Securities and Exchange Commission v. Milan Group, Inc. , 962 F. Supp. 2d 182 ( 2013 )


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  •                            UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT
    FOR THE DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA
    )
    SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE                     )
    COMMISSION,                                 )
    )
    Plaintiff,                    )
    )
    v.                                   )       Civil Action No. 11-2132 (RMC)
    )
    MILAN GROUP, INC., et al.,                  )
    )
    Defendants.                   )
    )
    OPINION
    The Securities and Exchange Commission sued The Milan Group, Inc., the law
    firm Baylor & Jackson, P.L.L.C., and certain individuals as “Principal Defendants” for
    conducting an alleged securities fraud from which victims suffered losses amounting to millions
    of dollars. SEC also named certain “Relief Defendants”—that is, persons who allegedly
    received money resulting from the fraudulent activities but who are not charged with personally
    engaging in the fraud. SEC seeks disgorgement from both sets of defendants for restitution to
    the victims. SEC moves for summary judgment. For the reasons stated below, SEC’s motion
    will be granted in part and denied in part. Relief Defendant Mia Baldassari’s cross-motion for
    summary judgment and for release of funds will be denied.
    I. FACTS
    A. Background
    The Securities and Exchange Commission complains that the Principal
    Defendants—The Milan Group, Inc. a/k/a The Milan Trading Group, Inc. (Milan); Frank Pavlico
    III a/k/a Frank Lorenzo (Pavlico); Brynee K. Baylor; and through Ms. Baylor, her law firm
    Baylor & Jackson P.L.L.C.—made untrue statements of material fact or omitted to state material
    1
    facts in connection with the sale of securities in violation of Section 17(a) of the Securities Act
    of 1933 (Securities Act), 
    48 Stat. 74
    , codified at 15 U.S.C. § 77a et seq.; Section 10(b) of the
    Securities Exchange Act of 1934 (Exchange Act), Pub. L. 73-291, 
    48 Stat. 881
    , codified at 15
    U.S.C. § 78a et seq.; and Rule 10b-5 thereunder, 
    17 C.F.R. § 240
    .10b-5. See Am. Compl. [Dkt.
    53] ¶¶ 62–65 (Count I, Section 10(b) and Rule 10b-5), ¶¶ 68–70 (Count III, Section 17(a)).
    Alternatively, Mr. Pavlico, Ms. Baylor, and Baylor & Jackson are alleged to have aided and
    abetted Milan’s violation of these statutes and the Rule. Am. Compl. ¶¶ 66–67 (Count II, aiding
    and abetting violations of Section 10(b) and Rule 10b-5), ¶¶ 71–72 (Count IV, aiding and
    abetting violation of Section 17(a)).
    SEC also complains that all Principal Defendants offered and sold securities
    without a registration statement or exemption from registering in violation of Sections 5(a) and
    5(c) of the Securities Act. 
    Id.
     ¶¶ 73–76 (Count V, Sections 5(a) and 5(c)). Alternatively, Ms.
    Baylor and her law firm are alleged to have aided and abetted these violations. 
    Id.
     ¶¶ 77–78
    (Count VI, aiding and abetting violations of Sections 5(a) and 5(c)). Finally, SEC complains that
    Mr. Pavlico and Ms. Baylor induced, or attempted to induce, the purchase or sale of a security by
    an unregistered broker or dealer in violation of Section 15(a) of the Exchange Act. 
    Id.
     ¶¶ 79–81
    (Count VII, Section 15(a)).
    Relief Defendants Mia Baldassari; Dawn Jackson; Brett Cooper and his former
    business, Global Funding Systems, Inc. (referred to in some materials as GFS); Patrick T. Lewis
    and his former business, GPH Holdings LLC (referred to in some materials as GPH); and The
    Julian Estate, Inc., a Pennsylvania company incorporated by Pavlico, are alleged to have
    received funds from defrauded investors through the Principal Defendants without providing any
    legitimate product or service. Id. ¶¶ 21, 82–83.
    2
    SEC asks the Court to enjoin the Principal Defendants from further violations; to
    order them to disgorge all proceeds from their fraud, with interest; to bar them from serving as
    officers or directors of any public company; and to order them to pay a large civil penalty. SEC
    asks the Court to exercise its equitable powers to order the Relief Defendants to disgorge the
    funds they received from the Principal Defendants, with interest.
    B. The Alleged Prime Bank Scheme
    SEC alleges that the Principal Defendants defrauded at least 13 investors out of
    $2.665 million in a “Prime Bank” scheme that operated from August 2010 through November
    2011. Am. Compl. ¶¶ 22–29, SEC MSJ Mem. [Dkt. 109-2] at 3–7. Mr. Pavlico and Ms. Baylor
    (and, therefore, Milan and Baylor & Jackson) are alleged to have lured investors into the scheme
    by offering extraordinary returns ranging from 180% to 2400% per year at little to no risk. The
    purported investment involved the purchase or lease of bank instruments, including “standby
    letters of credit,” “bank guarantees,” or “medium term notes,” all of which were to be
    “leveraged” to increase their value and then “monetized” or “traded” to generate extraordinary
    returns. SEC MSJ Mem. at 3–4.
    Calling himself Frank Lorenzo, 1 Mr. Pavlico initiated this scheme in 2010. He
    created Milan and recruited Ms. Baylor as his lawyer, who then allegedly used her position as an
    attorney to give an aura of legitimacy to the “investments.” Among other things, Ms. Baylor is
    1
    Mr. Pavlico’s legal name is Frank Pavlico, III. He pled guilty to conspiracy to conduct
    financial transactions involving proceeds of drug trafficking in violation of 
    18 U.S.C. § 371
     in
    U.S. District Court for the Middle District of Pennsylvania on February 8, 2007. United States v.
    Pavlico, No. 3:07-cr-00052-JMM (M.D. Pa. Feb. 8, 2007) (plea agreement, ECF No. 2). The
    charges arose from Mr. Pavlico’s alleged role in laundering the profits of marijuana trafficking
    earned by a co-conspirator, including by facilitating transfers of currency, gold, and silver in
    small amounts to avoid reporting requirements. See United States v. Pagnotti, No. 3:05-cr-
    00064-TIV (M.D. Pa. Nov. 8, 2006) (2d superseding indictment, ECF No. 116). Mr. Pavlico
    was sentenced to ten months of incarceration, to be followed by three years of supervised
    release.
    3
    alleged to have told investors that she had known Mr. Pavlico for years, that Mr. Pavlico and
    Milan had previously completed numerous successful bank instrument transactions at great
    investor profit for years, that investors’ funds would remain in escrow in her law firm’s IOLTA
    account, 2 that Milan and Mr. Pavlico offered a great investment opportunity that she had
    validated, and that she and Mr. Pavlico were working in the best interests of the investors. See
    SEC MSJ Mem. at 3–7. For example, SEC cites a September 15, 2011, telephone call between
    Mr. Pavlico and agents of the Federal Bureau of Investigation acting as investors, in which Mr.
    Pavlico assured the FBI: “And you can speak to our attorneys, too, and they’ll let you know of
    the credibility of who we are. . . . They were just involved in the 15 million. . . . They actually
    speak to the bankers. They actually—they know everybody. They know everything. We don’t
    do anything without them.” SEC MSJ, Decl. Christopher McLean (McLean Decl.) [Dkt. 109-4],
    Exs. 1–68 [Dkts. 109-5 to -17] (SEC Exs.), SEC Ex. 35, Dep. of Frank Pavlico, at 98–99.
    SEC contends that the bank instruments were fictitious; that no victim’s money
    was ever invested anywhere; that almost all of the money went immediately to the pockets of the
    Principal Investors or, to a lesser extent, to the Relief Defendants; that investors were lulled for
    more than a year into believing that successful bank transactions were underway; and that Ms.
    Baylor became the chief contact assuring suspicious investors of hard work on their behalf after
    time passed with no return. By December 1, 2011, when the scheme was terminated by this
    Court’s temporary restraining order, see Dkt. 4, and preliminary injunction, see Dkt. 22, the
    2
    IOLTA stands for Interest on Lawyer Trust Accounts. When lawyers hold client monies, the
    funds are held in trust for the client. When these amounts are small or to be held only
    temporarily, amounts from multiple lawyers can be pooled into an interest-bearing account held
    in trust. All states and the District of Columbia now have IOLTA programs, which customarily
    use the IOLTA interest revenue to provide grants to legal-aid organizations. See generally
    Brown v. Legal Found. of Wash., 
    538 U.S. 216
    , 220 (2003); D.C. R. Prof. Conduct 1.15.
    4
    Principal Defendants and Relief Defendants had allegedly received and spent the following
    amounts:
    Baylor and Jackson (Baylor)          $ 746,266
    Milan (Pavlico)                      $ 1,318,734
    GFS (Cooper)                         $ 225,000
    GPH (Lewis)                          $ 375,000
    TOTAL:                               $ 2,665,000
    SEC MSJ Mem. at 7.
    After the case was filed, SEC dismissed the case against three other Relief
    Defendants, Susan C. Kevra-Shiner, the Law Office of Susan Kevra, and Elmo Baldassari, upon
    satisfaction that they no longer held any improperly gained benefits of the fraud. See SEC
    Partial Mot. Dismiss [Dkt. 52]; Minute Order dated Feb. 27, 2012 (granting SEC motion to
    dismiss). SEC then filed a Motion for Summary Judgment or Default Judgment on November
    15, 2012. See SEC MSJ [Dkt. 109]. Some of the remaining Principal and Relief Defendants are
    no longer contesting SEC’s allegations. A default judgment was entered against Relief
    Defendant GPH Holdings, LLC, on November 14, 2012. See [Dkt. 110]. Default judgment was
    also entered against Relief Defendant Global Funding Systems, Inc. See [Dkt. 137]. SEC and
    Relief Defendant Dawn Jackson, Ms. Baylor’s former law partner, settled all disputes between
    them with an agreement that Ms. Jackson is liable for $153,000 of disgorgement and $9,410 in
    prejudgment interest, to be repaid only upon sale of certain property Ms. Jackson owns in the
    Bahamas. See Redacted Jackson Final J. [Dkt. 164].
    SEC filed a Notice of Defendant Death on December 12, 2012, notifying the
    Court and all parties of the death of Principal Defendant Frank Pavlico. 3 See [Dkt. 117]. Mr.
    3
    Mr. Pavlico was facing charges for wire fraud in violation of 
    18 U.S.C. § 341
     for the same
    conduct underlying this case in the U.S. District Court for the District of South Carolina. See
    United States v. Pavlico, No. 8:11-cr-2361-TMC (D.S.C. Dec. 13, 2011) (indictment).
    According to the docket in that case, Mr. Pavlico was on release from custody pending trial, but
    5
    Pavlico’s estate was substituted as a party, see Minute Order dated Jan. 18, 2013, and the
    executrix of Mr. Pavlico’s estate has filed a response to SEC’s motion stating, in part:
    As prior to his death Frank L. Pavlico a/k/a Frank Lorenzo asserted
    his Fifth Amendment right against self incrimination, the Estate of
    Frank L. Pavlico, III has no objection to Plaintiff’s Motion for
    Summary Judgment. 4
    [Dkt. 131]. Judgment will be entered against Mr. Pavlico’s estate.
    Judgment will also be entered against the three entities that filed answers in the
    case but have ceased defending: Principal Defendants Milan and Baylor & Jackson and Relief
    Defendant The Julian Estate. See Joint Answer to Amended Complaint by Milan and Julian
    Estate [Dkt. 60], Answer to Amended Complaint by Baylor & Jackson, P.L.L.C. [Dkt. 65].
