Securities & Exchange Commission v. Nacchio

614 F. Supp. 2d 1164
CourtDistrict Court, D. Colorado
DecidedMarch 13, 2009
Docket1:05-cr-00480
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 614 F. Supp. 2d 1164 (Securities & Exchange Commission v. Nacchio) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Colorado primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Securities & Exchange Commission v. Nacchio, 614 F. Supp. 2d 1164 (D. Colo. 2009).

Opinion

OPINION AND ORDER DENYING MOTIONS TO DISMISS AND OVERRULING OBJECTIONS TO MAGISTRATE JUDGE’S ORDER

MARCIA S. KRIEGER, District Judge.

THIS MATTER comes before the Court pursuant to Defendant Woodruffs Motion to Dismiss Certain Claims Due to the Governments’ Invocation of State Secrets 1 (# 369), Plaintiff Securities and Exchange Commission’s (“the SEC”) response (# 393), and Mr. Woodruffs reply (# 400); Defendant Nacchio’s Motion to Dismiss Certain Claims Based on the Government’s Invocation of State Secrets (# 379), the SEC’s response (# 393), and Mr. Nacchio’s reply (# 403); Defendant Mohebbi’s Motion to Dismiss From the Second Amended Complaint a New and Uneognizable Claim for Relief (#447), the SEC’s response (# 459), and Mr. Mohebbi’s reply (#461); and Defendant Kozlowski’s Objections (# 510) to the December 9, 2008 Orders (#509) of United States Magistrate Judge Craig B. Shaffer granting the SEC’s Motion to Quash (# 482) Mr. Kozlowski’s Notice of Rule 30(b)(6) Deposition and denying Mr. Kozlowski’s Motion for Protective Order (#483), the SEC’s response (# 527), and Mr. Kozlowski’s reply (# 545, 551).

FACTS

The current operative pleading in this case is the SEC’s Second Amended Complaint (#432). Greatly summarized, the Second Amended Complaint alleges that, *1167 from 1999 to early 2002, the Defendants, as officers and employees of Qwest Communications International, Inc. (“Qwest”), engaged in a variety of actions constituting securities fraud. Most prominently, the SEC alleges that all five Defendants were involved in a scheme to misrepresent and conceal the nature of Qwest’s revenue from the sale of “IRUs” — contracts for access to Qwest’s fiber optic network — as recurring “services revenue” rather than the “one-time sales” that the IRUs actually represented. These misrepresentations allowed Qwest to meet revenue and growth targets that it would not have otherwise been able to reach from recurring sources of revenue, resulting in artificial inflation of the value of Qwest’s stock. (In addition, the SEC alleges that Mr. Nacchio and Mr. Woodruff separately inflated Qwest’s stock price by causing Qwest to improperly recognize revenue from its telephone directory publishing subsidiary, and that these Defendants also engaged in unlawful insider trading.) The Second Amended Complaint alleges seven causes of action: (i) securities fraud against all Defendants in violation of 15 U.S.C. § 77q(a)(l); (ii) securities fraud against all Defendants in violation of 15 U.S.C. § 77q(a)(2) and (3); (iii) securities fraud against all Defendants in violation of 15 U.S.C. § 78j(b) and 17 C.F.R. § 240.10b-5; (iv) falsification of books and records against all Defendants in violation of 15 U.S.C. § 78m(b)(5) and 17 C.F.R. § 240.13b2-l; (v) deceit of auditors, against Mr. Nacchio, Mr. Woodruff, and Mr. Mohebbi, in violation of 17 C.F.R. § 240.13b2-2; (vi) false SEC filings, against all Defendants, in violation of 15 U.S.C. § 78m(a) and 17 C.F.R. § 240.12b-20 and § 240.13a-l, 13a-ll, and 13a-20; and (vii) false books and records, against all Defendants, in violation of 15 U.S.C. § 78m(b)(2).

The Court will address additional substantive or procedural facts as relevant in the analysis of each issue.

ANALYSIS

A. Motions to dismiss on state secrets grounds

Both Mr. Woodruff (# 369) and Mr. Nacchio (# 379) move to dismiss the bulk of the Second Amended Complaint based on the SEC’s invocation of the state secrets privilege.

During discovery, many of the Defendants sought to obtain information pertaining to security-classified contracts, potential contracts, and other communications between Qwest and various components of the U.S. intelligence community. These Defendants were pm-suing a theory that Qwest’s ongoing contracts with the U.S. intelligence community for the sale of IRUs would demonstrate that the IRU sales provided a reliable revenue stream, contrary to the SEC’s characterization of IRU sales as unreliable, “one-time” revenues. The SEC moved for a protective order (#328) to prevent such discovery, contending that communications between Qwest and the intelligence community involved confidential issues of national security, thus giving rise to the State Secrets Privilege under 50 U.S.C. § 403 — l(i)(l).

Discussions between the Magistrate Judge and the parties suggested that the SEC’s successful invocation of the state secrets privilege might adversely affect the Defendants’ ability to present a complete defense to the claims then pending. Mindful of these concerns, the Magistrate Judge provisionally granted (#362) the SEC’s motion to protect the classified information from disclosure, but also invited the Defendants to move to dismiss those claims implicated by the SEC’s invocation of the State Secrets Privilege and, simulta *1168 neously, encouraged the SEC to consider amending the complaint to minimize the extent to which the claims would implicate issues of national security. On May 7, 2008, the SEC moved for leave (# 363) to file a Second Amended Complaint, which, among other things, revised the pleading of the claims involving IRUs to focus strictly on a limited number of specified IRU transactions, none of which, the SEC claimed, implicated national security concerns.

Two weeks later, contemporaneously with their responses to the SEC’s request for leave to amend the complaint, Mr. Kozlowski and Mr. Nacchio filed the instant motions to dismiss the IRU claims due to the SEC’s invocation of the State Secrets Privilege. Both motions assert essentially the same argument: (a) the SEC has framed the IRU issue as presenting the question of whether the IRU revenue should have been designated as “recurring” or “one-time” 2 ; (b) some of Qwest’s IRU transactions involved the sale of IRUs to intelligence agencies; and (c) if the details of these classified transactions could be disclosed, the Defendants would be able to show that they believed that “future government demand for Qwest IRUs was ... recurring and robust.” Docket # 381 at 4.

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Bluebook (online)
614 F. Supp. 2d 1164, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/securities-exchange-commission-v-nacchio-cod-2009.