Atlantic Global Yield v. U.S. Bank National Association

CourtDistrict Court, D. South Dakota
DecidedJuly 17, 2018
Docket4:17-cv-04113
StatusUnknown

This text of Atlantic Global Yield v. U.S. Bank National Association (Atlantic Global Yield v. U.S. Bank National Association) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. South Dakota primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Atlantic Global Yield v. U.S. Bank National Association, (D.S.D. 2018).

Opinion

UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT DISTRICT OF SOUTH DAKOTA SOUTHERN DIVISION i fe fe 2 fe □□ ae fe 2s 2 fe fe 2 ae fe ofc of fe oft os fe ofc af ae ols 2c ake 2s ake fe oft 2K fe oie fe of fe of aft fe ofc oft ale fe oft fe ae afc afc fe af afc □□ ofc oft ac fe ofc ok ofc ok ake ak oft oft □□ ke ok * THE WATER WORKS BOARD OF THE * CITY OF BIRMINGHAM; WASHINGTON * SUBURBAN SANITARY COMMISSION * Case No: 4:17-cv-04113-LLP EMPLOYEES’ RETIREMENT PLAN; * ATLANTIC GLOBAL YIELD OPPORTUNITY * MASTER FUND, L.P; AND ATLANTIC * GLOBAL YIELD OPPORTUNITY FUND, L.P, * * MEMORANDUM OPINION Plaintiffs, * AND ORDER ON DEFENDANT’S * MOTION TO DISMISS VS. * * U.S. BANK NATIONAL ASSOCIATION, * * Defendant. * * ois 2h 2 2h 2k oie 2s 2s 2k ae fe oie ois ois 2s 2s ofc fe fe 2c □□ ais of of ofc fe fe oe □□ fe fe oie 2c 24s □□ 2fe oft □□□ ofe fe fe 2 24 of 2 2fe fe of 2h 2c ofc ofc fe fs ofc 2k 2 2 2 oie ok oe ok 2K □□ ok □□ Pending before the Court is Defendant’s Motion to Dismiss under Fed. R. Civ. P. 12(b)(6) for failure to state a claim upon which relief can be granted. Doc. 25. The Court has considered the relevant pleadings and for the reasons set forth below, Defendant’s motion is granted in part and denied in part. BACKGROUND This case arises out of the purchase by Plaintiffs of approximately $25 million in bonds issued by Wakpamni Lake Community Corporation (Wakpamni Corp.), a South Dakota Native American tribal organization and an affiliate of the Oglala Sioux Tribe of the Pine Ridge Reservation, South Dakota. Those bonds were part of a scheme involving a series of sham Native American tribal bonds sold to unsuspecting investors, with the profits redirected to a group of criminal conspirators, defined by the Complaint as the “Criminal Defendants,” including Jason Galanis—the scheme’s main architect who has already pleaded guilty to criminal charges in the Southern District of New York—and his associate Hugh Dunkerley. Beginning in March 2014, the criminal scheme had several components. First, the Criminal Defendants convinced the Wakpamni Corp. to issue the first series of Tribal Bonds with the promise that the proceeds would be used to fund community development projects. The trust

