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WASHINGTON - Today, Congressman Paul E. Kanjorski
(D-PA), the Chairman of the House Financial Services Subcommittee on Capital
Markets, Insurance, and Government Sponsored Enterprises, released a letter from
U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) Inspector General H. David Kotz
in which the inspector general responds to Chairman Kanjorski's requests for suggestions
for modifying our federal securities laws based on the Madoff investigations
and other examinations. Chairman
Kanjorski's initial letter from June 15 requested the recommendations by June
30. Chairman Kanjorski stressed the need
to learn about the SEC's examinations and findings on this issue by the end of
July and in advance of the movement of regulatory reform legislation in
Congress.
"I thank Mr. Kotz for his swift reply and his preliminary
legislative recommendations for improving enforcement and closing legal
loopholes based on his investigation into the $65 billion Madoff Ponzi scheme,"
said Chairman Kanjorski. "The
recommendations provide some valuable insight that could help the House
Financial Services Committee as we work to develop legislation for financial
regulatory reform. Additionally, Mr.
Kotz's first proposal is very similar to legislation that I introduced earlier
this year that would close a legal
loophole in the authority of the Public Company Accounting Oversight Board that
helped Bernard Madoff to avoid detection of his $65 billion scam. By
addressing this and other issues, we can work to update and improve our
regulatory structure. I look forward to
reviewing Mr. Kotz's full recommendations when they become available."
The text of SEC Inspector General Kotz's letter to Chairman
Kanjorski from June 30 follows:
Dear Chairman Kanjorski:
Thank you for your June 16, 2009 letter regarding the
Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) Office of Inspector General's (OIG) investigation into allegations regarding Bernard
L. Madoff (Madoff) and Bernard L. Madoff Investment Securities, LLP and for
meeting with me on June 23, 2009 at your offices to discuss our ongoing
investigation.
I am glad that you are generally pleased with our
progress in connection with our investigations and audits of these important
and complex matters. As I indicated to you during our meeting, we are committed
to producing, in an expeditious manner, thorough and comprehensive investigative and audit reports analyzing
the reasons that the SEC did not uncover the Madoff Ponzi scheme
notwithstanding examinations and investigations conducted over a period of
nearly 20 years, as well as providing recommendations to improve the operations
of the pertinent SEC divisions and offices. I appreciated the opportunity to
brief you on developments in our investigation at your offices last week and am
happy that you felt the meeting was productive.
While we have not yet completed the investigation, we
are able to provide to you, at your request, several legislative suggestions
that have arisen out of our Madoff investigatory work, which we believe will
strengthen the ability of investors and the regulatory agencies to uncover
frauds such as Ponzi schemes in the future. We understand that the SEC is also
recommending to the Subcommittee the legislative suggestions numbered 1 and 4
below. These suggestions are as follows:
(1) Extend the regulatory jurisdiction of the
Public Company Accounting Oversight Board (PCAOB) to audit reports prepared by
a domestic registered or foreign public accounting firm regarding issuers,
broker-dealers, investment advisers and any companies subject to U.S. securities
laws. The PCAOB's current
responsibilities include the following: (a) registering public accounting
firms; (b) establishing auditing, quality control, ethics, independence, and
other standards relating to public company audits; (c) conducting inspections,
investigations, and disciplinary proceedings of registered accounting firms;
and (d) enforcing compliance with the Sarbanes-Oxley Act of 2002. The PCAOB is able to address many auditing
problems through a combination of inspections and standards-setting. The PCAOB's supervisory model uses several tools to improve
audit quality, correct audit deficiencies, and promote compliance with
applicable standards and laws. Where necessary, the PCAOB exercises its
enforcement authority.
Extending the
regulatory jurisdiction of the PCAOB would allow for increased oversight of
these accounting firms and reduce the risks associated with unknown accounting
firms that have been able to avoid scrutiny. We believe that H.R. 1212, as
currently introduced, accomplishes many of these same goals, except that we
would recommend that the legislation clarify that the PCAOB oversight be
extended to audit reports prepared by a registered accounting firm which
provides reports for investment advisers, investment companies and other
registered entities, as well as registered broker dealers.
(2) Amending the Investment Advisers Act of
1940 (Investment Advisers Act) to require the use of independent custodians in
a manner similar to Section 17(f) of the Investment Company Act of 1940
(Investment Company Act), which requires the use of an independent custodian by
mutual funds. Section 17(f) of the Investment Company Act requires a registered
management company to "place and maintain its securities and similar
investments in the custody of" a bank or a dealer admitted to a national
securities exchange, subject to such rules and regulations as the Commission
may from time to time prescribe for the protection of investors. See 15 U.S.c.
