July 04, 2009     | Register

The Keystone Cops meet the Gang that Couldn’t Shoot Straight

Location: Blogs Mark Faulk's Blog    
Posted by:   mfaulk 6/23/2006 8:25 PM
In the most stunning development yet in the scandal that is threatening to rock the very foundation of the US stock market, a former SEC attorney who was fired on September 1, 2005, has released two scathing letters accusing SEC officials of apparent wrongdoing in dealing with an investigation into one of the nations most prominent hedge funds, Pequot Capital Management.

First, on the same day that a federal court struck down a rule requiring hedge funds to register with the SEC, the New York Times reported today that Gary J. Aguirre had been fired by the SEC last August eleven days after he was praised for his work on the Pequot investigation and awarded a merit pay increase. His supervisor, Robert Hanson, wrote in Aguirre’s performance evaluation just before the firing, that “His efforts have uncovered evidence of potential insider trading and possible manipulative trading by the fund. He has consistently gone the extra mile, and then some."

Apparently, going the “extra mile” wasn’t what his superiors at the SEC had in mind, because Aguirre was fired without notice just eleven days later while he was on vacation. The next day, on September 2, 2005, he wrote a letter to SEC Chairman Chris Cox detailing his allegations of wrongdoing within the SEC in connection with the Pequot investigation…three weeks before the Faulking Truth reported that Senate Banking Committee Chairman Richard Shelby (R-ALA) had killed a scheduled Banking Committee hearing into stock market fraud and naked short selling.

According to the New York Times article Aguirre “has told Congress that the fund's trading had repeatedly aroused suspicion among stock exchange officials, prompting them on 18 occasions to refer cases to the SEC for further investigation.” Although both letters have the names deleted, the Times reported that Aguirre was fired when he tried to take testimony from Morgan Stanley CEO John J. Mack, who at the time was the former head of Credit Suisse First Boston, and was under consideration for the Morgan Stanley position. Aguirre had begun to suspect that Mack was the person who provided inside information to Pequot CEO Arthur J. Samberg, that enabled Pequot to realize an $18 million profit involving General Electric’s buyout of Heller Financial, when Heller’s stock rose 50% in one day.

In the September, 2005 letter to Chairman Cox, Aguirre said, in part: “I am compelled to write to you today, my last day with the Commission, out of a sense of duty to the Commission’s mission—to maintain the integrity of the financial markets and to protect the investor. Unfortunately, my supervisors--as far up the chain as I can see—have lost sight of the mission in the above matter.”

When he suggested that they solicit testimony from Mack, Aguirre's Branch Chief, Robert Hanson, said “it would be very difficult to obtain approval to take [suspect’s] testimony because of his powerful political connections." Aguirre said that "Hanson later repeated the same statements to me on several other occasions. Some are confirmed by emails. Assistant Director (Mark) Kreitman participated in one of these discussions.”

He went on to say in the letter to Cox that after issuing approximately 100 subpoenas in the investigation where all documents came directly to him, that when he subpoenaed documents from both Samberg and Mack, they suddenly went over his head and began to deal directly with Linda Thomson, and that Pequot’s counsel also bypassed Aguirre and began to deal directly with Thomson. According to Aguirre, “of hundreds of contacts with defense counsel, this is the first time any defense counsel began discussions at the top of the chain of command. Further, at the same time, my supervisors excluded me from the discussions involving [suspected tippee].”

From late June through late August, Aguirre continued to send “multiple e-mails to my Branch Chief Robert Hanson, Assistant Director Mark Kreitman, and Associate Director Paul Berger, as well as a brief e-mail to Linda Thomson, expressing my concerns.” Instead, immediately following praise from both Hanson and Keitman for “the excellent job” he was doing on the investigation, Aguirre was fired.