    Milan and Baylor & Jackson have collapsed. Mr. Pavlico formed The Julian Estate to purchase a
    house using funds obtained from the Prime Bank fraud, see SEC MSJ Mem. at 2 n.1; that entity
    has also not defended this case since entering its answer. Because Milan, Baylor & Jackson, and
    The Julian Estate have not responded to SEC’s motion for summary judgment, the motion is
    deemed conceded as to those defendants. 5 See LCvR 7(b).
    the United States moved to revoke his bond due to allegations that Mr. Pavlico failed to advise a
    potential client/investor of the pending criminal charges. (That same conduct led SEC to file a
    motion for an order to Mr. Pavlico and Ms. Baldassari to show cause in this case. See [Dkts.
    114, 115].) Mr. Pavlico failed to appear for the bond revocation hearing and was arrested in
    Pennsylvania. A magistrate judge for the U.S. District Court for the Middle District of
    Pennsylvania released Mr. Pavlico on December 11, 2012, and ordered him to appear in South
    Carolina the next day. United States v. Pavlico, No. 5:12-mj-00116-MEM (M.D. Pa. Dec. 12,
    2012) (release order, ECF. No. 5). Mr. Pavlico committed suicide at his home that night.
    4
    The executrix—Ms. Kevra-Shiner, the former Relief Defendant—initially appeared pro se.
    After the Court advised her that administrators or executors may only appear pro se in limited
    circumstances, Ms. Kevra-Shiner retained Dominic Vorv as counsel for the estate. The Court
    then gave Mr. Vorv an opportunity to file any supplement to the estate’s response to SEC’s
    motion for summary judgment, which he did not do.
    5
    Moreover, for the reasons stated in this Opinion, SEC has shown that Milan and Baylor &
    Jackson are liable as Principal Defendants for the Prime Bank fraud perpetrated by Mr. Pavlico
    6
    Thus, presently remaining for adjudication are the arguments of the remaining
    persons who oppose SEC: Principal Defendant Brynee Baylor and Relief Defendants Mia
    Baldassari, Patrick Lewis, and Brett Cooper.
    II. LEGAL STANDARDS
    A. Summary Judgment
    Under Rule 56 of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure, summary judgment shall
    be granted “if the movant shows that there is no genuine dispute as to any material fact and the
    movant is entitled to judgment as a matter of law.” Fed. R. Civ. P. 56(a); accord Anderson v.
    Liberty Lobby, Inc., 
    477 U.S. 242
    , 247 (1986). Moreover, summary judgment is properly
    granted against a party who “after adequate time for discovery and upon motion . . . fails to make
    a showing sufficient to establish the existence of an element essential to that party’s case, and on
    which that party will bear the burden of proof at trial.” Celotex Corp. v. Catrett, 
    477 U.S. 317
    ,
    322 (1986).
    In ruling on a motion for summary judgment, the court must draw all justifiable
    inferences in the nonmoving party’s favor and accept the nonmoving party’s evidence as true.
    Anderson, 
    477 U.S. at 255
    . A nonmoving party, however, must establish more than “the mere
    existence of a scintilla of evidence” in support of its position. 
    Id. at 252
    . In addition, the
    nonmoving party may not rely solely on allegations or conclusory statements. Greene v. Dalton,
    
    164 F.3d 671
    , 675 (D.C. Cir. 1999). Rather, the nonmoving party must present specific facts that
    would enable a reasonable jury to find in its favor. Id. at 675. If the evidence “is merely
    and Ms. Baylor. In addition, SEC has shown that Mr. Pavlico formed The Julian Estate to
    purchase 113 Upland Terrace in Clarks Summit, Pennsylvania, using $409,482 in ill-gotten gains
    from the Milan scheme. See SEC Ex. 42.
    7
    colorable, or is not significantly probative, summary judgment may be granted.” Anderson, 
    477 U.S. at
    249–50 (citations omitted).
    B. Counts I through IV—Principal Defendants—Securities Act Section 17(a),
    Exchange Act Section 10(b), and Rule 10b-5
    1. Primary Violation
    Together, Section 17(a) of the Securities Act, Section 10(b) of the Exchange Act,
    and Rule 10b-5 proscribe fraud touching on the purchase or sale of a security in the United
    States. See SEC v. Falstaff Brewing Corp., 
    629 F.2d 62
    , 75–76 (D.C. Cir. 1980). Under Section
    2(1) of the Securities Act, 15 U.S.C. § 77b(1), and Section 3(a)(10) of the Exchange Act, 15
    U.S.C. § 78c(a)(10), “security” includes “investment contracts,” which the Supreme Court has
    defined as (1) an investment of money, (2) in a common enterprise, (3) with profits to be derived
    from the entrepreneurial or managerial efforts of others. SEC v. W. J. Howey & Co., 
    328 U.S. 293
    , 301 (1946); see also SEC v. Int’l Loan Network, Inc., 
    968 F.2d 1304
    , 1308 (D.C. Cir. 1992).
    As interpreted by the courts, these antifraud provisions promote the informational
    integrity of securities transactions. Section 10(b) of the Exchange Act, 15 U.S.C. § 78j(b),
    provides:
    It shall be unlawful for any person, directly or indirectly, by the
    use of any means or instrumentality of interstate commerce or of
    the mails, or of any facility of any national securities exchange [t]o
    use or employ, in connection with the purchase or sale of any
    security registered on a national securities exchange or any
    security not so registered, or any securities-based swap agreement
    any manipulative or deceptive device or contrivance in
    contravention of such rules and regulations as the Commission
    may prescribe as necessary or appropriate in the public interest or
    for the protection of investors.
    Section 17(a) of the Securities Act, 15 U.S.C. § 77q(a), provides:
    It shall be unlawful for any person in the offer or sale of any
    securities (including security-based swaps) or any security-based
    swap agreement . . . by the use of any means or instruments of
    8
    transportation or communication in interstate commerce or by use
    of the mails, directly or indirectly[:] (1) to employ any device,
    scheme, or artifice to defraud, or (2) to obtain money or property
    by means of any untrue statement of a material fact or any
    omission to state a material fact necessary in order to make the
    statements made, in light of the circumstances under which they
    were made, not misleading; or (3) to engage in any transaction,
    practice, or course of business which operates or would operate as
    a fraud or deceit upon the purchaser.
    Rule 10b-5, 
    17 C.F.R. § 240
    .10b-5, states:
    It shall be unlawful for any person, directly or indirectly, by the
    use of any means or instrumentality of interstate commerce, or of
    the mails or of any facility of any national securities exchange,
    (a) [t]o employ any device, scheme, or artifice to defraud,
    (b) [t]o make any untrue statement of a material fact or to omit to
    state a material fact necessary in order to make the statements
    made, in the light of the circumstances under which they were
    made, not misleading, or
    (c) [t]o engage in any act, practice, or course of business which
    operates or would operate as a fraud or deceit upon any person,
    in connection with the purchase or sale of any security.
    Sections 17(a)(1) and 10(b) and Rule 10b-5 essentially have the same elements.
    To prove a primary violation, SEC must show that a defendant “(1) made a material
    misrepresentation or a material omission as to which he had a duty to speak, or used a fraudulent
    device; (2) with scienter; (3) in connection with the purchase or sale of securities.” SEC v.
    Familant, 
    910 F. Supp. 2d 83
    , 92 (D.D.C. 2012) (quoting SEC v. Monarch Funding Corp., 
    192 F.3d 295
    , 308 (2d Cir. 1999)). 6 Materiality means “a substantial likelihood that a reasonable
    6
    Courts formulate these elements in different ways. See SEC v. May, 
    648 F. Supp. 2d 70
    , 77
    (D.D.C. 2009) (requiring the SEC to show that a defendant “(1) made a misrepresentation, or an
    omission (where there was a duty to speak), or other fraudulent device; (2) that was material in
    the case of a misrepresentation or omission; (3) in connection with the sale or purchase of a
    security; (4) . . . acted with scienter; and (5) the involvement of interstate commerce, the mails or
    9
    shareholder would consider it important in deciding how to vote.” Basic Inc. v. Levinson, 
    485 U.S. 224
    , 231–32 (1998) (internal quotation and citation omitted). “[I]f there is a substantial
    likelihood that a reasonable investor would have viewed the misleading or omitted fact as
    ‘significantly alter[ing] the total mix of information,’ it is material.” Rockies Fund, Inc. v. SEC,
    
    428 F.3d 1088
    , 1096 (D.C. Cir. 2005) (quoting Basic, 485 U.S. at 231–32). For the “connection”
    element, what is important is that there be a link between the alleged fraud and a securities
    transaction—i.e., it is enough that the fraud “touch” the sale of a security. See Superintendent of
    Ins. of N.Y. v. Bankers Life & Cas. Co., 
    404 U.S. 6
    , 11 n.7 (1971); see also SEC v. Tex. Gulf
    Sulphur Co., 
    401 F.2d 833
    , 862 (2d Cir. 1968) (“Rule 10b-5 is violated whenever assertions are
    made . . . in a manner reasonably calculated to influence the investing public.”).
    To prove the scienter element of a claim under Section 17(a)(1), Section 10(b),
    and Rule 10b-5, SEC must show that the primary defendant “acted with an ‘intent to deceive,
    manipulate, or defraud.’” SEC v. Steadman, 
    967 F.2d 636
    , 641 (D.C. Cir. 1992) (quoting Ernst
    & Ernst v. Hochfelder, 
    425 U.S. 185
    , 194 n.12 (1976)). The D.C. Circuit has “determined, along
    with a number of other circuits, that extreme recklessness”—“‘a lesser form of intent,’” but more
    than ordinary negligence—satisfies this scienter element. 
    Id.
     at 641–62 (quoting Sanders v. John
    Nuveen & Co., 
    554 F.2d 790
    , 793 (7th Cir. 1977); other citations omitted). SEC must show an
    “extreme departure from the standards of ordinary care” that “presents a danger of misleading
    buyers or sellers that is either known to the defendant or is so obvious that the actor must have
    been aware of it.” 
    Id.
     (quoting Sundstrand Corp. v. Sun Chemical Corp., 
    553 F.2d 1033
    , 1045
    (7th Cir. 1977)); see also Dolphin & Bradbury, Inc. v. SEC, 
    512 F.3d 634
    , 639 (D.C. Cir. 2008)
    a national security exchange.” (quoting SEC v. Lucent Techs., Inc., 
    363 F. Supp. 2d 708
    , 714
    (D.N.J. 2005))).
    10
    (Steadman refers to a “danger [that] was so obvious that the actor was aware of it and
    consciously disregarded it”).
    Sections 17(a)(2) and (a)(3) require SEC to show essentially the same elements,
    with one exception: they do not require a showing of scienter. See Weiss v. SEC, 
    468 F.3d 849
    ,
    855 (D.C. Cir. 2006). Instead, “[p]roof of negligence is sufficient to establish a violation of
    these provisions.” 
    Id.
     (citing Aaron v. SEC, 
    446 U.S. 680
    , 697, 701–02 (1980)).
    2. Aiding and Abetting
    The relevant aiding and abetting provision of the Exchange Act, Section 20(e), 15
    U.S.C. § 78t(e), is substantially identical to the relevant aiding and abetting provision of the
    Securities Act, Section 15(b), 15 U.S.C. § 77o(b). Each states that “any person that knowingly
    or recklessly provides substantial assistance to another person . . . shall be deemed to be in
    violation . . . to the same extent as the person to whom such assistance is provided.”
