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Enforcement Actions: Week in Review - January 15th, 2016

SEC ENFORCEMENT ACTIONS

SEC Announces 2016 Examination Priorities
January 11, 2016 (Litigation Release No. 4)
The SEC has announced its new 2016 priorities for its Office of Compliance Inspections and Examinations. The new priorities center around liquidity controls, public pension advisers, product promotion, exchange-traded funds, and variable annuities.

Julie M. Riewe, Co-Chief of Asset Management Unit, to Leave SEC After 10 Years of Service
January 11, 2016 (Litigation Release No. 5)
The SEC has announced that Co-Chief of the Enforcement Division's Asset Management Unit Julie M. Riewe is leaving the SEC. Riewe has been co-chief for over two years.

SEC Adopts Rules Implementing FAST Act Provisions 2016
January 13, 2016 (Litigation Release No.6)
The SEC has announced its approval of interim final rules for implementing two provisions of the Fixing America's Surface Transportation Act. The rules, adopted by Congress last December, revise Forms S-1 and F-1 to benefit emerging growth companies and smaller reporting companies.

SEC Charges 11 Bank Officers and Directors With Fraud
January 13, 2016 (Litigation Release No.7)
Eleven former executives and board members at Superior Bank and its holding company have been charged by the SEC for their involvement in schemes to cover up loan losses at the bank in the aftermath of the 2008 financial crisis. The SEC alleges that they manipulated bad loans in order to avoid reporting increasing allowances for loan and lease losses (ALLL). This fraud allegedly led Superior Bank to overstate its net income by ~99% in 2009 and 50% in 2010. In 2011, Superior Bank was closed the FDIC in April of 2011. Two of the eleven executives are contesting the charges. The nine that have agreed to settle the charges will pay monetary penalties and be barred from ever serving as officers or directors of a publicly traded company.

SEC Charges State Street for Pay-to-Play Scheme
January 14, 2016 (Litigation Release No.8)
The SEC has announced that State Street Bank and Trust Company has agreed to pay $12 million to settle charges that it engaged in a pay-to-play scheme to obtain government contracts. The SEC alleges that State Street's former senior vice president and head of public funds, Vincent DeBaggis, created a lobbying agreement with an immigration lawyer with connections to Ohio's former deputy treasurer Amer Ahmad. In exchange for money, State Street would be given pension funds contracts; in a little over a year, State Street paid $160,000 in lobbying fees, a large portion of which was sent to the deputy treasurer, and made $60,000 in political contributions. Robert Crowe, a fundraiser and lobbyist for State Street, is accused of making illicit campaign contributions to Ahmad, who threatened to terminate the deal.

SEC Charges Goldman Sachs with Improper Securities Lending Practices
January 14, 2016 (Litigation Release No.9)
The SEC has announced that Goldman Sachs has agreed to pay $15 million to settle charges that they violated Regulation SHO. Goldman Sachs is alleged to have located stock for short sales without completing sufficient review of the security. The SEC found that employees were using a system short-cut when processing locate requests and that Goldman Sach's documentation did not identify locates filled using this function.

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