After Chairman Cox took no action on the letter from nine months ago, Aguirre wrote another letter to Senators Chuck Hagel and Christopher Dodd of the Senate banking Committee, and sent copies to Senator Shelby and Senator Paul Sarbanes. The second letter, dated May 30, 2006, is 18 pages in length, and is stunning as an indictment of the SEC, the hedge funds, and the entire investment industry. Here are a few excerpts from that letter:

Dear Chairman Hagel and Ranking Member Dodd:

One stubborn question kept popping up when SEC officials recently testified before the full Committee and your Subcommittee: is the SEC adequately protecting the nation’s capital markets and their participants from the risk of manipulation and fraud by the nation’s 11,500 hedge funds? The answer is no.

And the answer is no whatever facts you consider. It is no when the SEC fails to consider any hedge fund fraud or manipulation against other market participants for a quarter century: from 1979 to 2004. It is no when the SEC fails to protect mutual fund investors when billions of dollars are siphoned from their accounts by hedge funds. It is no when you compare what the SEC is doing with what its counterparts in Europe are doing and saying…It is a deafening no when the SEC halts an insider trading investigation of one of the nation’s largest hedge funds because the suspected tipper has powerful political connections, as they did with the investigation assigned to me.
(page 1)

…Fixing the SEC so it can protect investors and capital markets from hedge fund abuse will not be an easy task. Those interests are not just the hedge funds. They include the financial industries that are receiving tens of billions of dollars in revenues for helping hedge funds cheat other market participants or close their eyes to the carnage. At the top of the list are the big investment banks, e.g., Goldman Sachs, Morgan Stanley, Merrill Lynch, and Bear Stearns. Those interests know how to reward friends and punish perceived enemies. Their tentacles reach far. They stopped the hedge fund investigation I was assigned to conduct. They cost me my job. (pages 2 and 3)

…Likewise, the value investor has no clue that an attractively priced small cap is on its way to bankruptcy via the naked shorting of an $8 billion hedge fund. (pages 4 and 5)

…An investment bank can help a hedge fund make and retain illegal profits in multiple ways. For example, its computers can be programmed to miss illegal hedge fund trading, e.g., naked shorts or wash trades. That appeared to be the case with the prime broker in the investigation I headed. (page 7)

In another section of the letter, he goes on to describe in detail how the SEC mishandled one case after another, saying about one investigation “If this case were a movie, it would be titled, The Keystone Cops meet the Gang that Couldn’t Shoot Straight.”

Aguirre presents damning evidence in page after page of his letter to Congressional leaders, detailing how SEC regulators either covered up or turned a blind eye time and time again to massive fraud in the stock market, fraud that has cost investors billions upon billions of dollars over the course of decades of stock market abuse. Next Wednesday, on June 28, the Senate Judiciary Committee will investigate the relationship between hedge funds and independent analysts. If they have any sense of honor and integrity whatsoever, they will broaden the scope of their hearing and call for a full Congressional investigation into the SEC and the entire securities industry. And their first and star witness should be none other than former SEC attorney Gary J. Aguirre.


To read Gary J. Aguirre’s Sept. 2, 2005 letter to Chairman Cox, go to:
http://www.faulkingtruth.com/Files/aguirre_cox0623.pdf

To read Aguirre’s May 30, 2006 letter to members of Congress, go to:
http://www.faulkingtruth.com/Files/aguirre_congress0623.pdf

For information on how to contact the members of the Judiciary Committee, go to:
http://www.faulkingtruth.com/Articles/-EditorsCorner/1048.html

