INTRODUCTION
The Stanford Financial Group was a privately held international group of financial services companies controlled by Allen Stanford, until it was seized by United States (U.S.) authorities in early 2009.
Stanford Group Company, also known as Stanford Financial Group, is a diversified financial services company. The company offers brokerage and investment advisory, private and commercial banking, investment advisory, trust, real estate investment services, and investment banking services. It also makes private equity investment through Stanford Venture Capital Holdings, Inc
It had 50 offices in several countries, mainly in the Americas, included the Stanford International Bank, and said it managed US$8.5 billion of assets for more than 30,000 clients in 136 countries on six continents. On February 17, 2009, U.S. Federal agents put the company under management of a receiver, because of charges of fraud. On February 27, 2009, the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission amended its complaint to describe the alleged fraud as a "massive Ponzi scheme".
AFFILIATED COMPANIES
Stanford Financial Group comprises several affiliated companies:
Stanford Capital Management, investment adviser, based on Houston
Stanford Group Company, broker-dealer, based in Houston
Stanford International Bank, was started in 1986 in Montserrat where it was called Guardian International Bank. Allen Stanford relocated its operations to Antigua. On 19 February 2009 Nigel Hamilton-Smith and Peter Wastell of the British accounting firm Vantis were appointed joint receivers of the bank, and were made liquidators on 15 April 2009. In June 2010, the High Court of Antigua resolved that Vantis should be removed from its responsibilities. The firm, which had recently received government approval to sell the property assets, appealed the decision.
Stanford Trust Company, helped manage and protect wealth. Vantis was also appointed receivers of Stanford Trust Company.
Bank of Antigua
Stanford Coins and Bullion
How it all started…
Background
Stanford Group Company (SGC) was an SEC-registered broker dealer and a member of FINRA and
SIPC. There were 30+ SGC offices in the US with 250+ FINRA Registered Representatives.
SGC’s Registered Reps sold approximately $2.2 billion worth of fictitious Stanford International
Bank (SIB) CDs to 5,000 US investors in 46 states; and $1 billion to 3,000 foreign investors.
Both SGC and SIB were wholly owned by Allen Stanford, and operated under the umbrella brand of
The Stanford Financial Group of Companies.
The SIB CDs were sold as securities disclosed to the SEC under a Regulation D filing, which was filed annually with SEC. By law, Reg. D securities can only be sold to “accredited investors,” but many of the CD purchasers did not meet the statutory requirements for accreditation.
Middle-class, retirement-age investors were targeted to invest brokerage account holdings, including IRAs and pension plans, in the SIB CDs.
For most SGC customers, their SIB CD investments represented their entire life savings.
Approximately 80% had account balances less than $500K.
Funds to purchase the CDs were never sent to SIB. Funds were laundered through (primarily US)banks then used to pay earlier investors, SGC’s expenses and Allen Stanford’s lavish lifestyle.
SGC was financially dependent on referral fees for selling the SIB CDs, and additional shareholder capital contributed by Allen Stanford in the form of “loans” from SIB. Both the fees and the additional capital—both disclosed on SGC’s monthly financial statements filed with FINRA—came from the stolen SIB CD funds.
Stanford Trust Company (STC) in Baton Rouge, La., which was also wholly owned by Allen Stanford, held custody of approximately $400 million of SGC customers’ IRAs that were invested in the SIB CDs. Monthly statements were sent to customers from STC, which until 2004 was a subsidiary of SGC that was included in audits filed annually with the SEC. STC’s operations were governed by a Board of Directors that included SGC employees.
Most of the SGC customers who purchased SIB CDs used their brokerage accounts (held for SGC by a third party) to effectuate the transactions. Others wrote checks made out to SGC, Stanford Trust Company, SIB or just “Stanford.”
The CDs were sold by SGC Registered Reps along with other securities. All products were sold as SIPC-insured investments.
By a vote of the Commissioners, the SEC determined in June 2011 that SGC should be liquidated under the Securities Investor Protection Act (SIPA) in order to pay claims for the fictitious SIB CDs,and authorized the SEC Division of Enforcement to seek a court order if SIPC refused to comply.
In November 2001, SIPC took the unprecedented action to defy the SEC’s plenary authority over
SIPC by refusing to commence a SIPA liquidation of SGC. SIPC launched a PR campaign against protecting SGC customers, and hired two outside law firms to defend its actions.
In December 2011, the SEC filed an application with District Court in Washington, D.C. to force SIPC to file for a protective decree for SGC and initiate a SIPA liquidation in the District Court in Dallas.
In July 2012, the D.C. District Court denied the SEC’s application. More than 50 Members of Congress asked the SEC to appeal that decision.
