Securities and Exchange Commission v. Danny O. Cherif, and Khaled Sanchou, Nominal

933 F.2d 403
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit
DecidedJune 7, 1991
Docket90-1688, 90-1805
StatusPublished
Cited by185 cases

This text of 933 F.2d 403 (Securities and Exchange Commission v. Danny O. Cherif, and Khaled Sanchou, Nominal) 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
Securities and Exchange Commission v. Danny O. Cherif, and Khaled Sanchou, Nominal, 933 F.2d 403 (7th Cir. 1991).

Opinion

CUMMINGS, Circuit Judge.

The Securities and Exchange Commission (“SEC”) brought this civil enforcement action against defendant Danny 0. Cherif, alleging that Cherif had violated the anti-fraud provisions of the federal securities laws, in particular Sections 10(b) and 14(e) of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, 15 U.S.C. §§ 78j(b) and 78n(e) (1988), and Rules 10b-5 and 14e-3 thereunder. 17 C.F.R. §§ 240.1Ob-5 and 240.14e-3 (1990). Section 21 of the Exchange Act allows the court to enjoin further violations of the securities laws upon a showing that defen *406 dant did in fact violate the laws or threatens to do so. 15 U.S.C. §§ 78u(d) and (e) (1988). The district court entered an injunction preventing Cherif from future trading and freezing his assets. It also froze two accounts of nominal defendant Khaled Sanchou, Cherif’s cousin. It was alleged that Cherif used Sanchou’s accounts to facilitate his illegal trades and that the profits from Cherif’s trading remained in Sanchou’s accounts. Cherif and Sanchou both appeal.

FACTS

This case, which raises for this Circuit issues of first impression in securities law, had its genesis in a simple, cunning scheme. Danny Cherif was employed by the First National Bank of Chicago (“First Chicago”) in its International Financial Institutions Department from October 1979 until December 1987, when his position was eliminated as the result of an internal reorganization. When Cherif’s employment with First Chicago ended, he kept his magnetic identification card. The card could be used to enter the First Chicago building if the building’s security system recognized the card’s owner as a current employee. Cherif’s card remained activated after December 1987 because of a memorandum signed purportedly by the Senior Vice-President of the International Financial Institutions Department and sent to the bank’s data-entry department. The memo, dated January 26, 1988, stated that Cherif continued to work part-time on a special project for his department and asked that his identification card remain activated. In fact, the Senior Vice-President of Cherif’s department had not written or signed the memo, and Cherif was not working on a special project for First Chicago. Cherif admitted later to William Bronec, Jr., who had been a co-worker at First Chicago, that he had reactivated his identification card “by means of false representations.”

Using his identification card, Cherif was able to enter the First Chicago building on nights and weekends for over a year after his employment ended. Unbeknown to Cherif, the building’s security system automatically recorded his comings and goings.

Cherif’s destination within the bank was the Specialized Finance Department, which provides financing for extraordinary business transactions such as tender offers and leveraged buy-outs. The Specialized Finance Department obtained and developed confidential information about these transactions and the companies involved in the transactions from its corporate clients. In an effort to protect this information, the bank required all employees to sign an “integrity policy” restricting the use and disclosure of “material inside information” for personal gain. The policy warned that improper use of such information could result in civil or criminal penalties. Cherif had signed the agreement on three occasions, in 1979, 1986 and 1987.

A comparison of the security system’s records with a summary of Cherif’s trading activity revealed that during 1988 and the beginning of 1989, Cherif had traded in the stocks of four companies about which the Specialized Finance Department had obtained confidential information. For example, in May 1988, Stone Container Corp. sought First Chicago financing of a proposed acquisition of Consolidated Bathurst Corp. Cherif used his identification card to enter the building on Sunday, May 15, 1988. Cherif then bought 5500 shares of Consolidated Bathurst over the next two weeks and eventually made a profit of over $11,000. The evidence was similar with respect to the other three companies in whose stock Cherif traded. In each case, First Chicago’s Specialized Finance Department had acquired confidential information about transactions and targets from a corporate client. Cherif’s card was used to make an after-hours entry into the building and, soon after, Cherif bought stock in the company to be acquired or bought out. Cherif made profits on the securities of each of the four companies.

Cherif used two brokerage accounts to make his trades. He opened one brokerage account with Quick & Reilly in March 1988 in the name of Khaled Sanchou, a resident of Tunisia and Cherif’s cousin by marriage. *407 Cherif presented to Quick & Reilly a check for $100,000 signed by Sanchou to open the account and a power of attorney authorizing Cherif to trade in Sanchou’s account. Subsequently Cherif was the only person to trade in this account, and he received the monthly statements. In May 1988, Cherif opened a second brokerage account in his own name with Charles Schwab & Co. Profits from short-term securities trading in the two accounts from May 1988 to February 1989 totalled $247,000: $93,000 in the Schwab account and $154,000 in San-chou’s account at Quick & Reilly. Between February and May 1989, Cherif transferred $265,000 from the Quick & Reilly account to a bank account in Sanchou’s name at First Chicago. Cherif also has a power of attorney over the First Chicago bank account.

The SEC began investigating Cherif in May 1989. They obtained the cooperation of William Bronec, Jr., a fellow employee at First Chicago until 1985. Cherif had shared the information he acquired from First Chicago with Bronec, who had become Cherif’s confidant. Bronec wore a microphone to a meeting with Cherif on May 19, 1989, allowing the F.B.I. to record a conversation in which Cherif admitted he had been using his card to enter the First Chicago building.

The SEC applied for an ex 'parte temporary restraining order on May 21, 1989. The SEC asked that Cherif be enjoined from further violations of the securities laws and that Cherif and Sanchou be enjoined from transferring or disposing of their assets so as to preserve the possibility of recovering civil penalties or disgorgement of illegally obtained profits. The district court entered TROs against Cherif and Sanchou. It ordered each defendant to provide an accounting showing any legitimate claim each had to his own assets. The court additionally gave permission for Sanchou to be served overseas by international express mail.

At the subsequent preliminary injunction hearing on May 31, 1989, the parties agreed to continue the TRO with respect to Cherif to allow discovery to proceed. At his deposition, Cherif did not rebut any of the SEC’s evidence. Instead, he invoked his Fifth Amendment right not to incriminate himself. Cherif also failed to provide any accounting. On September 8, the district court entered a preliminary injunction against Cherif, using Cherif’s silence to draw inferences adverse to him.

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Bluebook (online)
933 F.2d 403, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/securities-and-exchange-commission-v-danny-o-cherif-and-khaled-sanchou-ca7-1991.