United States v. Lumiere

249 F. Supp. 3d 748
CourtDistrict Court, S.D. New York
DecidedApril 18, 2017
Docket16 Cr. 483 (JSR)
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 249 F. Supp. 3d 748 (United States v. Lumiere) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District 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
United States v. Lumiere, 249 F. Supp. 3d 748 (S.D.N.Y. 2017).

Opinion

OPINION AND ORDER

JED S. RAKOFF, U.S.D.J.

On January 19, 2017, following a six-day trial, a jury found defendant Stefan Lumiere guilty of wire fraud, securities fraud, and conspiracy to commit those offenses. See Verdict, EOF No. 65.. The basic charge was that the defendant, a former employee of Visium Capital Management (“Visium”), had participated in a two-year scheme to dupe investors into believing that the Visi-um Credit Opportunities Fund (the “Credit Fund”) was performing far better than it actually was. Lumiere now moves for a new trial pursuant to Rule 33(a) of the Federal Rules of Criminal Procedure. For the reasons stated below, Lumiere’s motion is.hereby denied.

[752]*752The evidence at trial (taken, along with all reasonable inferences, most favorably to the Government) showed as follows:

Visium was a hedge fund manager that operated several different hedge funds and that, at its peak, had $8 billion of investor money under management. See Tr. 40, 42. Among the hedge funds it managed was the Credit Fund, which invested principally in bonds, bank debt, and other credit instruments, and which managed up to $500 million. See Tr. 42-43, 630-31. The Credit Fund performed well through 2010, but in 2011, its performance began to suffer. See Tr. 248-49; Government Exhibit (“GX”) 117.

In 2011, Christopher Plaford was the senior portfolio manager for the Credit Fund, and was responsible for directing the fund’s investment process. See Tr. 45, 630-31, 651; see also GX 106. Lumiere, who reported to Plaford, was a senior analyst and also a portfolio manager responsible for around $100 million of the Credit Fund’s investments. See Tr. 146-47, 244-46, 664-65. Jason Thorell was the trader for the Credit Fund, which meant that he executed trades as directed by Plaford, Lumiere, and others. See Tr. 241-42, 652-53. When the Credit Fund’s investments began to suffer in 2011, Plaford and Lumiere, with assistance from Thorell, hatched a scheme to defraud investors in the Credit Fund into believing it was still performing well. Plaford pleaded guilty to participating in the fraud and testified at trial under a cooperation agreement; Thorell, who was not charged, testified under a grant of immunity. See Tr. 222-23, 640-41.

The key metric by which Visium reported the Credit Fund’s performance to investors was its net asset value (“NAV”), which represented the aggregate fair market value of all investments and cash held by the hedge fund. See Tr. 60, 662-63. Investors also monitored the proportion of the Credit Fund’s investments that were classified as illiquid “Level 3” assets under Accounting Standard Codification 820, and strongly preferred that the Credit Fund hold no Level 3 assets at all. See Tr. 663, 703-04; see also Tr. 63-66. Plaford and Lumiere also had personal stakes in the level of the Credit Fund’s NAV, because the higher the NAV, the higher their compensation would be, whereas, by contrast, poor performance could result in their termination. See Tr. 248, 664. Visium reported the Credit Fund’s NAV and liquidity to investors on a monthly basis, see Tr. 661; thus, to achieve their goal of duping investors into believing the struggling Credit Fund was performing well and held no illiquid investments, Plaford and Lumiere crafted a plan to systematically manipulate both the NAV and the liquidity calculations, month-by-month, from 2011 to 2013.

Plaford and Lumiere did not directly control the level at which the NAV was reported, since it was calculated by the back-office Operations group. However, to make the calculation, Operations relied to a significant degree on securities prices reported by the investment team—le., by Plaford and Lumiere. At the end of each month, the investment team would send Operations a list of prices for each security held by the Credit Fund. See Tr. 560-61. The next business day, Operations would obtain market prices for each security from a third-party pricing source such as Markit, and then send to the investment team a spreadsheet that compared Visi-um’s in-house prices with the third party prices. See Tr. 561-63. In order to cause Operations to use an in-house price instead of the third party’s price in calculating the NAV, the investment team was required to provide independent verification that its in-house price was fair and accurate. This was known as “overriding” the third-party price. See Tr. 563-65, 667-68. A quote [753]*753from an outside broker indicating that it would transact in a security at the investment team’s in-house price was, however, sufficient to override a third-party price. See Tr. 564-65. Thus, beginning in mid-2011, Plaford and Lumiere began suborning outside brokers to provide, on demand, assurances regarding whatever back-up securities price quotes Lumiere asked for. Lumiere personally selected and corrupted the two main brokers used for this purpose: Scott Vandersnow of Princeridge and Jonathan Brook of Janney Montgomery Scott. See Tr. 285, 293-94, 305, 483, 680-81. In addition to being personal friends of Lumiere, Vandersnow and Brook worked at firms that did not usually trade the type of securities the Credit Fund held, and thus could not realistically be counted on for objective price quotes. See Tr. 314-15, 351; GX 1224. Later, at Lumiere’s suggestion, Thorell located a third corrupt broker, Matthew O’Callaghan of Odeon Capital Management, another “bucket shop” broker whose services they occasionally used as well. See Tr. 306-09. The brokers allowed Lumiere and his co-conspirators to dictate the prices the brokers attested they were willing to pay. See, e.g„ Tr. 489-91; GX 1209, 1227. In return for the brokers providing the sham prices, Lumiere steered business their way. See, e.g., Tr. 285-86, 294. All of this, needless to say, was concealed from everyone but the coeonspirators. See Tr. 699.

To implement this scheme, Plaford and Lumiere, toward the end of each month, would devise inflated prices for poorly performing securities. See Tr. 668, 674-75; see also Tr. 684-91; GX 1208, 1212, 1216, 1228-30. Plaford would send Thorell a spreadsheet of the prices, and Thorell, at Plaford’s direction, would then create a new email, attach that spreadsheet, and send it to Operations to begin the month-end NAV calculation process. See Tr. 252-57, 677-78. Meanwhile, Lumiere would contact Vandersnow and/or Brook (or, later on, O’Callaghan) and dictate the chosen prices; Vandersnow and Brook (sometimes while they were still on the phone with Lumiere) would promptly send Lumiere “verifications” of the demanded prices, without in fact independently verifying them. See, e.g., Tr. 286, 354-58, 361-62, 489-94, 679-80; GX 1209, 1227. To give a veneer of legitimacy, these exchanges were sometimes glossied-up. For example, Pla-ford might tell Lumiere that he thought a certain price was accurate, but that he was open to other views. See, e.g., GX 1230. Lumiere, in turn, might relay the prices to the brokers under the guise of “educating” them about Visium’s perspective. See, e.g., GX 1227.

All of this, was simply window dressing intended to help conceal the fraud. Over the course of two years and hundreds of securities, none of the brokers ever disagreed with Lumiere’s prices, nor was there any attempt to supply the brokers with information about the securities, with most of which they were unfamiliar. See Tr. 500-02, 675. Once the brokers dutifully supplied the dictated quotes, their emails would be sent to Operations as the necessary back-up documentation for Plaford’s and Lumiere’s hand-picked securities prices. See Tr. 276, 289.

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Bluebook (online)
249 F. Supp. 3d 748, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-lumiere-nysd-2017.