In Re All Assets Held in Account Jw3083094 in the Name of Carinalli, S.A. at Jefferies, LLC

CourtDistrict Court, District of Columbia
DecidedOctober 6, 2025
DocketMisc. No. 2025-0096
StatusPublished

This text of In Re All Assets Held in Account Jw3083094 in the Name of Carinalli, S.A. at Jefferies, LLC (In Re All Assets Held in Account Jw3083094 in the Name of Carinalli, S.A. at Jefferies, LLC) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, District of Columbia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re All Assets Held in Account Jw3083094 in the Name of Carinalli, S.A. at Jefferies, LLC, (D.D.C. 2025).

Opinion

UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA

IN RE: ALL ASSETS HELD IN ACCOUNT JW3083094 IN THE Case No. 25-mc-96-TSC-MJS NAME OF CARINALLI, S.A. AT JEFFERIES, LLC, et al.

REPORT AND RECOMMENDATION

Based on a treaty request from the Oriental Republic of Uruguay, the United States of

America seeks a restraining order to preserve certain U.S.-based assets that may be subject to

forfeiture in criminal proceedings underway in Uruguay. See 28 U.S.C. § 2467(d)(3). Those

Uruguayan proceedings, according to the Government, are premised on allegations that Sara Silvia

Goldring Waisbiot (“Goldring”) engaged in “misappropriation and fraud in her operation of client

accounts and investments through brokerage companies she controlled.” (See ECF No. 1 (“Gov’t

App.”) at 2.) The Government asks the Court to restrain all assets in eleven bank accounts—four

at Morgan Stanley and seven at Jefferies, LLC (“Jefferies”)—in the names of Goldring, her

business partners (and sons), and her businesses. Goldring and others oppose the Government’s

request, at least in part. The matter is before the undersigned on a referral from District Judge

Tanya S. Chutkan. Based on a careful assessment of the governing authorities, the parties’ briefing,

and the arguments of counsel during the recent hearing, the undersigned RECOMMENDS that

the Court GRANT the Government’s application and enter the requested restraining order. 1

1 Because the restraining order requested by the United States would be considered “dispositive” relief, the Court’s ruling takes the form of a report and recommendation to the District Judge. See Fed. R. Civ. P. 72(b); Local Civil Rule 72.3(a)(2); In re Enf’t of a Restraining Order by the Republic of India (“India”), 2024 WL 5375481, at *1 n.1 (D.D.C. Nov. 18, 2024) (issuing R&R on Section 2467(d)(3) application). FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND

According to information provided by Uruguayan authorities, Goldring is the majority

owner and chair of two Uruguayan brokerage firms, United Brokers, S.A. and Custodia de Valores

Mobiliarios, S.A. In 2022, Uruguayan prosecuting authorities initiated an investigation based on

complaints from private investors and the Uruguayan Central Bank alleging that Goldring and

others used those brokerage firms to engage in fraud and related misconduct, resulting in millions

of dollars in alleged losses to her clients.

As part of that investigation, Uruguayan authorities identified several bank accounts at

Morgan Stanley and Jefferies in New York that Goldring beneficially owns and that are under her

control or joint control with her adult sons (Martin Cukier, Daniel Cukier, and Dario Cukier). In

December 2022, a Uruguayan court—Uruguay’s Second Civil Criminal Court of First Instance

Specialized in Organized Crime of Montevideo—acted on applications from the prosecution and

certain victims to issue Decree No. 1368/2022, which found a sufficient basis under Uruguayan

law to order restraint of the accounts and to issue a letter rogatory asking the United States for

assistance. A few days later, the Uruguayan court issued the letter rogatory (Oficio No. 1065/2022)

and formally requested that the United States take appropriate steps to freeze the accounts. These

two “2022 Orders” form the basis for the Government’s application here. 2

The 2022 Orders encompass all assets held in the following accounts (with the named

account holder(s) reflected in parentheses):

1. Jefferies # JW3083094 (Carinalli, S.A.)

2. Jefferies # JW3125077 (Carinalli, S.A).

3. Jefferies # JW3125341 (Comptoir International Corp.)

2 The Court follows the Government’s lead in referring to both Uruguayan court documents collectively. (See Gov’t App. at 3; see also ECF No. 13 (“Hrg. Tr.”) at 64:3–9.) 2 4. Jefferies # JW3070000 (Sara Goldring Waisbiot and Daniel Cukier)

5. Jefferies # JW3078888 (Sara Goldring Waisbiot and Daniel Cukier)

6. Jefferies # JW3078904 (Sara Goldring Waisbiot and Martin Cukier)

7. Jefferies # JW3073491 (United Maritime Capital, LLC)

8. Morgan Stanley # 711-891670 (Sara Goldring Waisbot and Martin Cukier Goldring)

9. Morgan Stanley # 711-891671 (Sara Silvia Cukier Goldring and Dario Cukier Goldring)

10. Morgan Stanley # 741-073746 (United Brokers S.A. c/o M Cukier Goldring, SS Goldring Waisbot, CM)

11. Morgan Stanley # 711-045184 (United Maritime Capital, LLC)

(ECF No. 1-1 at 2, 16–18, 33–34). 3

Uruguay made its mutual legal assistance requests soon after the Uruguayan court issued

the 2022 Orders, but the U.S. Government “determined that it needed additional information” and

“worked closely with Uruguay over the course of an approximately two-year period to obtain the

information needed.” (ECF No. 8-4 ¶ 9, Decl. of Jesse Ormsby, DOJ, Criminal Division, Office

of International Affairs Attorney.) Through that process, Uruguay “provided multiple responses

… supplementing” its requests, and the United States ultimately agreed to furnish assistance. (Id.)

Meanwhile, the Uruguayan court issued a 2023 Order of Formalization “initiating the

formal phase of the criminal proceedings against Goldring and naming her as the ‘alleged author’

of a ‘continuous crime of … [misappropriation].’” (Gov’t App. at 8; see also ECF No. 8-2 at 16.) 4

3 The 2022 Orders identified additional accounts beyond this list, but the Government reports that the Uruguayan authorities no longer seek restraint of those accounts. The Court does not address them further. 4 According to the Government, an Order of Formalization under Uruguayan law “is a judicial decision finding that there are sufficient objective elements of a crime and that the defendant is responsible for the offense.” (Gov’t App. at 8.) Respondents’ description is relatively consistent; they characterize the Order of Formalization as “the Uruguayan equivalent of an indictment[.]” (ECF No. 5 (“Opp’n”) at 15.).

3 According to the Government’s translation, the criminal offense of “misappropriation” is defined

as follows in Article 351 of the Uruguayan Penal Code: “Whoever appropriates, converting it to

their benefit or that of a third party, money or other movable thing, which had been entrusted to

them or delivered by any title that implies an obligation to return it or to make a specific use of it,

will be punished with three months in arrest to four years in prison.” Among other underlying

findings, the statement of facts supporting the Order of Formalization specified that:

• “[T]he defendant appropriated, for the benefit of a third party, assets that had been entrusted to her and delivered to her by many of her clients, and which she had an obligation to return or use for a specific purpose.”

• “The losses suffered were so great that the defendant acknowledged before this Prosecutor’s Office that, in order to prevent a run on the company when customers found out what was happening, she concealed information from them.”

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In Re All Assets Held in Account Jw3083094 in the Name of Carinalli, S.A. at Jefferies, LLC, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-all-assets-held-in-account-jw3083094-in-the-name-of-carinalli-sa-dcd-2025.