To read more about recent events in the stock market, read “The world was too ridiculous to bother to live in.”:
http://www.faulkingtruth.com/Articles/CommentaryToo/1061.html
Permalink  |  Trackback
Comments (30)
Re: The Keystone Cops meet the Gang that Couldn’t Shoot Straight By Steubenville Ohio on 6/24/2006 3:24 AM
Wow! God bless Attorney Gary Agurirre. The truth we have all been waiting for. I sent this to my local paper. It has done a good job of supressing the news. There must be a lot of jubliant folk this morning. Good job Mark!
Re: The Keystone Cops meet the Gang that Couldn’t Shoot Straight By Granny on 6/24/2006 5:05 AM
How does it make you feel to know that Stevie Cohen of SAC Capital has an ice skating rink the size of the one at Rockefeller Center, including Zamboni, while I can't even afford to take my grandkids ice skating.
Re: The Keystone Cops meet the Gang that Couldn’t Shoot Straight By Mark Faulk on 6/25/2006 6:40 PM
I'll move it to the top of the list with investigatethesec.com. I haven't updated the links in months. In a month, after I've finished my writing project, I'm revamping the entire Faulking Truth website, and setting up a seperate section to pull all the stock market material and links together. It's turned into my major focus, and it's about time I set it up to allow readers to focus on that issue in a more "user friendly" way.

I wish I could clone myself. :)
Re: The Keystone Cops meet the Gang that Couldn’t Shoot Straight By Mark Faulk on 6/25/2006 7:26 PM
Reworked the Faulking Truth links page to focus on the stock market issue:

http://www.faulkingtruth.com/links.html

(Thanks for the suggestion)
Re: The Keystone Cops meet the Gang that Couldn’t Shoot Straight By hwh on 6/25/2006 7:34 PM
Main street America is talking about the destruction of their retirement accounts and the relentless attack on their residual holdings ever since. It is a matter of national security & the SEC has failed to protect Americans' interests.

The equivalent of a court-marshal is appropriate...hwh
Re: The Keystone Cops meet the Gang that Couldn’t Shoot Straight By idewa on 6/26/2006 3:00 PM
Ranger says.......the info on the SEC's non action should be sent to the "right people", and I begin to wonder who they may be? As small investors lose $, those they depend on are too politically corrupt to enforce integrity.
Re: The Keystone Cops meet the Gang that Couldn’t Shoot Straight By Barri Park on 6/24/2006 5:26 AM
Investors should organize ina a grass roots action . 1000 well linked investors could tear shorty a new one , one stock at a time . Supporting the company and applying the cure to a cancer in our markets . Such a network could already be forming . opsuround@lycos.com
Re: The Keystone Cops meet the Gang that Couldn’t Shoot Straight By Patchie on 6/24/2006 7:20 AM
The most amusing aspect of these memos is how Pequot and the press have already spun this.

Aguirre is a disgruntled fired employee – except he was acting on 18 separate referrals from the NYSE. The fact that Aguirre wrote the Chairman on the day he was terminated, and that the SEC was compelled to terminate while he was on vacation is not even questioned. This Lawyer was no rookie – the SEC knew what they were getting when they hired him only a year previously. Aguirre was a 66 year old with a career as a lawyer. Certainly something the SEC could have researched. Instead they paint a picture of a low performer despite rave reviews and unheard of pay increases..

Pequot is quoted by roddy Boyd as being enraged that the SEC was even looking at them. In a “How dare you “ tactic the Pequot Management proves why they should be looked at from every angle. Pequot and other Hedge Funds feed off SEC investigations and now they have the gall to challenge a similar tact against them

I wonder how Thomsen, Hansen and the other staff at the SEC will handle a criminal investigation into their actions.
Re: The Keystone Cops meet the Gang that Couldn’t Shoot Straight By Bookman on 6/24/2006 9:43 AM
I was an SEC attorney for almost 14 years and saw the same conduct over and over. Aguirre speaks the truth...the sad truth.
Re: The Keystone Cops meet the Gang that Couldn’t Shoot Straight By bobo on 6/24/2006 10:13 AM
This is the end of the SEC - as it should be. If his allegations are true (and they certainly explain all of the activity to date) it needs to be dismantled, and a new mechanism created.