In August 2011, the SEC filed a notice of appeal with the Circuit Court for the District of Columbia.
Allen Stanford traced his company to the insurance company founded in 1932 in Mexia, Texas, by his grandfather, Lodis B. Stanford. However there was no direct connection between the insurance company and Allen Stanford's banking business, which he started on the British Overseas Territory of Montserrat in the West Indies in the 1980s. Allen Stanford's move into banking utilised funds he had made in real estate in Houston in the early 1980s.
Stanford Group Company’s Regulatory History
Stanford Group Company (SGC) registered with the SEC in 1996 as both a broker dealer and an investment advisor.
In its first exam of SGC in 1997, the SEC suspected a Ponzi scheme, and opened a Matter Under Inquiry, which was closed 30 days later after Stanford did not voluntarily submit the requested documentation. No further action was taken despite direct knowledge of SGC customer funds in jeopardy of being misappropriated or stolen.
Three more SEC exams were completed between 1998 and 2004. Each concluded that Stanford was in violation of numerous securities laws, and that the SIB CDs were likely fraudulent. The size of the fraud, in each instance, was bigger than the SEC’s entire budget. No action was taken.
A formal SEC investigation was finally opened in 2005. The investigation took 4 years, during which SIB CD sales doubled. More than 85% of all SIB CD sales to US investors occurred from 2007 through 2009 when the SEC filed a civil lawsuit that took all Stanford entities into Receivership on Feb. 16, 2009.
The SEC blames the 4-year investigation delay on Stanford’s lack of cooperation and Antigua’s bank secrecy laws.
None of the exams or the multi-year investigation of SGC were made public. The SEC had every reason and resource to stop the Stanford Ponzi scheme, but chose not to for 12 years. The longer the SEC took to act, the more legitimacy the SIB CDs had.
SGC’s financial statements filed with the SEC and FINRA showed SGC’s dependence on revenue from selling SIB bank CDs and large cash contributions from Allen Stanford, which were directly traced to loans from SIB. SGC showed an operating loss every year of its existence. Without SIB, SGC was insolvent. No protective action was taken.
Dozens of SGC employees came forward to FINRA alleging fraudulent practices at SGC. FINRA arbitration favored SGC in every instance.
In 2007, FINRA fined SGC $20,000 for failing to maintain minimum net capital requirements, and $10,000 for allegations of distributing "misleading, unfair and unbalanced information" about the SIB CDs.
In 2008, FINRA fined SGC $30,000 failing to adequately disclose its research methods used to report securities valuations.
Stanford was under investigation by numerous US government agencies for more than 20 years. The DEA, FBI, US Attorney’s Office, IRS Criminal Division, US Customs and the Federal Reserve all notified the SEC that Stanford was under investigation starting in 1999.
In 1999, the US Treasury issued an advisory to all banks in the US warning them to scrutinize transactions to/from Antigua because of Stanford’s role as the head of the regulator that oversaw his own bank. The advisory, lifted in 2011, was only the second of its kind against an entire nation.
In 2001, the US Treasury entered into an information sharing agreement with the government of Antigua. The agreement gave Treasury access to information from any financial institution operating in Antigua if there was a suspected financial crime. During their 4-year investigation, the SEC never asked Treasury to help get information about SIB’s assets.
In 2001, the State of Texas entered into an information sharing agreement with the government of Antigua and Barbuda. The agreement allowed for the Texas Banking Department to examine the books and records of a financial institution in Antigua with offices in Texas. During their 4-year investigation, the SEC never asked the Texas Banking Department to help get information about SIB’s assets.
Leroy King, Director of Antigua’s banking regulator, was indicted in June 2009 for obstruction of the SEC’s investigation of Stanford. However, starting in 2001, the US State Department was providing the agency King directed with all of its technology equipment.
During their 4-year investigation of Stanford, the SEC never asked for the State Department’s assistance with the uncooperative regulator in Antigua.
Present Scenario
SGC is now under receivership. In law, receivership is the situation in which an institution or enterprise is being held by a receiver, a person "placed in the custodial responsibility for the property of others, including tangible and intangible assets and rights."
Mr. Stanford, 61, pleaded not guilty to a revised 14-count indictment charging him with defrauding nearly 30,000 investors from 113 countries in a Ponzi scheme involving bogus high-interest certificates of deposit at the Stanford International Bank, which is based on the Caribbean island of Antigua.
Mr. Stanford is currently serving a 110-year federal prison sentence. A federal judge ruled recently that investors could proceed with a lawsuit that alleges the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) was negligent in its handling of the fraud.
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