Bayou Superfund, LLC v. WAM Long/Short Fund II, L.P. (In re WAM Long/Short Fund, L.P.)

362 B.R. 624, 2007 Bankr. LEXIS 635, 47 Bankr. Ct. Dec. (CRR) 262
CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, S.D. New York
DecidedFebruary 23, 2007
DocketBankruptcy No. 06 B 22306(ASH); Adversary No. 06-08293A
StatusPublished
Cited by23 cases

This text of 362 B.R. 624 (Bayou Superfund, LLC v. WAM Long/Short Fund II, L.P. (In re WAM Long/Short Fund, L.P.)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Court, S.D. New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bayou Superfund, LLC v. WAM Long/Short Fund II, L.P. (In re WAM Long/Short Fund, L.P.), 362 B.R. 624, 2007 Bankr. LEXIS 635, 47 Bankr. Ct. Dec. (CRR) 262 (N.Y. 2007).

Opinion

DECISION DENYING MOTIONS TO DISMISS

ADLAI S. HARDIN, JR., Bankruptcy Judge.

Before the Court are defendants’ motions to dismiss the amended complaints in ninety-five adversary proceedings pursuant to Bankruptcy Rules 7009 and 7012 and Federal Rules of Civil Procedure 9(b) and 12(b)(6). The adversary proceedings were commenced by debtors-plaintiffs to recover alleged fraudulent conveyances under Sections 544 and 548 of the Bankruptcy Code and Sections 273-276 of the New York Debtor and Creditor Law (“DCL”).1

The plaintiffs in these 95 adversary proceedings (Bayou Superfund, LLC, Bayou No Leverage Fund, LLC and Bayou Accredited Fund, LLC) are three hedge funds organized in 2003 (collectively, the “Bayou Hedge Funds” or, together with other Bayou-related entities, the “Bayou Entities”). The defendants are persons and entities who invested in the Bayou Hedge Funds. The gravamen of the amended complaints is that the Bayou Entities including the Bayou Hedge Funds were operated by their pre-petition principals — Samuel Israel III and Daniel E. Marino (“Israel” and “Marino”) — as a “massive Ponzi scheme.” As summarized at page 2 of plaintiffs’ Memorandum of Law in response to the motions to dismiss (“Plaintiffs’ Memorandum”):

Israel and Marino siphoned many millions of dollars from the Bayou Hedge Funds for their personal benefit, disseminated false financial reports indicating that the Bayou Hedge Funds had enjoyed substantial investment gains when in fact they had experienced substantial [627]*627losses, created a phony accounting firm to certify those false financial reports, and caused the Bayou Hedge Funds to make redemption payments to certain investors in inflated amounts derived from those false reports. When the fraudulent scheme collapsed, hundreds of investor creditors lost all of their principal investments totaling approximately $250 million....
Essential to the fraudulent investment scheme was the transfer of over $135 million in inflated redemption payments of non-existent principal and fictitious profits to the Defendants, each of whom redeemed during the fourteen months preceding the Bayou Hedge Funds’ demise in August 2005. To effect the fraud, the Bayou Entities purposefully paid Defendants substantially more than their investments were actually worth in order to validate the falsified performance reports and financial statements, with the specific intent to conceal the fraud from existing investors and to induce prospective investors to entrust new investments to the Bayou Hedge Funds. As such, these redemption payments were the sine qua non of the fraud, and thus were made with actual intent to defraud present and future creditors.

The alleged fraudulent conveyances sought to be recovered are payments to the defendants of “non-existent principal and fictitious profits” in redemption of defendants’ purported but non-existent interests in the Bayou Hedge Funds as reflected in the Funds’ false financial reports (id. at 3).

Jurisdiction

This Court has jurisdiction over these core proceedings under 28 U.S.C. §§ 1334(b) and 157(a) and (b)(2) and the standing order of reference to bankruptcy judges dated July 10, 1984 signed by Acting Chief Judge Robert J. Ward.

Background

The material facts alleged in the amended complaints may be briefly summarized.

It is alleged that the original Bayou Fund was organized by Israel and Marino in 1996. Soon after the Bayou Fund opened and started trading, it sustained heavy losses amounting to millions of dollars during 1997 and 1998. To conceal those losses, the Bayou Fund began falsifying its financial disclosures and fraudulently misrepresenting its investment performances. Because the Bayou Fund’s losses could not withstand the scrutiny of an independent audit of year-end 1998 financial results, the Bayou Fund’s independent auditor was terminated and, in its place, Marino (an accountant) created a fictitious accounting firm (Richmond-Fair-field Associates, CPA, PLLC) to pose as the independent auditor.

Beginning in 1999 and continuing through 2005 Israel and Marino caused the Bayou Entities, under cover of purported “audits” by Richmond-Fairfield, to continue to generate false performance summaries and false financial statements designed to mislead investors. Because the Bayou Entities were self-administered and lacked a truly independent auditor, they were able to and did maintain books and records that fraudulently misrepresented their true financial performance. As alleged in the amended complaints (quoting from the amended complaint in adversary proceeding no. 06-08354):

14. As Israel and Marino both admitted in their respective plea allocutions, they and their co-conspirators:
caused to be mailed quarterly reports to investors that contained fictitious rates of return on trading in the funds and annual financial statements that contained fictitious rates of return on trading and inflated net asset[] values. [They] also had faxed and [628]*628mailed weekly newsletters that also misrepresented the performance of the funds at various times during the time period set forth in the information. All these communications to investors [ ] made it appear that Bayou was earning profits on trading when in fact it was not.
Israel further admitted that this false financial information concerning Bayou’s performance was disseminated to “current and prospective clients of Bayou” in order to “induce [ ] people to invest in Bayou or continue to keep their money in Bayou.”

From 1999 to 2003 the Bayou Fund continued to lose substantial amounts of money and never earned a profit, all the while drawing in hundreds of millions of dollars of new investments. As a result of a reorganization in February 2003, the original Bayou Fund was liquidated and four separate on-shore hedge funds were created, including the three Bayou Hedge Funds which are the debtor-plaintiffs in these adversary proceedings. Investors could transfer their investment in the original Bayou Fund to one of the four new Bayou Hedge Funds. Each of the new Bayou Hedge Funds subsequently sustained millions of dollars in losses, which were concealed through dissemination of false investment performance reports and false financial statements.

In addition to trading losses, the Bayou Hedge Funds were depleted for the personal financial benefit of the principals of the Bayou Entities. Tens of millions of dollars in high volume trading commissions were paid to a broker-dealer wholly owned by the principals, and millions of dollars of incentive bonus payments were made to the principals based on non-existent profits. The Bayou Hedge Funds made a series of bank transfers exceeding $100 million out of the Bayou Entities’ accounts to various bank accounts in Europe, which were eventually deposited in a bank account in the United States. This bank account was seized by the Arizona Attorney General in May 2005, and the funds were eventually transferred to the United States Marshals Service, apparently for distribution pro rata to victims of the Bayou fraud.

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Bluebook (online)
362 B.R. 624, 2007 Bankr. LEXIS 635, 47 Bankr. Ct. Dec. (CRR) 262, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bayou-superfund-llc-v-wam-longshort-fund-ii-lp-in-re-wam-longshort-nysb-2007.