The individuals cited in that document should be aggressively prosecuted for aiding in the cover-up of multiple felonies.
Re: The Keystone Cops meet the Gang that Couldn’t Shoot Straight By Mark Faulk on 6/24/2006 11:31 AM
I agree, once a supposed independent regulatory agency has been corrupted by politics, there is no way to fix it short of burning it down and starting all over again. This is worse than the FEMA fiasco, because it affects millions of people...every damn day. And they recommended dismantling FEMA. What do you do with an organization that has been corrupt for longer than any of us can even imagine?

Bookman....email me sometime. info@faulkingtruth.com
Re: The Keystone Cops meet the Gang that Couldn’t Shoot Straight By mhelburn on 6/24/2006 11:35 AM
Who do we write? Do we ask for a house-cleaning? I've heard of people rising to their level of incompetence, but this doesn't sound like incompetence, it is more like recompense.

Wasn't Thomsen upset when Cox got involved in the subpoenas to journalists? Is she just a great actress? Gamesmanship...no... just gamey?

Will the stench ever go away? Mr. Mark will now take over the Treasury! Please will someone tell me about one honest person on Wall Street. When I first wrote on the Faulking Truth, I suggested that hari-kari was in order at the SEC.... but that requires honor. What will Linda receive for blocking the investigation? Kreitman? Where will they be a year from now. Sr. VP's on Wall Street. They could be there already pulling down a couple of million a year or more.. so what allows them to stay there and take less compensation? But if they leave, an honest person might take over... so how is Wall Street able to keep these lackeys where they are? There has to be some money involved. JMHO... but this looks terrible... smells terrible....

I sent Gary Aquirre a fan letter. This has to be so disappointing and frustrating to be so close and have the stink rubbed your face.
Re: The Keystone Cops meet the Gang that Couldn’t Shoot Straight By Johnboy on 6/24/2006 12:06 PM
Money is the only language people of power and influence in this country understands. We need to setup bounty accounts for people that will blow the whistle or get something done in order to compete with the hedge funds.
Re: The Keystone Cops meet the Gang that Couldn’t Shoot Straight By old duffer on 6/24/2006 12:54 PM
if they can ignore this and sweep it under the rug we all need to take any money we have left in the US market and pull it out!

i have already started with this plan and have been putting the money into the canadian mining stocks. i have played these jr canadian stocks for years in spite of the US brokers protests that they are all rigged and crooked and said i would lose my money there......well.... all my canaidian stocks as a group have me up around 100% since jan while my US stocks are down to 33% of what they started the year at, as most of them are dead center in the sights of one force or another.

now whose market is rigged mister broker man?
Re: The Keystone Cops meet the Gang that Couldn’t Shoot Straight By Mark Faulk on 6/24/2006 1:11 PM
The entire system has to be revamped. A housecleaning won't cut it unless they rework the entire system, make fundamental changes in the way Wall Street operates....close the loopholes, regulate the hedge funds, seperate Wall Street from the SEC, tighten short selling and settlement rules, and shut the revolving door between the two entities. And add a LOT MORE transparency to the system as well.

And while they're at it, they should throw half of the people in the SEC and the brokerage firms in jail.