    “[T]hree principal elements are required to establish liability for aiding and
    abetting a violation of section 10(b) and Rule 10b-5: (1) that a principal committed a primary
    violation; (2) that the aider and abettor provided substantial assistance to the primary violator;
    and (3) that the aider and abettor had the necessary ‘scienter’—i.e., that she rendered such
    assistance knowingly or recklessly.” Graham v. SEC, 
    222 F.3d 994
    , 1000 (D.C. Cir. 2000)
    (surveying law of other circuits); see also SEC v. May, 
    648 F. Supp. 2d 70
    , 78 (D.D.C. 2009)
    (“The scienter element for aiding and abetting requires a showing that [the aider-and-abettor]
    ‘knowingly’ provided substantial assistance.”). “A secondary violator may act recklessly, and
    thus aid and abet an offense, even if he is unaware that he is assisting illegal conduct.” Howard
    v. SEC, 
    376 F.3d 1136
    , 1143 (D.C. Cir. 2004). Scienter “may be found if the alleged aider and
    abettor encountered ‘red flags,’ or ‘suspicious events creating reasons for doubt’ that should have
    11
    alerted him to the improper conduct of the primary violator.” 
    Id.
     (quoting Graham, 
    222 F.3d at 1006
    ).
    C. Counts V and VI—Principal Defendants—Sections 5(a) and 5(c)
    Section 5 of the Securities Act requires putative securities issuers to register
    securities with SEC before offering them for sale unless an exemption applies. Section 5(a),
    codified at 15 U.S.C. § 77e(a), prevents sale or delivery until the registration statement is
    effective. That section states:
    Unless a registration statement is in effect as to a security, it shall
    be unlawful for any person, directly or indirectly (1) to make use
    of any means or instruments of transportation or communication in
    interstate commerce or of the mails to sell such security through
    the use or medium of any prospectus or otherwise; or (2) to carry
    or cause to be carried through the mails or in interstate commerce,
    by any means or instruments of transportation, any such security
    for the purpose of sale or for delivery after sale.
    Section 5(c), codified at 15 U.S.C. § 77e(c), bars any offer to sell or buy securities
    prior to the registration statement being filed:
    It shall be unlawful for any person, directly or indirectly, to make
    use of any means or instruments of transportation or
    communication in interstate commerce or of the mails to offer to
    sell or offer to buy through the use or medium of any prospectus or
    otherwise any security, unless a registration statement has been
    filed as to such security, or while the registration statement is the
    subject of a refusal order or stop order or (prior to the effective
    date of the registration statement) any public proceeding or
    examination under section 77h of this title.
    To show a violation of Sections 5(a) and 5(c), the SEC must show “that the
    investments offered are securities, and that the Defendants offered or sold these securities
    without first filing a registration statement.” SEC v. Kenton Capital, Ltd., 
    69 F. Supp. 2d 1
    , 10–
    11 (D.D.C. 1998). “Once participation in an unregistered sale has been shown,” the burden of
    showing that the securities were covered by an exemption, such as Securities Act Section 4(1)
    12
    (exempting “transactions by any person other than an issuer, underwriter, or dealer,” 15 U.S.C.
    § 77d(1)), shifts to the defendant. Zacharias v SEC, 
    569 F.3d 458
    , 464 (D.C. Cir. 2009) (citing
    SEC v. Ralston Purina, 
    346 U.S. 119
    , 126 (1953)). “There is . . . no scienter requirement under
    Section 5.” SEC v. Parkersburg Wireless Ltd. Liab. Co., 
    991 F. Supp. 6
    , 9 (D.D.C. 1997)
    (rejecting argument that “since [the defendant] had no idea that the units he was selling were
    securities, he should not be held accountable to the SEC”).
    The aiding and abetting provision relevant to a Section 5 violation is Section
    15(b) of the Securities Act, 15 U.S.C. § 77o(b), which provides that “any person that knowingly
    or recklessly provides substantial assistance to another person in violation of a provision of this
    subchapter, or of any rule or regulation issued under this subchapter, shall be deemed to be in
    violation of such provision to the same extent as the person to whom such assistance is
    provided.”
    D. Count VII—Section 15(a)
    15 U.S.C. § 78o(a) codifies Section 15(a) of the Exchange Act, which prohibits a
    broker from undertaking any securities transaction without being registered with SEC or being
    associated with a registered broker-dealer. Section 15(a) states:
    (1) It shall be unlawful for any broker or dealer which is either a
    person other than a natural person or a natural person not
    associated with a broker or dealer which is a person other than a
    natural person (other than such a broker or dealer whose business
    is exclusively intrastate and who does not make use of any facility
    of a national securities exchange) to make use of the mails or any
    means or instrumentality of interstate commerce to effect any
    transactions in, or to induce or attempt to induce the purchase or
    sale of, any security (other than an exempted security or
    commercial paper, bankers’ acceptances, or commercial bills)
    unless such broker or dealer is registered in accordance with
    subsection (b) of this section.
    (2) The Commission, by rule or order, as it deems consistent with
    the public interest and the protection of investors, may
    13
    conditionally or unconditionally exempt from paragraph (1) of this
    subsection any broker or dealer or class of brokers or dealers
    specified in such rule or order.
    A broker is a person “engaged in the business of effecting transactions in
    securities for the account of others.” 15 U.S.C. § 78c(a)(4)(A). “The broker-dealer registration
    requirement serves as the keystone of the entire system of broker-dealer regulation.” Roth v.
    SEC, 
    22 F.3d 1108
    , 1109 (D.C. Cir. 1994) (internal quotation marks and citation omitted). SEC
    “need not prove the broker’s scienter to establish a violation of Section 15(a).” SEC v. Martino,
    
    255 F. Supp. 2d 268
    , 283 (S.D.N.Y. 2003).
    E. Liability of Relief Defendants
    SEC’s claims against the Relief Defendants rest on the Court’s equitable powers
    to order disgorgement of the profits of securities fraud even from persons who are not alleged to
    have been involved in the fraud themselves. See 15 U.S.C. § 78u(d)(5) (“[A]ny Federal court
    may grant[ ] any equitable relief that may be appropriate or necessary for the benefit of
    investors.”). A federal court “may order equitable relief against a person who is not accused of
    wrongdoing in a securities enforcement action where that person: (1) has received ill-gotten
    funds; and (2) does not have a legitimate claim to those funds.” SEC v. Cavanagh, 
    155 F.3d 129
    ,
    136 (2d Cir. 1998) (citing SEC v. Colello, 
    139 F.3d 674
    , 677 (9th Cir. 1998)); see also
    Zacharias, 569 F.3d at 471. Relief defendants are “joined to aid the recovery of relief” because
    they have “no ownership interest in the property [that] is the subject of litigation.” SEC v.
    George, 
    426 F.3d 786
    , 798 (6th Cir. 2005) (quoting SEC v. Cherif, 
    933 F.2d 403
    , 414 (7th Cir.
    1991)). The disgorgement amount only needs to be a “reasonable approximation of profits
    causally connected to the violation.” SEC v. First City Fin. Corp., Ltd., 
    890 F.2d 1215
    , 1231
    (D.C. Cir. 1989).
    14
    III. ANALYSIS
    A. The Fraudulent Securities
    SEC has submitted a lengthy Expert Report of Professor James E. Byrne, Dkt.
    136 (“Byrne Rep.”), which is uncontested by any remaining Defendant. The Court notes that
    Professor Byrne has been accepted as an expert “on commercial and financial investment fraud,
    banking operations, and standby letter of credit practice” in approximately 20 federal and eight
    state courts in the United States as well as in foreign courts and, without objection, accepts him
    as an expert here. See Byrne Rep. ¶ 13. Professor Byrne summarized his opinion:
    In my considered professional opinion, the investments described
    in the materials that I have examined in connection with this case
    are not legitimate but resemble and are classic instances of Prime
    Bank or High Yield Investment Schemes. The proposed returns
    are excessive for even the most risky legitimate investments and
    are not possible for safe or guaranteed investments. In addition,
    the materials are replete with other common features of Prime
    Bank or High Yield Investment Schemes.
    ...
    [A] typical transaction as reflected in the materials involves the use
    of investors’ funds to lease a standby letter of credit which is to be
    leveraged to obtain an instrument in an exponentially larger
    amount which is to be monetized, producing funds which are to be
    used in trading instruments such as medium term notes. The
    proceeds of the trade will yield the promised returns.
    
    Id.
     ¶¶ 14–15. As one example, Professor Byrne noted an investment of $325,000, to be
    deposited in the law firm’s IOLTA account, based on which Milan was to have acquired a
    “leased instrument” for $10 million which would have been monetized to obtain an instrument
    valued at $150 million. Id. ¶ 16. The yield from further monetization of $100 million would
    then have been used in a “trading platform” to produce the extraordinary promised returns. Id.
    Certain aspects of Defendants’ materials “sounded” legitimate; Professor Byrne
    opines that prime bank schemes often “involve, refer to, mimic, or use a number of devices and
    instruments that exist in legitimate commerce” to give “transactions an aura of legitimacy.” Id.
    15
    ¶¶ 50–51. “Prime bank” is a term used in legitimate finance to refer to the top banks in the
    world; the involvement of a Prime Bank in a financing scheme indicates its trustworthiness to
    victims. Id. ¶ 19. “High Yield” is a term of legitimate finance used to describe junk bonds that
    are not rated as investment grade. Id. ¶ 20. In contrast to these legitimate uses of the terms, “the
    defining characteristic” of a Prime Bank or High Yield scheme “is the promise of a
    disproportionate return without risk or with low risk from a source which is obscure or unable to
    be ascertained objectively.” Id. ¶ 24. Such investment schemes may offer disproportionate
    returns at low risk; mimic legitimate financial instruments; obscure the commercial basis for and
    source of the returns with vague references to “trading;” utilize documents with significant
    technical flaws; refer to legitimate financial institutions without connection; contain elements of
    a Ponzi scheme; insist on secrecy; present a charitable, humanitarian, or religious dimension and
    often prey on such associated groups; intimate an international dimension; and/or provide
    “intricate explanations and excuses as to why the promised returns have failed to materialize.”
    Id. ¶ 25. Each of these characteristics was present in the Pavlico/Baylor scheme.
    Professor Byrne provides a detailed discussion of the features of Prime Bank and
    High Yield schemes and compares them directly to the financial “investments” offered by Milan
    and Mr. Pavlico. He notes particularly that “some of the instruments described in the materials
    such as standby letters of credit and bank guarantees are not traded.” Id. ¶ 49. Standby letters of
    credit are “a promise to honor a timely presentation of documents that comply with the terms and
    conditions of the undertaking,” thereby assuring performance or payment. Id. ¶ 53. “They are
    specialized promises that only run to the named beneficiary, are not transferable unless they
    expressly so state and then only with the consent of their issuer,” and they expire on a date
    certain agreed to by the parties. Id. Most critically, Professor Byrne is absolutely clear that:
    16
    [Standby Letters of Credit] are not investments, they do not pay
    interest, they are not discounted, they are not traded or bought and
    sold, there is no market in which they are traded or could be traded
    even were they freely transferable and freely drawable (which is
    most unlikely) because each must be evaluated individually and in
    light of its terms and the transactions which [it] support[s]. While
    [Standby Letters of Credit] are used to assure performance, banks
    do not issue them unless there is a dependable means of
    reimbursement and their issuance is treated like a loan.
    Id. ¶ 54. He further states quite clearly that “[t]here is no such thing as the ‘lease’ of a [Standby
    Letter of Credit].” Id. ¶ 56. Professor Byrne cogently explains why, in his opinion, the sole
    Standby Letter of Credit actually in the record—despite the constant references to them in
    Defendants’ materials—“contains many highly suspicious features,” such as three different
    spellings of the name of the purported bank, and, in Professor Byrne’s opinion, is “not
    legitimate.” Id. ¶ 57. The transactions described in the Defendants’ materials are no more real
    than unicorns, offering “a mythical return on a fictional instrument.” Id. ¶ 95.
    Professor Byrne similarly debunks other terms, as used by Defendants: “medium
    term notes and bonds,” id. ¶ 61; “pre advice,” id. ¶ 62; “pre issued debentures,” id. ¶ 63;
    “monetization,” id. ¶ 64; “SWIFT MT 760 and MT 799,” id. ¶ 65; “Clean, Clear Funds,” id.