indenture for the August 2014 Offering provided that the net proceeds from the purchase of the bonds would be invested in a variable annuity which would fund interest and principal payments on the bonds. Wakpamni Corp could then draw certain amounts from the annuity to finance development projects for the tribe. Next, on the eve of the first bond offering, an entity controlled by one or more of the Criminal Defendants purchased Hughes Capital Management LLC (Hughes), an SEC Registered Investment Advisor. Hughes had been the investment advisor of Plaintiffs Birmingham Water and Washington Suburban for many years and had discretionary authority over these Plaintiffs’ accounts pursuant to investment agreements. Then, on or about August 25, 2014, Wakpamni Corp. issued $24,844,089 worth of Special Limited Revenue Bonds (Taxable), Series of 2014, and delivered them to U.S. Bank as Trustee under an Indenture Agreement of the same date (2014 Indenture). On August 26, 2014, the Birmingham Water and Washington Suburban accounts controlled by Hughes purchased $8,462,720 worth of tribal bonds in the offering. An early draft of the 2014 Indenture was circulated to U.S. Bank and other offering participants and provided that, upon final execution of the indenture, Wakpamni Corp. was to execute and deliver to U.S. Bank a number of additional closing documents, including “{a] letter of appointment appointing Wealth Assurance AG as the investment manager with respect to the Annuity Investment.” The Offering Distribution List, which identified the parties involved in the August 2014 Offering, and the Closing Agenda similarly listed “Wealth Assurance AG” as the ~ “Annuity Provider.” However, the final draft of the indenture omitted the requirement that a letter of appointment of Wealth Assurance AG be presented at closing. Instead, the final 2014 Indenture provided that the letter of appointment was to appoint Private Equity Management, Limited, as the investment manager. Further, at closing, Wakpamni Corp. was to execute and deliver to the Indenture Trustee: A Closing Statement signed by the President or Vice-President of the [Wakpamni Corp.] setting forth (i) the amount of the proceeds to be received by the [Wakpamni Corp.] from the sale of the 2014 bonds for funding the purchase of the Annuity Investment .. . ; (ti) the amounts to be paid or reserved for the costs and expenses of the financing; and (iii) the amounts to be deposited in the funds established under this Indenture. At closing, U.S. Bank received a copy of a 25-year term annuity contract in the amount of $25,250,000 (Annuity Contract) which was issued by Wealth Assurance Private Client Corporation (Wealth Assurance BVI). The Annuity Contract identified Wealth Assurance BVI as

a British Virgin Islands entity authorized to do business only.in the British Virgin Islands. The Annuity Contract also required that the annuity purchase payment be wire transferred to “a bank without any offices and/or branches in the United States.” Dunkerly was the signatory for Wealth Assurance BVI on the Annuity Contract, though he was also listed as a primary representative of □□ Burnham, the Placement Agent. He was also the signatory on the Placement Agency Agreement. This rendered Dunkerly the principal of both the Placement Agent and the Annuity Contract Provider, two parties to the same deal. The Closing Statement was also signed by Wakpamni Corp.’s President, Geneva Lone Hill. Also signed by Wakpamni Corps.’s President is a letter dated August 21, 2014 and addressed to U.S. Bank’s Vice President “appoint[ing] Private Equity Management, Limited, as investment manager in connection with the purchase of the annuity investment from Wealth Assurance Private Client Corp. and direct[ing] them to take all actions necessary.” Pursuant to the Annuity Contract, the bond proceeds were to be deposited into a separate segregated account and managed exclusively by Private Equity Management, LLC as investment manager, with U.S. Bank as the intended custodian of the investment portfolio. The Annuity Contract and the Investment Management Agreement, a copy of which U.S. Bank appears to have received with the August 21, 2014 letter, were also inconsistent as to who had authority to direct investments. The Annuity Contract granted Wakpamni Corp. no authority over the investments while the Investment Management Agreement provided that Wakpamni Corp. would provide investment guidelines to the manager, had the right to modify them, and could instruct the manager to “buy, sell or retain any investment.” Ultimately, the net proceeds of the bond were never invested. The 2014 Indenture also required that the value of the Investment Securities be determined at the end of each month according to directions established by agreement between Wakpamni Corp. and U.S. Bank. The term “Investment Securities” is defined to include the Annuity Contract itself. No such agreement was ever put in place and no valuation was conducted. On August 26, 2014, U.S. Bank received instructions for transferring proceeds of the bond issuance to the annuity provider. These instructions were forwarded from Galanis to U.S. Bank by counsel for Burnham, Dilworth Paxson LLP (Dilworth). Galanis was listed on the Distribution List as a primary representative of Burnham, the Placement Agent. Wakpamni Corp. was not copied on the email nor did Wakpamni Corp. send U.S. Bank any directions regarding the disbursement of the proceeds. The instructions directed U.S. Bank to transfer the annuity purchase amount to an

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Atlantic Global Yield v. U.S. Bank National Association, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/atlantic-global-yield-v-us-bank-national-association-sdd-2018.