led some investors to believe that AVG would collect a two-percent management fee during each year of its funds’ 10-year term, and separately collect a 20-percent performance fee, the SEC said.
The financial watchdog added that AVG’s typical practice was instead to assess management fees totaling 20 percent of an investor’s fund investment (representing ten years’ of two-percent annual management fees) upon the investor’s initial fund investment.