Otto, Kevin L. v. SEC

CourtCourt of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit
DecidedJune 12, 2001
Docket00-3897
StatusPublished

This text of Otto, Kevin L. v. SEC (Otto, Kevin L. v. SEC) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Otto, Kevin L. v. SEC, (7th Cir. 2001).

Opinion

In the United States Court of Appeals For the Seventh Circuit

No. 00-3897

Kevin Lee Otto,

Petitioner,

v.

Securities and Exchange Commission,

Respondent.

On Petition for Review of an Order of the Securities and Exchange Commission File No. 3-9938.

Argued April 17, 2001--Decided June 12, 2001

Before Fairchild, Cudahy, and Coffey, Circuit Judges.

Coffey, Circuit Judge. On September 15, 2000, the Securities and Exchange Commission ("SEC" or "Commission") issued an order pursuant to the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, 15 U.S.C. sec. 78s(d)(1), affirming disciplinary action taken by the National Association of Securities Dealers, Inc. ("NASD") against Kevin Otto. Otto, a securities salesman associated with an NASD member firm at the time of the misconduct charged, seeks review of the SEC order pursuant to 15 U.S.C. sec. 78y(a)(1). We deny Otto’s petition and affirm the SEC’s order.

I. Factual Background

During all times relevant to the disposition of this case, Kevin Otto worked as a general securities representative for various NASD member firms including Hamilton Investments, Inc., Wellington Investment Services Corporation, and First Montauk Securities Corporation. Mary Sue Smith/1 became a client of Otto’s beginning in 1988 or 1989 and followed him through his various firm transfers.

In February 1992, Otto solicited $22,000 from Smith for an investment in the Wisconsin Business Club ("WBC"). In a letter to Smith Otto explained that:

WBC is a group of people that network to bring to the table business opportunities which enable me to make some cash. These are opportunities that you and I as individuals probably wouldn’t see. . . . Again as I stated on the phone this is not an investment nor is it offered by any securities company. It has nothing to do with me as a broker or my brokerage firm. This is a private thing. It is kind of fun. I think you’ll like it. . . . Liquidity depends on what the funds are in.

Otto further professed that the return was reported as a Treasury Bill rate "plus a couple of percentage points." Smith provided Otto with the $22,000; unbeknownst to her, WBC did not exist.

Rather than invest the $22,000 into WBC as he had suggested he would, Otto instead placed the $22,000 partly in his personal bank account and partly in a Charles Schwab account for PowerSource Battery Corporation, an unprofitable company that he owned and operated with a partner, Donna LeBrecht. Otto used Smith’s funds for "personal stuff," business expenses related to the operation of PowerSource, and expenses related to the investigation of other business opportunities. Despite the illicit infusion of capital, PowerSource filed for bankruptcy protection in March of 1992.

To cover up his misuse of her funds, Otto prepared and sent to Smith fictitious portfolio updates that falsely reflected a WBC balance. In April 1994, Smith requested funds from her WBC account. Because he could not immediately return Smith’s money, Otto stalled the repayment with more deceit, explaining in a letter that "the invest[ment] club has invested cash. May take a few weeks to find a replacement for your position. . . . Once we sell your seat, we are out unless another opens up." In May, he wrote to Smith that her account’s value was $28,576.24 and he had arranged for "all dividends and/or capital gains to date" to be forwarded to Smith. Otto further explained to her that it could take a few weeks to liquidate, and suggested that she withdraw approximately $3,000 immediately, leaving $25,000 in the club to remain active, thus attempting to prolong the charade that he had invested Smith’s money in WBC. Smith signed an authorization agreeing to leave $25,000 in the fictitious club, and received a personal check form Otto in the amount of $3,576.24 in June 1994. Initially the check was returned for insufficient funds, but later Smith was able to deposit it.

Because of the two-month delay between her request and her receipt of the WBC funds, Smith decided to withdraw all of the WBC funds. Still, Otto did not immediately return Smith’s money. In a letter dated July 27, 1994, he continued to represent that WBC existed as a legitimate investment club and blamed the delay in receiving her money on the investment club.

I’ve not yet received our exit papers for the investment club. As your request is unusual things don’t happen that fast. The group has assured me that funds will not be less than its value at the time the funds were requested. . . . This is an exclusive club with most people of professional investment background. I pushed to get us in, therefore I can’t cause a lot [sic] wave[s]. I should hope to receive our exit papers soon and subsequently the funds.

Otto finally sent Smith a check for $26,346 (the fictitious balance of Smith’s WBC account) on October 22, 1994, approximately six months after her initial request to withdraw her funds.

In October 1994, Smith sent to Otto’s then-employer, First Montauk Securities Corporation, copies of records and letters Otto had sent her regarding her WBC account. Nearly thirty months later, on March 14, 1997, NASD filed a complaint against Otto, charging him with violating Conduct Rule 2110, which requires members to "observe high standards of commercial honor and just and equitable principles of trade." At a subsequent hearing before the NASD Regional District Business Conduct Committee ("DBCC"), Otto admitted that WBC did not exist as anything other than an "insignia." Otto claimed, however, that Smith had authorized him to use the funds as he did. According to Otto, Smith faced marital difficulties and wanted to use WBC in order to hide the money from her then-husband. Otto further claimed that the only reason Smith made a complaint against Otto was because of the request of her father, also one of Otto’s clients, who was upset with Otto’s handling of his account. Smith’s complaint was admitted into evidence at the hearings, but she did not testify. On August 7, 1998, the DBCC found that Otto violated Conduct Rule 2110 and imposed a penalty composed of a censure, a permanent bar from associating with any NASD member, a fine of $110,000, and an assessment of costs in the amount of $3,110.75.

Otto appealed the DBCC’s decision to the National Adjudicatory Counsel ("NAC") for NASD. At the hearing before the NAC, Otto again admitted that WBC never existed and that he used Smith’s funds for his business and personal expenses. Again Smith did not testify. The NAC found that "Otto’s misuse of [Smith’s] funds was inexcusable. His misconduct, coupled with his total refusal to acknowledge that he had misused his client’s funds by using her money for his own personal and business benefit, makes him a danger to the investing public." Further, in its decision, the NAC explained that even though the guidelines did not recommend a bar for Otto’s conduct, it considered a bar "essential based on the egregious nature of Otto’s conduct." In support, it noted three aggravating factors: 1) the series of lies and deception beginning with his solicitation of Smith’s funds and continuing throughout her attempts to withdraw her funds; 2) his failure to accept responsibility for his misuse of Smith’s funds; and 3) his attempt to lay blame on others, specifically upon Smith herself with his theory that she attempted to use WBC to hide the money in a marital dispute. Accordingly, on June 28, 1999, the NAC affirmed the censure and bar, but reduced the fine to $35,000 because it concluded that the DBCC used a "conversion" sentencing guideline rather than an "improper use of funds" guideline.

Otto appealed the decision of the NAC to the SEC, which reviewed his case de novo. On September 15, 2000, the SEC sustained the censure, bar, $35,000 fine, and costs.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
Otto, Kevin L. v. SEC, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/otto-kevin-l-v-sec-ca7-2001.