    ¶ 67; “RWAs,” 7 id. ¶ 68b; “European Banking Days,” id. ¶ 69; and “Fresh Cut BG” or bank
    guarantee, id. ¶ 70. In context, these misused or nonsensical terms were meant to describe
    fictional financing instruments, explain delays, and lull investors.
    Professor Byrne’s expert report is uncontested. Even Prime Defendant Brynee K.
    Baylor offers no defense to his opinion and conclusion but only claims her own ignorance and
    innocence. Without contest, the Court finds that The Milan Group and Frank Pavlico engaged in
    7
    RWA stands for “ready, willing and able.” While it “is a phrase which is used loosely in a
    variety of contexts,” there is no real “thing in the legitimate world that is ‘an RWA.’” Byrne
    Rep. ¶ 68b.
    17
    the fraudulent securities scheme as alleged by SEC and that Frank Pavlico aided and abetted The
    Milan Group in its fraudulent activities.
    B. Principal Defendant Brynee K. Baylor
    Attorney Brynee K. Baylor, a Principal Defendant and named partner in Principal
    Defendant Baylor & Jackson, opposes SEC’s motion for summary judgment, arguing that proof
    of her intent to commit securities fraud cannot be found in a written record and that she acted
    only as an attorney advising her client. See Baylor Opp. [Dkt. 128]. She contends that “if the
    Commission’s position is that [Ms.] Baylor went beyond that role, and is thus liable as a primary
    participant, these are factual issues that must be presented to a jury.” Id. at 1. It is clearly SEC’s
    position that Ms. Baylor is liable as a Principal Defendant because she either went well beyond
    the role of advising attorney into active participation in the fraud and/or aided and abetted the
    commission of securities fraud by Mr. Pavlico and Milan.
    Ms. Baylor submits her own affidavit to support her statements of fact, quoted at
    length in her opposition. See Baylor Aff. [Dkt. 128-9]. After summarizing her career until the
    formation of Baylor & Jackson, Ms. Baylor asserts that she was investigating how two Virginia
    landowners, with valuable coal reserves, “might obtain a loan on the property.” Baylor Opp. at
    3. Ms. Baylor does not say that the landowners retained her for this purpose. Nonetheless, in the
    course of her investigation, she was introduced to Frank Pavlico, whom she knew as Frank
    Lorenzo, apparently by phone or on the internet. When she eventually met him in person, “he
    appeared to fit the profile she expected,” and Baylor & Jackson agreed to represent Milan. Id. at
    3–4. “Beginning in mid-2010, Baylor’s representation of The Milan Group consisted of
    communications with Milan’s clients, review of documentation in connection with Milan
    Group’s proposed transactions, including purchases of insurance for jewels and art, that she
    understood was being used as collateral for loans.” Id. at 4. Ms. Baylor worked primarily with
    18
    Mr. Pavlico on project financing matters. Persons introduced to her through this work reported
    that they had worked with Mr. Pavlico for years and successfully completed several international
    financing transactions. From these assertions, Ms. Baylor contends that SEC has no direct
    testimony or evidence that she possessed the requisite fraudulent intent to violate the securities
    laws; that, contrary to SEC allegations, she earned the fees paid to Baylor & Jackson; that she
    affirmatively denies any intent to defraud anyone; and, finally, that she is entitled to a jury trial.
    Id. at 13–19.
    Ms. Baylor’s protestations notwithstanding, the written record is clear: she acted
    with extreme recklessness concerning the fraudulent scheme, which was “so obvious that [she]
    must have been aware of it.” Steadman, 
    967 F.2d at
    641–42. “An egregious refusal to see the
    obvious, or to investigate the doubtful, may . . . give rise to an inference of . . . recklessness.”
    Chill v. General Elec. Co., 
    101 F.3d 263
    , 269 (3d Cir. 1996); see also Dolphin & Bradbury, 
    512 F.3d at 640
     (refusing to apply scienter standard “in a way that would protect someone who warns
    his hiking companion to walk slowly because there might be a ditch ahead when he knows with
    near certainty that the Grand Canyon lies one foot away” (internal quotation marks, citation, and
    emphases removed)). Ms. Baylor is an educated woman: college, law school cum laude,
    admitted to practice law after passing the bar, experienced lawyer, and head of her own law
    firm. 8 It ill behooves her now to declare that she represented the Milan Group for more than a
    year, from mid-2010 to November 2011, but that she had no relevant experience, knew nothing
    about securities laws, and did only what Frank Pavlico/Lorenzo directed her to do, without ever
    exercising a modicum of lawyerly interest in the legal implications of their activities. In the
    meantime, as the record demonstrates, she encouraged others to invest in unregistered securities,
    8
    According to the publicly available records of the D.C. Bar, Ms. Baylor remains an active
    member of the bar as of August 2013, practicing at Baylor Law Group, PLLC.
    19
    aided and abetted Milan’s fraud, and knowingly allowed investors’ monies—placed for
    safekeeping in her firm’s IOLTA account—to be dispersed to Milan and then back to her.
    The Court concludes that her own words and actions prove that Ms. Baylor
    possessed the requisite scienter and participation in connection with the purchase or sale of
    securities to have violated Sections 10(b) and Rule 10b-5 of the Exchange Act and Section
    17(a)(1) of the Securities Act. To the extent doubt on this question might possibly exist, Ms.
    Baylor very clearly (i) violated Sections 17(a)(2) and (3) of the Securities Act and (ii) aided and
    abetted Mr. Pavlico and Milan in their securities fraud and thereby violated Exchange Act
    Section 20(e) and Securities Act Section 15(b) by knowingly or recklessly providing substantial
    assistance to Mr. Pavlico and Milan. See Graham, 
    222 F.3d at 1000
    .
    To put this analysis into perspective, the Court quotes at length from a September
    23, 2011, telephone call between Ms. Baylor and two “prospective investors” who happened to
    be agents of the Federal Bureau of Investigation. When the agents asked for information about
    Frank Pavlico and clarification on a proposed million dollar investment that was predicted to
    return 250% in 30 days, Ms. Baylor responded:
    BAYLOR: Right. Absolutely. Absolutely. He actually he just
    completed a transaction very similar to that and a wire is supposed
    to be sent out today to my escrow for the, for the, participants in a
    trade very very similar. Basically the trades that he is working
    with he actually [garbled] is finding [garbled] they are project
    funding transactions and so they are inter-banking transactions that
    are going on. What happens is they leverage the one million
    dollars to obtain certain debt from one bank and sell them to
    another bank and this goes on and on repeatedly throughout the
    day for about 30 days and at the end a tremendous amount of
    money is made and a very high upside is in place for the actual
    trader. And this of course is international and so it is not subject to
    federal laws or governance, however at the end of the 30 days, the,
    the money has been, you know, used to leverage and trade and
    leverage and trade so greatly that the return is significantly higher.
    So that’s why they are able to do the 250 percent return on your
    20
    funds. So that is what I understand. That’s what I understand
    from Frank in terms of the deal. I did not have . . . I did not speak
    . . . He did tell me you’d be calling but we didn’t speak specifically
    about what the transaction was, but that’s generally how it works
    and so there are actually internationally licensed traders who are
    doing this and have relationships and contacts with different banks
    to buy and sell these debts.
    ...
    FBI 2: What’s the risk associated with the investment?
    BAYLOR: Well, there is a question about that. I don’t know that
    there is a risk. I’m not sure. Certain parties depending on where
    your money is domiciled now, they can either block your money
    and just use the money to trade off your blocked funds and your
    money goes nowhere for a period of thirty days. Or they have it in
    someone else’s escrow account. It would not be mine, it would be
    another bank that they are trading out of. But again it is not
    supposed to even be moved. Nobody spends that money, that
    money is escrowed the entire time. That’s my understanding. And
    any contract that you receive will dictate exactly how that will take
    place. Period. So if, if there is an escrow for it and possibly you
    would be sending to another bank account that would be going into
    a subaccount with the traders and he would have to be responsible
    for returning those funds.
    FBI: . . . But you have been involved in these transactions, I guess,
    for some period of time and have seen . . . seen them successfully
    be completed, correct?
    BAYLOR: Yes I have. As a matter of fact, in fact, like I said the
    first, not the first, the one this month, that actually took place last
    month. The funds are actually in place now to be paid out. And so
    I was just talking to the banker yesterday about a wire being sent
    and actually the participant I guess he is standing in the shoes of
    you who is actually set to receive the wire. So we’re actually
    completing one right now.
    ...
    BAYLOR: I will be honest with you and tell you there, that about
    a year ago there was another transaction and there was a situation
    where a third party that was contracting with Frank failed to
    perform and, you know, basically that was someone who was
    completely blacklisted and Frank still performed and has mitigated
    all of the other potential damages to make sure no one else really
    21
    has to suffer and so that is just something that did happen and
    because of that he is being extra extra specific, extra particular
    about who he is transacting with and, and having a history with
    anyone that he works with. So I mean at this point, he has kind of
    created a machine with it because he has working relationships
    with people who are performers, who are real, who are you know
    viable. And, so I mean it’s a really good time to be involved,
    absolutely. The, the kinks, the kinks and the obstacles have pretty
    much been overcome so now it’s kind of just smooth sailing. But
    I’m interested . . . it’s interesting because I did not realize that
    Frank was going to be taking outside clients any more. I mean, I
    think he, maybe he is, is interested I guess probably in just working
    with you because at this point he’s in a place where now he can
    kind of do this all by himself without even bringing other people in.
    So I guess you kind of lucked out and stuff. I wasn’t aware of that.
    ...
    FBI: . . . And Frank was telling, telling me that all of the fees and
    the money that’s earned by Frank and I’m sure the fees that are
    earned by you are all taken out of profits that, that when we invest
    a million dollars all of that goes into the investment.
    BAYLOR: Oh yeah. 100 percent goes to the investment. And
    there’s no money that goes you to know fees or anything.
    Anything else comes from your, from your profit. That is
    correct. . . .
    FBI: Well, if you were in our shoes and you had a million dollars
    you would have absolutely no reservation whatsoever about going
    into this with Frank obviously.
    BAYLOR: No. One thing about Frank is he is a very credible
    person and he really is a good person fundamentally. So his whole
    thing is making sure that the deal gets done. He wants to, you
    know, maintain great relationships and a lot of the people he works
    with are people he has worked with for years.
    ...
    BAYLOR: Well listen. Anytime you want to call me feel free to
    call me. I’m always available, if I’m not, you can either e-mail me
    or, or you know, or, or call my cellphone. But definitely, you
    know, if you have any questions feel free to call me. And if once
    you get the specifics of your transaction just look at, you know,
    just take time to really see, what, how it’s done, you know, how,
    how it is going to take place and make sure you are comfortable
    22
    with the fact that your money is protected because I know that one
    thing . . . [Frank] is very very adamant about is making sure that
    everyone’s money is protected going forward. I mean, You [sic]
    know what I mean, so that you don’t have your money at risk.
    SEC Ex. 19 (Tr. of 9/23/11 Phone Call) at 10–15 (ECF numbering) (emphases added).
    As this conversation and the rest of the record make clear, Mr. Pavlico and Ms.
    Baylor were engaged in “the purchase or sale of a security” under Section 10(b) of the Exchange
    Act and Section 17(a) of the Securities Act. Investors paid Milan, often through the trust account
    at Ms. Baylor’s law firm, to join their funds with Milan’s or other investors to purchase an
    alleged bank instrument (a “standby letter of credit,” a “bank guarantee,” or a note), to be
    “traded” on a “platform” by an unidentified “secret” third party, to realize a quick, high return.
    This type of transaction constitutes an “investment contract” as defined under Section 2(1) of the
    Securities Act and Section 3(a)(10) of the Exchange Act. See Int’l Loan Network, 
    968 F.2d at 1308
    .
