The SEC today charged an unregistered hedge fund with operating a large-scale scheme that it said defrauded hundreds of investors millions of dollars.
The Securities and Exchange Commission today charged an unregistered hedge fund with operating a large-scale scheme that it said defrauded hundreds of investors millions of dollars by overstating investment returns and misrepresenting the value of assets under management.
The SEC said it is seeking a court order to freeze the assets of Westgate Capital Management LLC of Pearl River, N.Y., and its managing member, James Nicholson of Saddle River, N.J. He is a former registered representative who was permanently barred in 2001 by NASD, now the Financial Industry Regulatory Authority Inc. of New York and Washington, the SEC said.
Investors were solicited by the firm “with false claims of an almost unbroken eight-year string of monthly investment successes,” the SEC said in a release. The U.S. Attorney’s Office in New York also announced parallel criminal charges against Mr. Nicholson today, the SEC said.
He and Westgate defrauded investors in 11 unregistered hedge funds that they managed by misrepresenting the value of the hedge funds to investors and soliciting new investors with sales materials that claimed a “nearly impossible record of investment success,” the SEC said. At least one Westgate fund claimed positive returns in 98 of 99 consecutive months, the SEC said.
By late last year, the funds had sustained such losses that redemption requests could no longer be honored, the SEC said.
Mr. Nicholson created a fictitious accounting firm under the name of an actual accountant and provided investors with bogus audited financial statements, the SEC said.
In a statement that brought to mind the Ponzi scheme alleged against Bernard L. Madoff Securities LLC of New York, Scott Friestad, deputy director of the SEC’s Division of Enforcement, said in the release: “If it seems too good to be true, it probably is.”