Credit Suisse Broker Previously Convicted for Selling High Risk ARS is Barred from Future Securities Law Violations

Credit Suisse Securities (USA) LLC (CS) broker Eric Butler is permanently barred from future violations of securities laws. The U.S. District Court for the Southern District of New York granted the Securities and Exchange Commission’s motion for the permanent injunction late last month.

Butler was convicted of criminal charges related to the unauthorized sale of more than $1 billion in subprime-related auction-rate securities to clients. A jury found him guilty of three counts of securities fraud and he was sentenced to five years in prison. Butler is appealing is sentence and conviction.

The SEC’s securities fraud‘s complaint in 2008 against Butler and co-defendant Credit Suisse broker Julian Tzolov accused the two men of engaging in a bait-and-switch approach that left unsuspecting foreign corporate customers with high-risk ARS, rather than the more conservative financial products they had given the defendants permission to buy. The collapse of the ARS market left clients with $800 million in illiquid products.

According to the court, the SEC made a motion for summary judgment against Butler on the grounds of collateral estoppel related to the criminal case against him. The commission also sought to permanently bar him from future violations. Meantime, Butler opposed the injunctive relief and summary judgment on the grounds that the criminal case did not “necessarily” decide the issues in this case, he was not given the fair and complete opportunity to litigate the criminal charges against him, and the SEC was not entitled to injunctive relief. The district court, however, determined that the criminal case did “actually” decide the issues the SEC wanted to establish by collateral estoppel and that given the circumstances “totality,” it was appropriate to permanently bar Butler from future SEC violations.

Related Web Resources:

Ex-Credit Suisse Broker Butler Gets Five-Year Prison Sentence, Bloomberg, January 23, 2011

Related Web Posts:
Judge Gives Lower Sentence to Former Credit Suisse Broker Convicted of Auction-Rate Securities Fraud, Stockbroker Fraud Blog, January 30, 2010

Will Two Former Credit Suisse Group AG Brokers Convicted of Securities Fraud Get More Lenient Sentences Because of Industry’s “Culture of Corruption?”, Stockbroker Fraud Blog, August 21, 2009

Ex-Credit Suisse Broker Who Pleaded Guilty to Securities Fraud for Role in Auction-Rate Securities Scam Knew in Late 2007 that Clients’ Funds Were in Trouble, Stockbroker Fraud Blog, July 29, 2009

If you believe you sustained financial losses because your broker failed to inform you of the risks tired to investing in ARS, contact our institutional investment fraud lawyers today.

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