    As SEC’s comprehensive banking account documentation proves, Mr. Pavlico
    and Ms. Baylor paid themselves handsomely, with 71 percent of investor funds going to Mr.
    Pavlico and Ms. Baylor and no record of any funds going into any investment. See, e.g., SEC
    Exs. 13–14, 37–38. The record is bereft of fee statements from Baylor and Jackson to support
    the supposed work behind the $746,266 the firm received between mid-2010 and November
    2011. Ms. Baylor insists that she worked for fees, was only paid for work performed, and did
    not participate in any fraud. But she never submitted fee statements to Milan or Mr. Pavlico, and
    she does not dispute the accuracy of the phone call quoted above or any of the other
    documentation submitted by SEC, including her own emails. As early as October 11, 2010, Ms.
    Baylor sent an email to an unnamed person “to confirm the validity of the transaction that your
    client, [redacted] is involved in.” SEC Ex. 24 (10/11/10 E-mail) at 45 (ECF numbering).
    23
    Notably, Ms. Baylor signed her emails, Brynee K. Baylor, Esquire, with the name and contact
    information for Baylor & Jackson. 
    Id.
     Her October 11, 2010, email continued:
    First, I have observed this company successfully complete
    transactions of this nature whereby participants received their
    funds as agreed. Second, I have personally been involved in this
    transaction and can validate it as well as confirm the fact that the
    transaction is moving along very well. Although there was a delay
    in the initial upstart, this process is moving full speed again and I
    am most confident that you as well as your client will be pleased
    with the result.
    
    Id.
    Ms. Baylor never observed Milan complete a single transaction in which
    participants received their funds. See SEC Ex. 26 (Baylor Dep.) at 210 (“The way it worked out
    Milan received its fees and Baylor & Jackson received its fees and to my knowledge investors
    have not been paid back.”). The record shows clearly that she used her authority as an attorney
    to attest to personal involvement and offer repeated validations of transactions about which she
    now proclaims ignorance. See SEC Ex. 25 (Notarized “Attorney Attestation Letter”) at 46 (ECF
    numbering) (“This information came directly from Frank Lorenzo of The Milan Group and has
    been verified by me.” (emphasis added)); SEC Ex. 29 (4/4/11 Baylor E-mail) at 9 (ECF
    numbering) (“Your clients will not receive bank documents as they remain confidential and have
    information that only the main parties are entitled to possess. Closing will depend on the actual
    delivery of the instrument. We are working to get this transaction closed.”); SEC Ex. 29 (6/1/11
    Baylor E-mail) at 13 (ECF numbering) (“Gentlemen, we have been very busy today on calls
    regarding the closing of a number of transactions. Below, is the real time status of the 500m
    SBLC from HSBC”); SEC Ex. 29 (11/17/11 Baylor E-mail) at 32 (ECF numbering) (“Trust and
    believe I am tired of this [delay] as well ! This is MY deal, not someone else’s transaction.”);
    Baylor Dep. at 50 (“But by the time I was out, we had never received or been aware of receiving
    24
    the profits.”); id. at 55 (“[W]e never submitted the invoices to Milan”); id. at 56 (“The way it
    worked out Milan received its fees and Baylor & Jackson received its fees and to my knowledge
    investors have not been paid back.”). 9
    Inasmuch as Ms. Baylor participated in encouraging investors to participate in the
    fraud; vouched for Mr. Pavlico as “very credible” and a “good person;” signed “client
    representation” letters with those sending money to the firm’s IOLTA account; allowed that
    money to be disbursed to Milan and thence to her; and concealed the use of the funds when
    investors asked questions, her active and knowing participation in dissipation of funds without
    investment cannot be denied. The fact that the “securities” offered by Ms. Baylor and her
    cohorts did not actually exist does not absolve Ms. Baylor or remove the fraud from coverage of
    U.S. securities laws. See SEC v. Lauer, 
    52 F.3d 667
    , 670 (7th Cir. 1995) (“Prime Bank
    Instruments do not exist. . . . It would be a considerable paradox if the worse the securities fraud,
    the less applicable the securities laws.”). As particularly relevant to Ms. Baylor, “[m]aking
    substantial misrepresentations as to the value of a worthless but technically extant security is a
    paradigmatic form of securities fraud. Extending the protection of the securities laws to the
    victims of schemes so fraudulent that the underlying paper does not exist logically follows, as
    fraudsters would have a perverse incentive to magnify their deceptive conduct.” SEC v Bremont,
    9
    The email chain at SEC Ex. 29 at 34–37 between a frustrated investor and Ms. Baylor well
    illustrates her role of stringing investors along for months. In another instance, Ms. Baylor
    provided explanations in the precise type of financial gobbledygook that Professor Byrne opined
    is a classic feature of Prime Bank fraud. On November 16, 2011—just days before Mr. Pavlico
    was arrested and this case was filed—Ms. Baylor wrote: “[T]he swift has been identified, but
    could not be delivered as of yet. It was coming from the Central Bank of Russia and has not
    arrived yet. We were told that it would be there in the morning, but we have not seen it yet. The
    buyer has agreed to do a ledger to ledger and get this resolved by the morning so stones could
    ship and the deal close. This is the status. We are all excited that we a[re] moving to closing,
    but we are not there yet.” Id. at 34.
    25
    
    954 F. Supp. 726
    , 731 (S.D.N.Y. 1997). The quote from Bremont describes Ms. Baylor’s role
    precisely.
    Ms. Baylor’s many misrepresentations and omissions would surely have been
    material to any prospective investor. See TSC Indus, 426 U.S. at 449 (defining materiality). For
    example, Ms. Baylor never disclosed that the so-called fees would be taken from an investor’s
    IOLTA fund, prior to and without any investment. The fact that so-called fees would amount to
    71% of the money collected, disregarding disbursements to Relief Defendants, would also have
    been “material” information. Most critically, the fact that no investment was ever made and no
    investment ever returned a dime to an investor would have been material, but Ms. Baylor
    repeatedly “validated” the contrary as fact and soothed anxious investors for months.
    These are facts that Ms. Baylor does not deny, instead relying on the ipse dixit
    that she “has affirmatively denied any intent to defraud anyone,” and, therefore, a genuine
    dispute of material fact exists. Baylor Opp. at 14. Ms. Baylor has declared under oath that she
    relied entirely on Mr. Pavlico and had no knowledge that Milan and its products were fraudulent
    until an investor informed her of Mr. Pavlico’s criminal past and that he was using a pseudonym.
    E.g., Baylor Opp. at 11–12. But her efforts to push unrelated documents in front of the Court so
    as to avoid the reality of her actions ring hollow. What matters in this case are the extensive
    material misrepresentations and omissions she made to investors concerning the use of their
    investment funds because “‘representations and opinions . . . given without basis and in reckless
    disregard of their truth or falsity’ establish scienter under Rule 10b–5.” Bremont, 
    954 F. Supp. at 730
     (quoting Rolf v. Blyth, Eastman Dillon & Co., 
    570 F.2d 38
    , 48 (2d Cir. 1978); alteration in
    original). Ms. Baylor knew that she omitted telling investors about the disbursements from her
    IOLTA account without any investment; she knew that she told investors that Milan was just
    26
    closing a deal and/or that all would be well with multiple investments when, in fact, no profits
    were ever returned to an investor; she knew that she told investors that investments through
    Milan were outside federal oversight when, at best, she had not researched the question; and she
    knew that she was assuring investors that she had “validated” aspects of the transactions, as an
    attorney, when, in fact, she had not. Even crediting her statements of ignorance, such statements
    only demonstrate extreme recklessness, not innocence.
    Ms. Baylor’s attempt to use her role as an attorney as a shield is particularly
    pernicious because, as an attorney, she was in the position to lead investors to believe that their
    money was safe. Investors retained Baylor & Jackson to use the firm’s trust account to “escrow”
    investor money. Each escrow agreement identified the investor(s) as a “client” of Baylor &
    Jackson. In every instance, investor funds were immediately disbursed from the IOLTA account
    to Milan and Baylor & Jackson for personal use, or, to a lesser extent, to Relief Defendants.
    While Ms. Baylor protests that the “fees” she received were paid only on authority of Frank
    Pavlico at Milan, she does not argue that she did not know that her firm’s trust account was used
    as a revolving door to receive investors’ money and pay it out to Milan/Pavlico and thence to
    her, despite her assurances to investors that their money was safe.
    Ms. Baylor offers no real defense to Counts V through VII of SEC’s amended
    complaint, charging Ms. Baylor with having failed to register the securities with SEC (Count V)
    and aiding and abetting Mr. Pavlico in doing so (Count VI), and for failing to register as a broker
    or to associate with a registered broker-dealer (Count VII). She argues only that she was an
    attorney who “provid[ed] legal advice in connection with securities transactions” and thus did
    not “‘offer’ or sell’ those securities.” Baylor Opp. at 16–18 (citations omitted). The Court finds,
    for the reasons stated above regarding Counts I through IV, that Ms. Baylor went far beyond her
    27
    role as an attorney and is liable as a Primary Defendant for violating Sections 5(a) and 5(c) of the
    Securities Act; for violating Section 15(b) of the Securities Act by “knowingly or recklessly”
    providing substantial assistance to Mr. Pavlico and Milan in such a violation; and for violating
    Section 15(a) of the Securities Act by “induc[ing] or attempt[ing] to induce the purchase or sale
    of, any security” without being registered.
    It is quite possible that Ms. Baylor began her representation of Milan and Mr.
    Pavlico as a starry-eyed lawyer in search of a rich client. At what point she discarded her
    responsibilities as a lawyer and became a participant in the scheme is not important. The record
    demonstrates that she actively participated in the fraud. At a minimum, Ms. Baylor used her
    professional position to aid and abet Milan and Mr. Pavlico in 2010 before she appears to have
    become involved hook, line and sinker in 2011 (“This is MY deal”). The Court will grant SEC’s
    motion for summary judgment against Ms. Baylor.
    C. Relief Defendant Patrick T. Lewis
    Patrick Lewis owned GPH Holdings, LLC, which he organized in the State of
    Idaho on July 22, 2009. Lewis MSJ Opp., [Dkt. 126] Ex. A at 3. By amendment filed on
    October 6, 2009, Perk My Interest, Inc., a company owned by Mr. Lewis, and Govind Prasad of
    the Govind Prasad Humanitarian Foundation in New Jersey, became equal owners. Id.; see also
    Lewis Opp. Show Cause (Lewis SC Opp.), [Dkt. 13]. After this ostensible change in ownership,
    Mr. Lewis functioned as the “non-member manager” of GPH. Lewis SC Opp. at 4–5. SEC
    wants to recover $375,000 from Mr. Lewis, which it contends was sent to GPH Holdings from
    the Baylor & Jackson IOLTA account, without any corresponding value to the 18 victims of the
    fraud and without any lawful services by GPH or Mr. Lewis. See Am. Compl. ¶¶ 15, 57; see
    also SEC MSJ Reply [Dkt. 139] at 12. SEC does not claim that Mr. Lewis is a Principal
    28
    Defendant, instead alleging that he is a Relief Defendant who is obligated to return such monies
    for restitution to the victims.