§ 80a-17(f)(1). In addition, Rule 17f-2(b) of the Rules and Regulations
promulgated under the Investment Company Act requires that all such securities
and similar investments be deposited in the safekeeping of, or in a vault or
other depository maintained by, a bank or other company whose functions and
physical facilities are supervised by Federal or State authority. The Rule
further provides that investments so deposited shall be physically segregated
at all times from those of any other person and shall be withdrawn only in
connection with transactions of the character described in the Rule. This
custodian requirement essentially removes the ability of an investment adviser
to fraudulently use the proceeds invested by new investors to make payments to
old investors.
Hedge funds
are currently exempt from the Investment Company Act and are not subject to the
independent custodian requirement. In addition, investment advisers who are
also registered broker-dealers are currently permitted to clear their trades
through their own broker-dealer firm. Thus, both investment advisers and hedge
funds should be required to use an independent custodian.
We are aware
that the SEC is currently proposing amendments to its custody rule under the
Investment Advisers Act to require a written report from an independent public
accountant that includes an opinion regarding the custodian's controls relating to custody of client assets if
the client accounts are not maintained by an independent qualified
custodian. However, we believe that a
more direct way to remedy this statutory loophole would be to amend the
Investment Advisers Act in conformity with the Investment Company Act.
(3) The Sarbanes-Oxley Act of2002 requires
ongoing certifications of certain reports by chief executive officers and chief
financial officers of public reporting companies. Executives who knowingly file
noncompliant reports face possible criminal prosecution including substantial
fines and imprisonment.
Certifications
have been determined to be effective controls to ensure compliance with
particular requirements or guidelines. We would recommend imposing a
requirement of certification by senior officers of registered investment advisers
that shows they conducted adequate due diligence in connection with
investments. This certification requirement should apply to all funds of hedge
funds. The adequate level of due diligence required in accordance with the
certification may be defined pursuant to a particular model of best practices,
such as the Managed Fund Association (MFA) model or the Alternative Investment
Management Association (AlMA) model, or could be developed by the SEC.
Enforcing an adequate level of due diligence would ensure that investors have
adequate information when investing through intermediaries.
(4) Bounty programs are an effective tool to
encourage whistleblowers to come forward and would provide necessary incentives
for outside entities to bring complaints about possible illegal activity. There
is some evidence that the bounty program implemented by the Department of
Justice (DOJ) has played a role in the increase of civil recoveries obtained by
the DOJ over a 10-year period. The Internal Revenue Service (IRS) also has a
system in place where it provides a bounty to individuals who present the IRS
with information leading to the collection of federal taxes.
Although the
bounty system has been in place at the SEC for more than 20 years, there have
been relatively few awards made. The SEC program is limited to insider trading
cases, and the stated criteria for judging bounty applications are broad,
somewhat vague and not subject to judicial review.
Currently,
Section 21A(e) of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 (Exchange Act) [15 U.S.C.
78u-l(e)] authorizes the SEC to award a bounty to a person who provides
information leading to the recovery of a civil penalty from an insider trader,
from a person who "tipped" information to an insider trader, or from a
person who directly or indirectly controlled an insider trader. All bounty
determinations, including whether, to whom, or in what amount to make payments,
are within the sole discretion of the SEC, however, the total bounty may not
currently exceed 10% of the amount "actually recovered" from a civil
penalty pursuant to a court order.
We would
recommend that the Exchange Act be amended to authorize the SEC to award a
bounty for information leading to the recovery of a civil penalty from any
violator of the federal securities laws, not simply insider trading violations.
We would also suggest that the Exchange Act be amended to provide specific
criteria for awarding bounties, including a provision that where a
whistleblower relies upon public information, such reliance does not constitute
an absolute bar to recovering a bounty. The statute should also require that
the whistleblower be provided with status reports at certain milestones during
the investigation or examination that was based on the tip.
We would be happy to discuss any of the above
legislative suggestions with you or the Subcommittee at your convenience. If,
as we conclude our investigation, we determine that there are any further
legislative recommendations that would be appropriate for your Subcommittee, we
will share them with you at that time.
Thank you again for your continued interest in our
work.
Sincerely,
H. David Kotz
Inspector General
cc: The Honorable Mary L. Schapiro
Chairman, Securities and Exchange Commission
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