I known this might sound crazy, but the people who have been the advocates for reform are the ones who could come up with a better system. If I had the money, I'd put together a "meeting of the minds" and we could come up with proposals that would fix this once and for all. The question is....is that even what anyone in positions of aurthority really want?
Re: The Keystone Cops meet the Gang that Couldn’t Shoot Straight By Ranger on 6/24/2006 3:06 PM
Damn it is about time somebody put the truth on paper and sent it the right people. The SEC cops are infected with politics. They cannot do the job and need to be replaced. I think they should take a division of the FBI financial investigators and turn them loose on Wall Street and give them all the resources they need to clean the mess up. I workd a beat and once criminals infect an area they have to be hit hard and you set up shop right were they are at and take them down for everybody to see. This is mess. I lost my ass in OSTK and now I seeing the same thing happen to my money in PARL. SAC capital is a major holder of the shares and naked shorts are being used to drive the price down. It is down 60% because they increased profits and gowth by 100%. It makes no sense to anybody. The illegal behavior will not stop until somebody gets caught and actually goes to jail. Right now there is no fear of getting caught because nobody is investigating it. When somebody does investigate it they get fired! Hell of a deal huh! Goes to show you the BIG MONEY ALWAYS WINS. That is the only trading strategy you have in the markets. Follow there play or get buried and lose you money. Not a fair playing field for sure.
Re: The Keystone Cops meet the Gang that Couldn’t Shoot Straight By Patchie on 6/24/2006 5:31 PM
Bookman, did you leave the Commission recently?
Re: The Keystone Cops meet the Gang that Couldn’t Shoot Straight By Wall streeter on 6/24/2006 8:34 PM
I've been on Wall Street for over 20 years, and now I'm ashamed to call myself a broker. I thought I would help people achieve their dreams, and retire comfortably, but it's all about the volume in my firm, and we're one of the big ones.I feel like I work in a boiler room. I hope all of you can clean this mess up, so I can tell people what I do for a living without being embarrassed.
Re: The Keystone Cops meet the Gang that Couldn’t Shoot Straight By bobo on 6/24/2006 9:38 PM
This all happened in the 1920's too. It ended with a global depression, and the creation of the SEC. Anonymous pools of money (now called hedge funds) played havoc with the markets, robbing an entire generation of their wealth, and not a dime was returned - rather, the SEC was created.

Folks, I'll make this simple. The crooks own the system. As they did in the 20's. The cops are owned by the crooks - the new morality has allowed most, if not all, of the top dogs to rationalize that only a fool would battle impossible odds, and do their frigging job.

Most third world countries are kleptocracies, where the wealth of the nation is siphoned off to the ruling groups.

We now live in a kleptocracy. It has killed every noble experiment since Rome. The first generation gets it right, the second argues about it, and by the 5th or 6th most of the principles that the first fought for are considered hackneyed or arcane.

Wall Street considers ideas like fair play, legality, honesty, right and wrong, to be silly anachronisms. We are the sheep, they are the players.

Exactly, exactly like the 1920's.

Any questions?
Re: The Keystone Cops meet the Gang that Couldn’t Shoot Straight By Selene on 6/24/2006 9:50 PM
Outside of the bigger picture, please don't forget what Mr. Aguirre has done for the American people.
Re: The Keystone Cops meet the Gang that Couldn’t Shoot Straight By pureadrenalin on 6/24/2006 11:29 PM
There it is, in plain english for all to see. WTF Congress, SEC, DTCC and Senators do something NOW.
Re: The Keystone Cops meet the Gang that Couldn’t Shoot Straight By kevin on 6/25/2006 1:45 AM
$25.7 trillion to be recovered?

http://rense.com/general70/wanta.htm
Re: The Keystone Cops meet the Gang that Couldn’t Shoot Straight By Sean on 6/25/2006 5:02 AM
I appreciate G. Aguirre shedding some much needed light on this very serious issue, but am I the only one that has noticed that it took almost 10 months for this letter and info to become public? Why such a gap in acknowledgement of something this important? Also Chairman Cox knew of this letter and still quashed the journalist supoenas..this says a lot about his agenda and character or lack of. Maybe I am missing something,please enlighten me. Thanks in advance.
Re: The Keystone Cops meet the Gang that Couldn’t Shoot Straight By InTheKnow on 6/25/2006 5:22 AM
Now we know what happened to those supeonas and why it was done. Political influence.

Kick the bastards out and start over.
Re: The Keystone Cops meet the Gang that Couldn’t Shoot Straight By Mark Faulk on 6/25/2006 7:29 AM
Cox should be fired for his failure to address this issue, but he probably won't. He's nothing more than a politcal appointee carrying out the interests of big busineess and big money. Here are a few quotes from an article I wrote when he was appointed last year, called SEC's Donaldson out, Cox in: One Step Forward, Two Steps Back:

Opponents of the choice of Cox have begun to line up and present their arguments as well, and many present compelling cases against him. In "The Case Against Chris Cox", the Center for American Progress lists a number of questionable activities by Rep. Cox, and points out that he has received over $250,000 in contributions from the securities and investment industry, and another $206,000 from the accounting industry.