    SEC’s initial Complaint, Dkt. 2, and Amended Complaint, Dkt. 53, are devoid of
    underlying factual contentions against Mr. Lewis. Each contains only statements that GPH
    received funds from the IOLTA account at Baylor & Jackson and that Mr. Lewis transferred the
    money to his own accounts. See Am. Compl. ¶¶ 15, 57. Mr. Lewis concedes that he received
    the money but argues that he earned the funds by attempting to secure leases of bank instruments
    for Mr. Pavlico. Lewis MSJ Opp. at 1–6; see also Lewis Supp. MSJ Opp., [Dkt. 174] at 13–14
    (“I declare I did not only earn the money I received but it was not enough to deal with what I had
    to endure.”). SEC retorts that evidence in the case, including the declaration from its expert
    Professor Byrne, establishes that no such “leased instruments” exist and that Mr. Lewis has
    introduced no evidence to the contrary. SEC Reply at 12. 10
    Mr. Lewis admits the receipt of monies from the Baylor and Jackson IOLTA
    account but insists that they were legally and fully earned. Thus, the first element of the test for
    ordering equitable relief is met; all that is in issue is whether Mr. Lewis has “a legitimate claim”
    to the funds. See Cavanagh, 
    155 F.3d at 136
    . Unfortunately, he has offered multiple and
    inconsistent transactions on which the monies might have been earned, all of which involved
    10
    SEC apparently bases some of its fact contentions against Mr. Lewis on two complaints filed
    in other courts. One such complaint was filed against the Principal Defendants and some Relief
    Defendants, including GPH and Mr. Lewis, on November 10, 2010. See Presidio Group LLC v.
    High Creek Holdings, LLC, No. 3:10-cv-05819-BHS (W.D. Wa. filed Nov. 10, 2010). This suit
    was dismissed for lack of service on April 11, 2011. The second suit, Princeton Developments,
    LLC v. Baylor, was filed on September 8, 2011. See No. 4:11-cv-04471-CW (N.D. Cal. filed
    Sept. 8, 2011). That case remains pending, including against Mr. Lewis. These two complaints
    are attached to the Declaration of Christopher McLean as part of SEC’s statement of facts not in
    dispute. See SEC Exs. 62, 65. A complaint only reflects a plaintiff’s allegations. It does not
    constitute evidence. The complaints cited by SEC as part of its statement of facts show only that
    other parties have sued some of these same Principal and Relief Defendants elsewhere. They do
    nothing to support SEC’s motion for summary judgment against Mr. Lewis.
    29
    bank instruments of the kinds found by the Court to violate securities laws. See, e.g., Lewis
    Opp., Ex. B, at 1 (agreement “to lease a financial instrument (Bank Guarantee) in the principal
    amount of Ten Million Dollars ($10,000,000) for a period of one (1) year”). Thus, his defense
    that he “earned” the monies is without merit.
    Mr. Lewis’s first explanation for the payment of $375,000 to GPH Holdings was
    offered in an unsuccessful effort to avoid a freeze on his accounts, as sought by SEC when this
    case began. See Lewis SC Opp. at 2–3. At that time, in December 2011, Mr. Lewis stated that
    the purpose of GPH Holdings was to parlay gems owned by Mr. Prasad into Standby Letters of
    Credit from a bank that could be leased to other persons as collateral for obtaining their own
    loans. 
    Id.
     Mr. Lewis explained:
    In 2009 I identified a need in the financial market for consulting
    services in order to assist companies representing investors with
    construction and other projects with legitimate uses of funds to
    obtain leased instruments as one component in a structured finance
    initiative. People seeking money to pay for their projects did not
    have enough credit . . . . These people needed to lease, meaning
    pay money to another company to purchase collateral to finance
    their projects. Leasing the collateral would be on a short term
    basis, usually no more than one year. They would sign a contract
    agreeing to pay money for the collateral and the use of whatever
    the asset was (either cash or a hard asset) that backed the collateral.
    Then the bank instrument used to represent that collateral would be
    contracted with another person or company—usually a trading
    group to use that collateral to back a public trading program. This
    means the leased collateral has a certain high value and is very
    much in demand and commands a high enough price in the market.
    Id. at 2. According to Mr. Lewis, his function “was to research, identify, contact people to bring
    to my clients a specific banking instrument called a stand by letter of credit (SBLC) or bank
    guarantee” that represented the client’s collateral “such as a hard asset like gold or diamonds.”
    Id. Relief Defendant Brett Cooper was such an individual, and Mr. Lewis asserted that Mr.
    Cooper took the gems to an institution identified only as Sovereign Bank, from which Mr.
    30
    Cooper obtained a Stand-by Letter of Credit worth 50% of their value. Id. at 5. Therefore, Mr.
    Lewis asserted, “[b]y providing the SBLC instruments procured by Mr. Cooper, I fulfilled my
    obligations to the specific [but unidentified] GPH Holdings clients these instruments were
    secured for,” id. at 5–6, and thereby earned the contested fee of $375,000. In fact, Mr. Lewis
    asserted that he “had no reason to believe Mr. Cooper could not fully perform because on at least
    four occasions, Mr. Cooper did in fact deliver the requisite SBLC instruments and no deal can
    happen without first the SBLC being secured.” Id. at 6. He further asserted that he was aware of
    no monies paid to GPH Holdings from Milan or Mr. Pavlico. Id. Mr. Lewis states that he
    disassociated with GPH in March 2011. Id. at 4 n.2.
    In response to SEC’s current motion for summary judgment, Mr. Lewis offers
    different explanations. See Lewis MSJ Opp. at 1–6. Mr. Lewis blames Roy Nielsen of Crucial
    Funds for introducing Mr. Lewis to “these transactions.” Id. at 2. He also contends that “[t]here
    was no escrow agreement represented or signed to or by me (Patrick Lewis) on behalf of GPH
    for any of the deposits.” Id. Rather, according to Mr. Lewis, GPH “receiv[ed] funds according
    to the contracts signed by the individuals Roy Nielsen introduced to GPH.” Id. Those contracts
    concerned a “leased Financial Instrument to be delivered to Al Hamri Enterprise, SL.” Id.
    “Upon continually working on fulfilling GPH Holdings LLC’s responsibility in delivering an
    Instrument to Al Hamri Enterprise, SL,” without success, GPH turned the contracts over to Mr.
    Cooper and GFS to complete the work. Id. at 3. Further protesting his innocence, Mr. Lewis
    explains that before GPH signed such contracts, they had been signed and notarized by the
    company introduced by Mr. Nielsen, with a notarized letter on company letterhead from an
    officer of the company, and GPH had been assured that “this would all be done through an
    Attorney Escrow account of their choosing.” Id. at 3. He argues that “[t]o demonstrate that
    31
    GPH was other than an innocent third party should be the subject matter of a hearing before the
    court where the whole of the facts can be presented.” Id. at 4.
    Mr. Lewis further attributes the $375,000 received by GPH from the Baylor &
    Jackson IOLTA account to a contract with Princeton Development LLC, another company
    introduced to GPH by Roy Nielsen. 11 A Princeton/GBH contract is attached to Mr. Lewis’s
    summary judgment opposition as Exhibit B. It was signed in September 2010 for Princeton by
    Syed Ali Abbas, Director, and for GPH by Mr. Lewis. Mr. Lewis contends that “the instrument
    was to be delivered to Al Hamri Enterprise, SL, in the name of Princeton Development.” Lewis
    MSJ Opp. at 4. However, nothing in Exhibit B mentions Mr. Nielsen or Al Hamri Enterprise,
    SL; in fact, the Princeton/GPH contract anticipated that GPH would “lease a financial instrument
    (Bank Guaranty) in the principal amount of Ten Million Dollars” within 45 days, for an initial
    fee of $125,000 payable directly to GPH and deposited into GPH accounts within 24 hours of
    signing the contract. Lewis MSJ Opp., Ex. B, Recitals ¶¶ 1–2, Terms ¶ 2.
    Through the exhibits attached to his Supplemental Opposition (Lewis Supp.
    Opp.), Dkts. 174 & 174-1, Mr. Lewis demonstrates his involvement in the business of
    “monetizing” and “trading” financial instruments, i.e., Stand-by Letters of Credit, both before
    and during his long-distance association with Frank Pavlico/Lorenzo. E.g., Lewis Supp. Opp.,
    Ex. E at 38 (ECF numbering) (GPH agreement titled “Asset Lease; Letter of Credit Account”).
    It is this very activity that the Court has found constituted fraudulent activity by Mr. Pavlico and
    Ms. Baylor. SEC has documented a $375,000 transfer from the IOLTA account to GPH. It
    cannot be determined from the written record whether Mr. Lewis was naïve or conniving. What
    11
    See also Lewis SC Opp. at 7 (“For Princeton, attorney Dawn Jackson was the Escrow Agent
    and Princeton wired its fees to Dawn Jackson who then paid GPH Holdings on escrow
    instruction. . . . For ANT Holdings [otherwise unidentified], their fees were wired to attorney
    Brynee Baylor who on escrow instruction then paid GPH Holdings.”).
    32
    is clear is that Mr. Lewis engaged with Mr. Pavlico, Ms. Baylor, and Milan in the same kinds of
    shady dealings. SEC has established through its expert that there are no financial instruments of
    the types that made up the fraud here. (In fact, no Defendant or Relief Defendant claims that
    such financial instruments are actually traded; each argues only his or her only innocent
    ignorance.) Mr. Lewis attempts to demonstrate that he “earned” the monies in question through
    legitimate activities but the “work” he posits is the same as, or similar to, the illegal securities
    fraud perpetuated by Milan, Mr. Pavlico, Baylor & Jackson and Ms. Baylor, and the money in
    question came from Baylor & Jackson. As he “does not have a legitimate claim to those funds,”
    Cavanagh, 
    155 F.3d at 136
    , such “work” does not support his claim to retain the $375,000 as
    money fairly earned, and it must be disgorged as proceeds of the fraud.
    Summary judgment will be granted to SEC against Patrick Lewis. The Court
    declines to use its discretion to require Mr. Lewis to pay prejudgment interest, as he is not a
    named wrongdoer or Principal Defendant. 12
    D. Relief Defendant Brett Cooper
    SEC’s case against Relief Defendant Brett A. Cooper is most curious. SEC
    asserts that Mr. Cooper was the managing member of Relief Defendant Global Funding Systems,
    LLC; that GFS received $225,000 from Milan; and that “[i]nvestor funds received by [GFS]
    were transferred to other accounts, including [Mr.] Cooper’s personal accounts.” Am. Compl.
    ¶¶ 16, 20. “Neither Global Funding nor Cooper provided any lawful services or products to any
    12
    An award of prejudgment interest lies within the broad discretion of the district court. Kenton
    Capital, Ltd., 
    69 F. Supp. 2d at 16
    ; SEC v. Hughes Capital Corp., 
    917 F. Supp. 1080
    , 1089
    (D.N.J. 1996). To determine whether to award prejudgment interest, a court should consider (1)
    the need to fully compensate a wronged party; (2) fairness and the equities of the award; (3) the
    remedial purpose of the statute; (4) any other principles deemed relevant by the court. Kenton
    Capital, 
    69 F. Supp. 2d at
    16 (citing SEC v. First Jersey Sec., Inc., 
    101 F.3d 1450
    , 1476 (2d
    Cir.1996)). The Court will award prejudgment interest against all Principal Defendants and The
    Julian Estate.
    33
    defendant or for the benefit of investors in the defendants’ fraudulent scheme in return for these
    funds.” Id. ¶ 58. All “[r]elief defendants . . . received, directly or indirectly, funds and/or other
    benefits from the defendants which are the proceeds of unlawful activities alleged in this
    [Amended] Complaint and to which these relief defendants have no legitimate claim.” Id. ¶ 83.
    SEC wants an order to Mr. Cooper to disgorge $225,000. SEC MSJ Mem. at 7.
    As relevant to Mr. Cooper in its motion for summary judgment, SEC argues, in
    full:
    Pavlico and Milan transferred through the B&J trust account and
    sometimes through the Milan checking account more than $1.2
    million of their ill-gotten proceeds to relief defendants Jackson,
    Cooper, Lewis, the Julian Estate and Mia Baldassari. None of the
    relief defendants provided any services, or any other type of
    consideration. Accordingly, these relief defendants had no right or
    legitimate claim to any of the investor funds that they received, and
    summary judgment should be entered against them for these
    amounts.
    SEC MSJ Mem. at 25.
    SEC submitted bank records for the -0337 account of Milan that demonstrated
    that “at least $225,000 was transferred to relief defendant Global Funding Systems, LLC.”
