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SUPREMES MAKE IT OFFICIAL: WALL ST & CORPORATE EXECS ARE ABOVE THE LAW WHEN THEY LIE TO THE INVESTING PUBLIC

Jeff McCord of The Investor Advocate

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It its far-reaching Janus decision, a divided Supreme Court on June 13 issued a 5 to 4

Decision that virtually immunizes investment and corporate managers against civil fraud

actions by investors and the SEC when they knowingly lie to the investing public in

certain easily replicated circumstances.  This ruling follows a similar 2008 decision

(Stoneridge) that grants immunity from investor accountability to managerial advisers –

accountants, lawyers, financial consultants – who aid and abet or otherwise knowingly

help investment and corporate managers lie in financial and other statements.

Like the two-faced Roman god Janus from whom the defendant mutual fund in this case

took its’ name, our highest court acting in the name of Justice has declared an already

privileged class of financial and corporate executives to be above the law when they

defraud the public — if they follow the easy to read “road maps” to loopholes spelled-out

for them in the Janus and Stoneridge decisions.

“When Clinton Lied, Nobody Died” — or Lost Their Life Savings

Reminiscent of then President Clinton’s pedantic and inventive definition of the word “it”

(as in “was ‘it’ sex?”) while being deposed in the Monica Lewinsky matter, Justice

Clarence Thomas relied on a narrow, counter-intuitive definition of the word “make”

(as in “who ‘makes’ a fraudulent corporate statement?”) in the Janus opinion he wrote

with the concurrence of Justices Roberts, Scalio, Allito and Kennedy.  Justice Stephen

Breyer in his dissenting opinion, joined by Justices Ginsburg, Sotomayor and Kagan, said

Justice Clarence’s definition of “make” does not comport with the English language.

Here, in part, is what the Free Online Dictionary says “make” means:

1. To cause to exist or happen; bring about; create: made problems for us; making a commotion.

2. To bring into existence by shaping, modifying, or putting together material; construct: make a

dress; made a stone wall.

http://www.thefreedictionary.com/make

Justice Thomas said that only the highest corporate authority (a Board of Directors, for

instance) can “make” a statement as the corporate entity.  Executives in subsidiaries or

corporate officers who clearly “bring a statement into existence” by putting it together

and then say or write the statement on behalf of the corporate entity cannot be held

accountable for “making” a corporate statement, in the world described in Janus.

Justice Breyer explains:

“[I]n the majority’s view, only ‘the person or entity with ultimate authority over the

statement, including its content and whether and how to communicate it’ can ‘make’ a

statement within the terms of Rule 10b–5 [the provision of securities law addressing

fraudulent statements]. In my view, however, the majority has incorrectly interpreted the

Rule’s word ‘make.’  Neither common English nor this Court’s earlier cases limit the

scope of that word to those with ‘ultimate authority’ over a statement’s content. To the

contrary, both language and case law indicate that, depending upon the circumstances, a

management company, a board of trustees, individual company officers, or others,

separately or together, might ‘make’ statements contained in a firm’s prospectus—even if

a board of directors has ultimate content-related responsibility.  And the circumstances

here are such that a court could find that Janus Management made the statements in

question.”

http://www.supremecourt.gov/opinions/10pdf/09-525.pdf

Justice Breyer provides two examples of people “making” statements on behalf of a

higher authority that nevertheless present that authority’s views:

– the President’s press secretary issues news releases and statements presenting an

Administration’s position.  Even though he or she is not the President, the press secretary

clearly speaks on behalf of the President.  “One can say that the President has made a

statement even if his press officer issues a communication, sometimes in the press

officer’s own name,” Justice Breyer says.

– “ [A]s a matter of English, one can say that a  national political party has made  a

statement even if the only written communication consists of uniform press releases

issued in the name of local party branches,” Justice Breyer added.

Yet, under Janus’ definition of “make,” neither the Administration nor political party

“subsidiaries” in Breyer’s examples would have “made” statements, even though

“spokespeople” with lawful authority (think corporate officers) made the statements on

behalf of the controlling entities (think Boards of Directors).  Unless a corporate Board

itself makes a statement, the corporate entity has not spoken and neither it, nor the

spokespeople themselves, bear responsibility for what corporate officers say or write,

under Janus.

Supremes Provide “Blueprint for Fraud”

BLOOMBERG-BUSINESS Week’s sources say Janus provides a road map for crooked

managers to follow to make themselves judgment-proof:

“The ruling may have ramifications well beyond the mutual fund industry, said William

Birdthistle, a professor who specializes in investment fund law and securities regulation

at Chicago-Kent College of Law.  “It’s a blueprint for operating companies to see what

the investment companies are doing and to make themselves as bulletproof as the

investment advisers,” said Birdthistle, who filed a brief backing the Janus shareholders.

http://www.businessweek.com/news/2011-06-13/mutual-fund-shareholder-suits-curbed-by-u-s-supreme-

court.html

And, THOMSEN REUTERS’ commentator Reynolds Holding sums up this problem in a

short headline:  “Supremes Show Fund Bosses How to Skirt Fraud.”

http://newsandinsight.thomsonreuters.com/Legal/News/2011/06_-_June/Breakingviews__Supremes_show_fund_bosses_how_to_skirt_fraud/

What do the Little People Think?  Putting Money in Mattresses

Early reaction from investors who read the first NEW YORK TIMES report on Janus is

not encouraging for those who believe America’s capital markets (once the most honest

in the world) play a vital, constructive role in financial and economic recovery and

prosperity.  Consider these e-mailed TIMES reader comments:

“The majority in this case chose to limit shareholder rights. A give away to wall st., another

reason why main st should stay away from wall st. We don’t need our hard earned money to go

to these wall st cronies, where your money goes to die.”

“Between computerized trading algorithms that work on a time scale of nano-seconds, the rife

insider trading, and now the Supreme Court colluding with the criminals, I am convinced that the

market is completely rigged, and that ordinary investors are just cannon fodder for these

predators (after all, someone has to be the loser for all these “winners”), so I have pulled all

money out of the market–it’s a mug’s game.”

http://bucks.blogs.nytimes.com/2011/06/13/supreme-court-ruling-in-janus-case-limits-shareholder-suits/

Wall Street and Corporate Elites Are Above the Law

So, in a one-two punch, this Court has eliminated all civil investor and federal liability

for primary management actors in accounting and disclosure frauds (Janus) and private

liability for those secondary professional advisory actors who knowingly assist managers

in such frauds (Stoneridge decision in 2008).

As recently reported in THE INVESTOR ADVOCATE, poll after poll of Americans

report that majorities, regardless of political leanings, believe Wall Street and senior

corporate executives are above the laws that the rest of us must live by.  Now the highest

Court in our struggling, economically depressed land has made it so.

http://www.the-investor-advocate.com/?p=2147483724

June 15, 2011