SEC Gag Orders are Against Public
Policy
Posted by Phillip Goldstein, Bulldog
Investors, on Tuesday, May 3, 2022
Editor’s Note:
Phillip Goldstein is
the co-founder of Bulldog Investors. This post is based on an
amicus brief in Barry
D. Romeril v.
Securities and Exchange Commission, submitted on behalf of
Mr. Goldstein, Mark
Cuban, Elon
Musk, Nelson
Obus, and the Investor Choice Advocates Network (“ICAN”). |
Identity and Interest of Amici Curiae
Amici are Mark Cuban, Phillip Goldstein, Elon Musk, Nelson Obus,
and Investor Choice Advocates Network (“ICAN”). Each of the individual amici is
a sophisticated businessperson and investor who has publicly litigated against
the United States Securities and Exchange Commission (“SEC”). ICAN is a
nonprofit, public interest law firm working to expand access to markets by
underrepresented investors and entrepreneurs. Amici have an interest in the
outcome of this case because they believe it is important that the public and
the market are able to learn of the merits—or lack thereof—of the SEC’s claims
against individuals or corporations as well as details about settlement
negotiations. In other words, amici appreciate that, absent a compelling reason
not present here, enforcement of a “gag order” regarding a settlement agreement
between a litigant and the SEC is against public policy. As market participants
and adverse parties to litigation with the SEC, amici have a particular interest
in fostering the ability of settling defendants to comment on the SEC’s unproven
claims and the circumstances that such defendants assert caused them to settle.
Summary of the Argument
The SEC’s prohibition against settling defendants criticizing the
SEC’s unproven allegations raises important First Amendment and Due Process
Clause issues, as noted by the Petitioner. Amici raise a complementary
consideration warranting review: there is no compelling public policy reason to
enforce SEC “gag orders” against defendants who settle with the SEC. In fact,
the opposite is true. In the statutes and regulations the SEC is responsible for
enforcing (and by its own actions, public statements, and admissions), the SEC
requires full transparency and disclosure for the benefit of participants in
securities markets. There is no compelling justification for the SEC to break
from this responsibility and single out for concealment and opacity information
from defendants who settle with the SEC. To the contrary, preventing these
settling defendants from speaking freely deprives the securities markets of
potentially material information and so may harm the very market participants
for whose benefit the SEC pursues transparency and disclosure. These important
additional considerations weigh in favor of granting the petition.
Argument
I. The SEC’s Gag Orders Conceal Information from the Market
The First Amendment fosters a “marketplace of ideas.” See Holmes,
J., dissenting and joined by Brandeis, J., in Abrams v. United States,
250 U.S. 616, 630 (1919) (“. . . the best test of truth is the power of the
thought to get itself accepted in the competition of the market . . . .”) This
“marketplace of ideas” is particularly important when it involves criticism of
government officials and perceived governmental overreaches. See, e.g., New
York Times Co. v. Sullivan, 376 U.S. 254 (1964).
The SEC plays an important role in the “marketplace of ideas,”
and holds itself out as striving “to promote a market environment that is . . .
characterized by transparency.” In
pursuit of transparency, the SEC regularly insists that market participants
provide “full disclosure” and not remain silent when to do so would “make the
statements made, in light of the circumstances under which they were made, not
misleading[.]” Lorenzo v. SEC, 139 S. Ct. 1094, 1105 (2019).
In a recent speech, SEC Chair Gary Gensler tied the need for
transparency to “lowering costs of intermediation for those who use
capital—issuers—and those who own capital—investors. If we can use our
authorities to bring greater transparency and competition into that market, that
helps issuers and investors.”
However, the SEC’s requirement of transparency and full
disclosure for the benefit of market participants has one glaring exception
highlighted by Petitioner’s case. The SEC insists on concealing truthful
information from the market when that information casts the SEC’s own unproven
allegations or its prosecutorial misconduct in a negative light. The SEC’s
insistence on secrecy in connection with its settlements serves no compelling
purpose, runs contrary to the SEC’s mission, and harms the very markets the SEC
is charged with protecting.
II. The SEC’s “Hobson’s Choice” Settlements Are No Substitute for Market
Transparency
The SEC may contend that all relevant information about settled
enforcement matters is available from the SEC’s complaint, judgment, and press
release. However, the manner in which most SEC actions reach settlement suggests
that the SEC’s unproven charging document rarely, if ever, contains all
information material to investors and the public. The “Hobson’s Choice” nature
of most SEC settlements stifles the “marketplace of ideas” and denies the
financial markets and the general public potentially useful information from the
SEC’s litigation opponents.