    Statement of Material Facts Not in Dispute (SEC Facts) [Dkt. 109-3] ¶¶ 63–64. Like Mr. Lewis,
    Mr. Cooper willingly concedes the first element of the test for ordering equitable relief. He
    readily agrees that GFS “was paid for services” to Milan in the amount of $225,000, from which
    he “paid Mr. Lewis a consulting fee of $50,000.00.” Cooper Resp. SEC Facts (Cooper Facts),
    [Dkt. 157] ¶¶ 55, 67. He asserts that GFS contracted with Milan in 2010 to “help Milan find a
    $100 million dollar [sic], and later a $200 million dollar [sic] bank guarantee or letter of credit
    for Milan.” Id. ¶ 67. Further, he states:
    I began by providing Milan with detailed outlines and information
    about the requirements to get the instruments that it wanted. I then
    worked for three months with three different financing groups to
    34
    come up with different options for Milan to finish the deal. But,
    Milan could not get an undertaking letter, and that was required to
    get the guarantee/letter of credit, so the deal fell through.
    Cooper Opp. [Dkt. 156] at 1–2 (ECF numbering). Mr. Cooper protests that the contract between
    Milan and GFS provided that GFS would be paid for its work without regard to whether a deal
    was ever consummated so that the failure of the deal, due to Milan’s inability to get an
    undertaking letter, is irrelevant. Id. at 2.
    Although not a lawyer and appearing pro se, Mr. Cooper also advances legal
    arguments against the SEC’s demand for disgorgement of $225,000 from him personally. First,
    he notes that the Milan contract was with GFS, of which he was an employee, and the SEC has
    provided no basis on which to pierce the corporate veil. Id. at 3. Mr. Cooper cites Valley
    Finance, Inc. v. United States, 
    629 F.2d 162
    , 172 (D.C. Cir. 1980), for the proposition that his
    sole ownership of GFS is not enough to warrant ignoring corporate formalities. Cooper Opp. at
    3. Second, Mr. Cooper notes the contradiction between SEC’s naming him as a Relief
    Defendant (who is not charged with wrongdoing) and its claim for pre-judgment interest, which
    the SEC characterizes in its motion for summary judgment memorandum as being a remedy
    against wrongdoers. Id. at 4.
    SEC’s response is remarkable. In a brief devoid of citation to legal authority, it
    argues that Mr. Cooper has provided no documentation to support his statements of having
    worked for three months in an attempt to obtain a bank guarantee for Milan, that he has provided
    no evidence of contacts with banks or bankers from whom such an instrument might be obtained,
    and that he has “utterly failed to address how he could possibly arrange for instruments of $100
    million or $200 million to be issued for use by Pavlico, Milan, and their investors.” SEC Cooper
    Reply [Dkt. 158] at 1–2. SEC does not address in any way the distinctions, legal or real,
    between GFS and Brett Cooper. It fails to respond to Mr. Cooper’s assertion that $25,000 of the
    35
    $225,000 SEC attributes to GFS and Mr. Cooper was paid to Mr. Lewis as a finder’s fee. Most
    notably, SEC has itself highlighted the dearth of evidence with respect to Mr. Cooper. 13 Id. at 1
    (“In fact, out of 92 documents produced by Cooper and GFS in response to the Commission’s
    document request, only a handful even come from Cooper, most of them in the form of emails
    responding to emails from defendant Frank Pavlico, a/k/a Frank Lorenzo (‘Pavlico’).”).
    In contrast to the written record regarding Mr. Lewis, who offered conflicting
    explanations and inculpatory documents, the record precludes summary judgment against Mr.
    Cooper. Default judgment has already been entered against GFS, and SEC offers no evidence or
    argument that would allow it to pierce the corporate veil and treat Mr. Cooper as the corporate
    entity. Mr. Cooper’s description of his efforts to obtain a bank guarantee if Milan could produce
    an undertaking letter does not, per se, demonstrate fraudulent conduct or that GFS did not earn
    the monies paid as per the contract.
    E. Relief Defendant Mia Baldassari
    Mia C. Baldassari does not dispute that she was Frank Pavlico’s girlfriend from
    2006 until sometime around his November 30, 2011 arrest on criminal charges arising from these
    same events. 14 SEC uncovered records of payments from Milan to Ms. Baldassari in 2010 and
    13
    Mr. Cooper has been difficult for SEC to track down. SEC filed an application to enforce
    compliance with subpoenas duces tecum and ad testificandum against Mr. Cooper in connection
    with a related securities enforcement action involving Mr. Cooper and various associated
    business entities. See generally SEC v. Cooper, Misc. No. 13-7 (RMC) (D.D.C. filed Jan. 3,
    2013). With active court intervention, he finally appeared in person in court and ascribed the
    absence of records to an alleged computer meltdown and/or seizure by SEC. Mr. Cooper
    insisted that SEC already had every document he could produce because he had turned over
    every relevant item in connection with the Pavlico/Milan investigation. SEC was unhappy but
    satisfied.
    14
    Ms. Baldassari testified at her May 3, 2012 deposition that she and Mr. Pavlico were no longer
    dating, although she and her son were still living in his home for economic reasons. Baldassari
    Dep., Br. Supp. Baldassari MSJ & Release of Funds (Baldassari MSJ Mem.) [Dkt. 85], Ex. A, at
    36
    2011 in the amount of $64,156.25. 15 Those payments are not contested by Ms. Baldassari. As a
    result, SEC argues that Ms. Baldassari received $64,156.25 from Milan during the fraudulent
    scheme and should be ordered to disgorge it to the benefit of victims. See Cavanagh, 
    155 F.3d at 136
     (permitting equitable relief “against a person who is not accused of wrongdoing in a
    securities enforcement action where that person: (1) has received ill-gotten funds; and (2) does
    not have a legitimate claim to those funds”).
    In November and December of 2011, Ms. Baldassari told SEC that all of these
    funds were loans or gifts from Mr. Pavlico, as a trail of emails appears to demonstrate. See SEC
    Facts Opp. Baldassari MSJ [Dkt. 87-1] ¶ 8; see, e.g., id. ¶ 8, first bullet (Ms. Baldassari’s request
    to “make arrangements to escrow loan money I received from the Milan Group in 2010 which
    total $19,000.00 {this amount does not include check numbers 1319 ($1500.00) & 1322
    ($4000.00} Which were Christmas gifts from Mr. Pavlico to me to buy my son a gift from him
    and the other was to me; I chose money instead of a traditional Christmas gift” (formatting as in
    original)).
    Ms. Baldassari’s explanations for the Milan disbursements later changed. At her
    May 3, 2012 deposition, Ms. Baldassari admitted that she frequently wrote checks to herself
    from Milan accounts at Bank of America, where she had signatory authority, and that she had
    12–13, 17. She also stated that their relationship ended around the time of Mr. Pavlico’s arrest,
    although the two were not causally linked. Id. at 15, 17.
    15
    Payments from Milan to Ms. Baldassari occurred on September 3, 2010, $7,000; October 8,
    2010, $1,000; October 21, 2010, $1,500; October 29, 2010, $4,500; December 6, 2010, $3,000;
    December 14, 2010, $1,500; December 18, 2010, $4,000; and January 1, 2011, $2,000, for a total
    of $24,500. SEC Facts Opp. Baldassari MSJ [Dkt. 87-1] ¶ 3. Further, Ms. Baldassari identified
    “Loans to Mia 2011” as of January 7, 2011, $1,000; January 20, 2011, $2,000; March 10, 2011,
    $1,000; February 2, [2]011, $2,500; February 23, 2011, $2,500; June 13, 2011, $1,500; June 16,
    2011, $3,000; June 17, 2011, $1,500; July 18, 2011, $3,000; September 14, 2011, $6,000;
    October 12, 2011, $9,000; and November 16, 2011, $4,456.25, for a total of $39,656.25. Id.
    37
    never informed SEC she earned any of funds she received from Milan. SEC Opp. Baldassari
    MSJ [Dkt. 87], Kidney Decl. [Dkt. 87-2] ¶ 13; see Kidney Decl., Ex. 4, Baldassari Dep., at 53–
    54. She also admitted that she “did not disclose a lot of things” to SEC “out of concern for
    incriminating Frank.” Baldassari Dep. at 58. According to her deposition testimony, one such
    hidden fact was that she had worked at a spa owned by Mr. Pavlico and thereby earned some of
    the payments she received from Milan, which paid her because the spa was not doing well
    financially. Id. at 48; see Baldassari MSJ Mem. [Dkt. 85] at 2 (“[S]he received approximately
    $20,000.00 in 2010 and $33,000 in 2011, as compensation for her work at the In-Touch Day
    Spa.”). To support this testimony, Ms. Baldassari later submitted two Internal Revenue Service
    Forms 1099, which report nonemployee compensation paid to Ms. Baldassari by Au Natural &
    Company LLC in the amounts of $19,000 in 2010 and $32,000 in 2011. See Baldassari MSJ
    [Dkt. 84], Exs. E & F.
    SEC obtained a temporary restraining order and preliminary injunction freezing
    Defendants’ assets when this litigation began. See TRO [Dkt. 4]. At that time, Ms. Baldassari
    was about to sell her house, purchased long before the Milan fraud began, and its closing was
    imperiled by the asset freeze. SEC and Ms. Baldassari agreed that she could close on the house
    sale as long as she deposited the proceeds into the Court Registry Investment System (CRIS)
    account to be held in escrow and available for victims if ordered. She thereafter deposited
    $39,656.25 into the CRIS account. 16 Months later, Ms. Baldassari moved for summary judgment
    and immediate release of her funds, arguing that she earned the monies she was paid by Milan
    due to her work for Au Natural and that her deposited funds should be released. Ms. Baldassari
    16
    As reflected by the Court’s docket: “DEPOSIT of Funds into registry of the Court on
    December 8, 2011 in the amount of $ 39,656.25, Receipt Number CQ12461600015 received
    from MIA C. BALDASSARI. (rdj) (Entered: 12/14/2011).”
    38
    also claimed a right to recover two other deposits made into the Court registry: (1) $10,000.00
    deposited by Jeremy Fry, Mr. Pavlico’s former counsel, whom Ms. Baldassari asserts she paid to
    represent Mr. Pavlico after his arrest in the related criminal case; 17 and (2) $20,000 deposited by
    Elmo Baldassari, brother of Mia Baldassari, which Ms. Baldassari avers to be “proceeds of [the]
    sale of a property she owned with her brother.” 18 Baldassari MSJ Mem. at 1–2. SEC opposed
    her motion. The Court deferred consideration of Ms. Baldassari’s motion for summary judgment
    to address it simultaneously with SEC’s motion for summary judgment. See Minute Order dated
    Feb. 1, 2013. Ms. Baldassari’s opposition to SEC’s motion for summary judgment, Dkt. 127,
    incorporates her own motion for summary judgment and adds no new arguments or facts.
    To summarize: SEC has demonstrated that Milan violated securities laws with its
    fraudulent scheme and that, during the course of that scheme, $64,156.25 from Milan was
    transferred to Ms. Baldassari. Ms. Baldassari seeks to recoup $69,656.25 now on deposit in the
    CRIS account: $39,656.25 from the sale of her house, which Ms. Baldassari argues was not
    related to any securities fraud; $10,000 that Ms. Baldassari sent to attorney Jeremy Fry, which
    Ms. Baldassari argues came from her personal account and not Milan’s; and $20,000 paid by
    Milan to Elmo Baldassari to repay on her behalf a brotherly loan, which Ms. Baldassari claims
    because she has now repaid her brother with a transfer of property.
    17
    As reflected on the docket, “DEPOSIT of Funds into registry of the Court on December 14,
    2011 in the amount of $10,000, Receipt Number CQ12461600021. (dr) (Entered: 12/23/2011).”