Another article, written in 2002, entitled "Made in Newport Beach - How Chris Cox helped produce the Enron scandal" says that:

"Cox pushed for securities-fraud reform in Congress. Nine hearings were held between 1993 and early 1995 before Cox unveiled his Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995.

Consumer advocate Ralph Nader had a different name for the legislation: The Swindlers & Crooks Protection Act. The accounting and high-tech industries—Cox’s biggest campaign contributors—pushed for the "reforms" because companies were being sued by investors when artificially inflated stock values crashed. Representative John Dingell (D-Michigan) characterized the bill as a raid on the small investor and predicted that Congress would regret it.

Lefties weren’t the only critics. Former Nixon and Ford economic adviser Herbert Stein, then-Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) chairman Arthur Leavitt, and top state regulators all opposed the bill, contending it would make it more difficult for defrauded investors to recover stock losses."

We believe that the Senate should be asking hard questions of Rep. Cox, and in fact, the very first question, which should serve as a litmus test for whoever heads the SEC, should be a straightforward and simple one:

"What specifically do you intend to do to stop the abusive and fraudulent practice of naked short selling, or stock counterfeiting, that has plagued our stock market for years, and how do you intend to make restitution to the millions of investors who have harmed by this illegal activity?"


Here it is a year later, and it looks that question has been answered loud and clear.
Re: The Keystone Cops meet the Gang that Couldn’t Shoot Straight By Wicked World on 6/25/2006 11:15 AM

Sean,

The letter to Cox is dated Sept. 2, 2005. The weightier letter to Congress is dated May 30, 2006.

FWIW.

Wicked
Re: The Keystone Cops meet the Gang that Couldn’t Shoot Straight By Sean on 6/25/2006 2:29 PM
Thanks W.W. Then there was not much of a delay. I thought the "Big One " was written Sept. 2005. I appreciate the response.
Re: The Keystone Cops meet the Gang that Couldn’t Shoot Straight By mhatmccane on 6/25/2006 4:04 PM
The letter to Cox was obviously "misfiled" before he even saw it. Now that it has surfaced, he will appoint a committee to investigate it. Likewise the letter to the two Honorable Senators. Meanwhile, money keeps moving offshore. The court system and the NASAA seem to be the main potential heroes in this game.
Re: The Keystone Cops meet the Gang that Couldn’t Shoot Straight By Mark Faulk on 6/25/2006 5:09 PM
Yeah, "misfiled" that's the ticket.

I do agree that the states and/or the courts will have to force the Feds and Congress to act....because they really just don't give a damn about America anymore. Hell, they rig the market...they rig the vote...they hold all the cards and all the money.

Pardon my language on this next part, but their attitude is...Screw America. America is nothing more than the billionaires' bitch. Unfortunately, even bitches will only take so much abuse before they rise up.
Re: The Keystone Cops meet the Gang that Couldn’t Shoot Straight By kevin on 6/25/2006 5:39 PM
Mark, I noticed some high profile sites (http://www.whatreallyhappened.com) linked to this story on your site yesterday. I went to your links section to see if you might be driving traffic here and mainstream sites like michael moore at the top and the naked short links way down the list.

Would you consider putting the link to this site higher in your links section (maybe even in bold) to help drive traffic?

A lot of people reading that article in isolation may think it is just another hedge fund scandal and not realize it means they may have IOU's in their own account.

We need to educate people to the corruption that threatens their own investments.

Your name:
Title:
Comment:
Please limit your comments to 500 characters. For longer comments, use our forums.
Copyright © 2006 The Sanity Check   |   Privacy Statement   |   Terms Of Use