According to one 2015 study, the average cost for companies to
respond to an SEC formal investigation—prior to the filing of any litigation—was
more than $4 million. Following
investigation, the SEC may elect to pursue targets through its administrative
hearing process, in federal court, or both, which results in formidable costs
and may take years to resolve. 15 U.S.C. §§ 78d-1(a), 78u(d), and 78y(a)(1).
Under these circumstances, most defendants have no choice but to
settle—not necessarily because they concede the accuracy of the SEC’s
allegations, but rather because the legal cost to resist an opponent having
virtually unlimited resources would be financially ruinous and would inflict
enormous reputational damage. The direct and indirect cost of litigating against
the SEC has motivated even defendants with substantial resources to settle
rather than go to trial for an adjudication of the SEC’s allegations. As
a result, settlements do not represent findings of fact at the end of an
adversarial process. Instead, settlements often represent a begrudging
alternative to a battle of attrition described by one settling defendant as
“totally abusive.”
If for no other reason than market transparency, it is against
public policy for the SEC to prohibit frank discussion by litigation opponents
who settle in the face of a process few can afford to endure.
III. The SEC Demands Transparency Regarding Settlements Between Private Parties
While the SEC prevents those who settle with it from publicly
speaking negatively about their settlements, it simultaneously chastises other
litigants for failing to disclose enough information about their litigation and
settlements.
Take, for example, the case of S.E.C. v. Yuen, No. CV
03-4376MRP (PLAX), 2006 WL 1390828 (C.D. Cal. Mar. 16, 2006). There, the SEC
charged Henry Yuen, the CEO of a public company, with securities fraud and other
violations of the federal securities laws. Id., at *1. The SEC alleged
that Yuen acted wrongfully in failing to disclose sufficient detail about his
company’s settlement negotiations and settlement agreement with an opponent in
litigation, thus misleading the investing public. Id., at *30. As a
result of these actions, Yuen received a permanent officer and director bar and
was required to disgorge more than $10 million and pay a civil penalty of more
than $10 million. S.E.C. v. Yuen, No. CV 03-4376 MRP (PLAX), 2006 WL
1390837, at *2 (C.D. Cal. May 8, 2006), aff’d, 272 F. App’x 615 (9th Cir. 2008).
But consider the circumstances if Yuen had, instead of settling
with a private party, entered into a settlement with the SEC. In that case, he
would have been barred from providing any information to
the investing public regarding the settlement critical of the SEC’s allegations,
even if that information was truthful and material to investors.
And Yuen is not unique. The SEC regularly brings
enforcement actions against individuals and companies based, at least in part,
on their failure to provide the investing public with sufficient information
about their settlements or litigation. See, e.g., S.E.C. v. RPM
Int’l, Inc., 282 F. Supp. 3d 1, 28 (D.D.C. 2017) (failing to disclose
submission of settlement offer); S.E.C. v. Kirkland, 521 F. Supp. 2d
1281, 1303 (M.D. Fla. 2007) (failing to disclose litigation history); S.E.C.
v. Falstaff Brewing Corp., 629 F.2d 62, 73 (D.C. Cir. 1980) (failing to
provide sufficient detail regarding litigation). The SEC would prohibit each of
these disclosures if it reflected negatively on the SEC’s allegations in a
settled enforcement action.
In essence, the SEC requires the withholding of information from
the investing public when the SEC is involved in a case, but condemns such
withholding in many other circumstances. The same reasons the SEC cites in
support of its cases compelling private parties to disclose aspects of private
litigation and settlements weigh in favor of permitting those who settle with
the SEC to provide information to the investing public about their settlements
with the SEC.
IV. The SEC Is Not Infallible and Should Welcome Exposure of Its Unproven
Allegations to Scrutiny
“Sunlight is said to be the best of disinfectants.” Like
any organization, the SEC is capable of error. But unlike many organizations
over which the SEC has considerable authority, the SEC is a federal government
agency “whose interest . . . is not that it shall win a case, but that justice
shall be done.” Berger v. United States, 295 U.S. 78, 88 (1935). The
SEC should welcome scrutiny of its allegations, particularly unproven
allegations in settled cases, to ensure that justice is done and any
shortcomings in its cases are publicly aired.
An extreme example of injustice demonstrates the point. In a now
infamous case involving allegations of options backdating at a public technology
company, the SEC secured settlements against the company and several of its
employees. In one such settlement in March 2008, the SEC obtained a judgment
requiring payment of $1.4 million in penalties and disgorgement from the
company’s vice president of human resources. J., SEC v. Tullos, No.
SACV 08-242- AG (MLGx) (C.D. Cal. Mar. 10, 2008), ECF No. 6.
The March 2008 settlement was subject to the SEC’s gag order, and
so the settling defendant was not free to speak about the reasons she settled,
the weaknesses in the SEC’s case, or the ambiguous nature of the legal theory at
issue.
In the meantime, a parallel criminal case proceeded to trial
against other defendants. But before that trial concluded, the district court
judge presiding over both the civil SEC and criminal cases made a stunning
announcement from the bench. Based on findings of egregious prosecutorial
conduct, the judge dismissed the criminal cases. The judge cited, among other
things, that the defendant who settled with the SEC met with the government “on
26 separate occasions and [the government] subjected her to grueling
interrogation during which the government interjected its views of the evidence
and, at least on one occasion, told her that she would not receive the benefits
of cooperation unless she testified differently than she had initially in an
earlier session.” (Tr. of Proceedings at 5196-97, United States v. Ruehle, No.
SACR 08-00139-CJC (C.D. Cal. Dec. 15, 2009).
Based on these and other findings of prosecutorial misconduct,
the judge dismissed the criminal cases and “discourage[d] the SEC from
proceeding further with the case. . . . The accounting standards and guidelines
were not clear, and there was considerable debate in the high-tech industry as
to the proper accounting treatment for stock option grants.” Id. at
5201.
Nearly a year after the judge’s actions, the SEC revised its
settlement with the defendant, eliminating the $1.4 million in penalties and
disgorgement. Am. Final J., SEC v. Tullos, No. SACV 08-242-CJC (MLGx)
(C.D. Cal. Nov. 10, 2010), ECF No. 11.
From the time of the initial settlement and imposition of a gag
order in March 2008 to the December 2009 hearing at which the judge revealed the
prosecutorial misconduct, the settling defendants kept mum as the SEC demanded.
They did not talk about the formidable amount of time, energy, and expense
necessary to litigate against the SEC, or the unclear accounting standards at
issue, or the pressure exerted by government attorneys to testify in a certain
way, or defenses and exculpatory facts they would have asserted had they not
settled. Moreover, if the judge presiding over the parallel proceedings had not
uncovered the prosecutorial misconduct, the public never would have learned of
the troublesome issues with the SEC’s case.
All of this is of course immensely important to settling
defendants such as the Petitioner in this case. But full and frank discussion
about SEC enforcement actions is also important to the general public and
particularly to those with a connection to the securities markets. As then-SEC
Chair Arthur Levitt said in a 1999 speech to the Economic Club of New York,
“Quality information is the lifeblood of strong, vibrant markets. Without it,
investor confidence erodes. Liquidity dries up. Fair and efficient markets
simply cease to exist.” Rather
than impeding the flow of information about its unproven allegations as it does
with settlement gag orders, the SEC should be barred from discouraging full,
frank, public discussion.
Conclusion
The petition for a writ of certiorari should be granted.
Endnotes
1
Pursuant to Supreme Court Rule 37.6, counsel for amici curiae states
that no counsel for a party authored this brief in whole or in part, and no
party or counsel for a party, or any other person other than amici curiae or
its counsel, made a monetary contribution intended to fund the preparation or
submission of this brief. The parties have filed blanket consents to the filing
of amicus curiae briefs. See Sup. Ct. R. 37.3.
(go back)
2
SEC, Agency & Mission Information, https://www.sec.gov/about/reports/sec-fy2014-agency-mission-information.pdf.
(go back)
3
Gary Gensler, Chair, SEC, Prepared Remarks at the Exchequer Club of Washington,
D.C., Dynamic Regulation for a Dynamic Society (Jan. 19, 2022), https://www.sec.gov/news/speech/gensler-dynamic-regulation-20220119.
(go back)
4
Center for Capital Markets, Examining U.S. SEC Enforcement:
Recommendations on Current Processors & Practices (July 2015), https://www.centerforcapitalmarkets.com/wp-content/uploads/2015/07/021882_SEC_Reform_FIN1.pdf
(go back)
5 See Jeff
Cox, Leon Cooperman: SEC insider trading case was ‘extraordinarily abusive,’ CNBC
(May 30, 2017, 12:18 PM EDT) (estimating trial costs of $20 million in addition
to other indirect costs), https://www.cnbc.com/2017/05/30/leon-cooperman-tells-cnbc-sec-case-was-extraordinarily-abusive.html.
(go back)
6
Id.
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7
Louis Brandeis, Other People’s Money (1914).
(go back)
8
Arthur Levitt, Chairman, SEC, Prepared
Remarks Before the Economic Club of New York City, Quality Information: The
Lifeblood of Our Markets (Oct. 18, 1999),
https://www.sec.gov/news/speech/speecharchive/1999/spch304.htm.
(go back).
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