    Knowing that the accounts of Milan and Mr. Pavlico had been subject to an asset freeze, Mr. Fry
    had asked SEC counsel how to proceed.
    18
    As reflected on the docket, “DEPOSIT of Funds into registry of the Court on December 6,
    2011 in the amount of $20,000.00, Receipt Number CQ12461600014 received from ELMO
    BALDASSARI. (rdj) (Entered: 12/09/2011).” Elmo Baldassari was a named Relief Defendant
    until he deposited the $20,000 he had received from Milan into the court; he was thereafter
    dismissed from the case.
    39
    The Court’s analysis begins with the simplest question and proceeds to the more
    difficult. First, pursuant to an agreement with SEC, Ms. Baldassari deposited $39,656.25 in the
    CRIS account from the proceeds from the sale of her house. Her deposit was then and is now
    insufficient to cover the entirety of the $64,156.25 that SEC alleges she received from
    Pavlico/Milan as proceeds of the fraud in 2010 and 2011, including the “Loans to Mia 2011.”
    Ms. Baldassari argues that she owned her house long before the Milan/Pavlico/Baylor fraud and
    money from its sale was not an “ill-gotten gain” from that scheme; therefore, she argues, she has
    a right to recover it. While quite shining in its logic, this argument fails. If, as she once
    admitted, Ms. Baldassari received funds that were fruits of the securities fraud, she is liable to
    disgorge the amount of such funds unless she earned them. Ms. Baldassari has already agreed
    under oath. See SEC Motion to Lift Freeze, [Dkt. 6] Ex., Baldassari Decl. ¶ 10 (“The funds may
    be provided to the SEC, distributed to defrauded investors or returned to me, depending on
    resolution of the lawsuit.”); see also id. ¶ 1 (“The Complaint alleges that I received funds . . .
    [that] were obtained by Pavlico by defrauding investors. The Complaint demands that these
    funds be frozen and then returned to defrauded investors in the event the case is resolved in favor
    of the SEC.”). 19 The fact that the specific dollars she received have long since been spent and
    she would be forced to disgorge her own dollars from another source does not absolve her of the
    obligation to return an equivalent sum for distribution to victims of the fraud because she had
    “no ownership interest” in the ill-gotten gains. See George, 
    426 F.3d at 798
    ; see also SEC v.
    Banner Fund Int’l, 
    211 F.3d 602
    , 617 (D.C. Cir. 2000) (“[A]n order to disgorge establishes a
    personal liability, which the defendant must satisfy regardless whether he retains the selfsame
    19
    Ms. Baldassari, who is now represented by counsel, was not represented when she signed the
    declaration, but she “decided not to retain counsel” in connection with her original dealings with
    SEC. Baldassari Decl. ¶ 5.
    40
    proceeds of his wrongdoing.”). Moreover, the Court’s original order permitting the sale of Ms.
    Baldassari’s property, to which Ms. Baldassari made no objection, made clear that the funds
    would be “held in escrow pending resolution of the entire matter.” Dec. 5, 2011 Order [Dkt. 9]
    at 1 (emphasis added).
    Second, Ms. Baldassari asserts ownership to the $10,000 paid to Attorney Fry that
    is now in the CRIS account because it went to Mr. Fry from her personal bank account. See
    Baldassari MSJ Mem. at 1 (asserting that “the funds were maintained in Baldassari’s personal
    checking account with no ties to the Defendants”). SEC does not contest this fact. It points out,
    however, that Ms. Baldassari admitted that the funds originated in one of Mr. Pavlico’s accounts
    to which she had signature authority. See Baldassari Dep. at 87 (“There was the initial $10,000,
    the joint account that Mr. Pavlico and I was [sic] on that I sent to Attorney Jeremy Frey two days
    prior to the SEC contacting myself. And that $10,000 was supposed to be used for legal
    terms . . . . .”). She used this authority on November 30, 2011 to transfer $10,000 to her own
    account. 20 On the next day, December 1, she then transferred $10,000 from her account to Mr.
    Fry. Ms. Baldasssari argues here that the retention fee to Attorney Fry came from her own
    account but she does so only by totally ignoring—and not answering—SEC’s evidence of its
    provenance. Whether it was appropriate for Ms. Baldassari to use Mr. Pavlico’s own money to
    retain a criminal lawyer to represent Mr. Pavlico (except for the inconvenient freeze on accounts
    imposed by this Court) is not the question. It is enough to say that the fact that the money’s brief
    visit to Ms. Baldassari’s own account did not make the money hers. Having failed to respond to
    SEC’s argument, Ms. Baldassari cannot be heard further. See Kone v. District of Columbia, 808
    20
    A wire transfer record that Ms. Baldasssari gave to SEC on December 9, 2011 showed that
    $10,000 was transferred from Mr. Pavlico’s account into her account on November 30, 2011.
    See Kidney Decl., Ex. 15 (E-mails & Bank Records).
    
    41 F. Supp. 2d 80
    , 83 (D.D.C. 2011) (“[A]n argument in a dispositive motion that the opponent fails
    to address in an opposition may be deemed conceded.” (quoting Rosenblatt v. Fenty, 
    734 F. Supp. 2d 21
    , 22 (D.D.C. 2010)); LCvR 7(b).
    Third, the tale of the sibling loan provides certain clarity: Elmo Baldassari loaned
    his sister, Mia, $20,000; on her behalf, Milan repaid the full $20,000 to Elmo Baldassari during
    the course of the securities fraud; to avoid involvement in this lawsuit, Elmo Baldassari
    deposited $20,000 into the CRIS account with the Court; to pay off her debt, Mia Baldassari
    transferred some real property to Elmo Baldassari. Ms. Baldassari now contends that $20,000
    should be dispersed from the CRIS account to her because it represented repayment of a loan to
    Elmo Baldassari that she repaid another way. 21 Her logic again fails. Milan engaged in a long
    securities fraud and the money in its accounts were (part of) the ill-gotten gains. When Milan
    paid off Mia Baldassari’s debt, it did so with money that belonged to the victims. Ms. Baldassari
    has no claim to that money.
    The Court thus concludes that Ms. Baldassari has no claim to the retainer paid to
    Mr. Fry or the debt paid to her brother with Milan money. Accordingly, she is not entitled to
    receive that $30,000 from the CRIS account. Whether Ms. Baldassari is entitled to release of the
    $39,656.25 she deposited depends on the fourth question: has SEC proved that it is entitled to
    disgorgement because Ms. Baldassari did not earn the $64,156.25 that she first identified as gifts
    and loans from Mr. Pavlico? Before wading into that marsh, the Court notes that Ms. Baldassari
    claims to have earned $19,000 in 2010, but the records undeniably show that she received
    $22,500 from Milan in that year; even crediting arguendo her earnings, $3,500 was unearned and
    21
    Having transferred the real property to Elmo Baldassari to repay her loan, it is risible that Mia
    Baldassari claims a right to $20,000 in the CRIS account as derived from her “sale of an
    additional parcel of real estate.” Baldassari MSJ [Dkt. 84] ¶ 10.
    42
    subject to disgorgement. Further, Ms. Baldassari claims to have earned $32,000 in 2011, but she
    received $41,656.25 from Milan in that calendar year, leaving $9,656.25 in unearned receipts
    that are subject to disgorgement. At a minimum, Ms. Baldassari must disgorge $13,156.25 in
    unearned monies to SEC. 22
    What remains are the total of $51,000 asserted earnings from Au Natural &
    Company in 2010 and 2011. For evidence of those earnings, Ms. Baldassari has submitted the
    two Forms 1099 discussed earlier, which her counsel asserts are “true and correct cop[ies] of
    2010 and 2011 1099 statements.” Baldassari Reply [Dkt. 89] at 6. SEC tells another story.
    When Ms. Baldassari testified at deposition in May 2012 that she had worked for a spa owned by
    Frank Pavlico, she also testified that she had “boxes” of documents to back up her testimony and
    IRS records. Thereafter, she submitted only the two Forms 1099 and ignored all SEC requests
    for the “boxes” of supporting documents from the business she supposedly managed. SEC then
    subpoenaed her accountants and discovered that she had reported adjusted gross income of
    $3,036 to the IRS in 2010 from investments, claiming no wage, salary or business income or
    loss. See Kidney Decl., Ex. 13 [Dkt. 87-3] (Baldassari 2010 IRS Form 1040). Her accountant
    produced an email from Ms. Baldassari to him dated March 2, 2012, in which Ms. Baldassari
    asked the accountant to prepare “1099s for 2010 and 2011 for earned income” from Au Natural
    & Company, Mr. Pavlico’s holding company for the spa. Kidney Decl., Ex. 14 [Dkt. 87-3] (E-
    mail from Mia Baldassari to “julian196969@gmail.com”). Ms. Baldassari wrote: “My attorney
    is requesting that I have [the Forms 1099] in my possession for the hearing.” 
    Id.
     The amount to
    22
    As stated above, Ms. Baldassari has already admitted that $5500.00 she received from Milan
    were gifts: check number 1319, dated 12/14/2010, for $1500.00 (Kidney Decl., Ex. 1 at ECF
    pages 14–15) and check number 1322, dated 12/18/2010, for $4000.00 (id. at ECF pages 16–17).
    Because that total is less than the $13,156.25 total received from Milan that is undisputedly not
    earnings, the Court does not apportion those amounts to 2010 or 2011 at this time.
    43
    be reported for 2011 was changed by hand from $39,656.00—i.e., the exact amount, minus 25
    cents, that Ms. Baldassari deposited into the CRIS—to $33,000. 
    Id.
    Ultimately, the Court cannot make credibility determinations from the written
    record. Ms. Baldassari has testified under oath that she earned some monies in 2010 and 2011
    managing a spa owned by Mr. Pavlico. If true, that could support a claim that she earned some
    funds legitimately and should not be required to forfeit them. See Cavanagh, 
    155 F.3d at 136
    .
    Notably, however, although she says she received payments for that work from Milan, her Forms
    1099 reflect income from Au Natural & Company. The Forms 1099 were prepared at Ms.
    Baldassari’s request in conspicuously convenient amounts apparently in preparation for this
    litigation. In addition, Ms. Baldassari communicated openly with SEC in late 2011 and told SEC
    that all monies received from Milan were either gifts or loans, although she now says she did not
    tell the truth at that time. Ms. Baldassari’s evidence is extremely weak, but a finder of fact must
    reach its own conclusion.
    Ms. Baldassari’s motion for summary judgment and release of funds will be
    denied. SEC’s motion for summary judgment with respect to Ms. Baldassari will be granted in
    part and denied in part. SEC’s motion will be granted with respect to the $13,156.25 that Ms.
    Baldassari received from Milan and admittedly did not earn in 2010 or 2011. SEC’s motion will
    be denied without prejudice to the remaining $51,000 that SEC asks the Court to order Ms.
    Baldassari to disgorge. No release from the CRIS account will be ordered.
    IV. CONCLUSION
    For the reasons stated above, SEC’s motion for summary judgment will be
    granted with respect to Principal Defendants the Estate of Frank Pavlico, the Milan Group,
    Baylor & Jackson, and Brynee K. Baylor, as well as Relief Defendants Patrick Lewis and The
    Julian Estate. SEC’s motion for summary judgment will be denied as to Relief Defendant Brett
    44
    Cooper. SEC’s motion will be granted in part and denied in part as to Relief Defendant Mia
    Baldassari, and Relief Defendant Mia Baldassari’s motion for summary judgment and release of
    funds will be denied.
    A memorializing Order accompanies this Opinion.
    DATE: August 26, 2013
    /s/
    ROSEMARY M. COLLYER
    United States District Judge
    45
    

Document Info

Docket Number: Civil Action No. 2011-2132

Citation Numbers: 962 F. Supp. 2d 182

Judges: Judge Rosemary M. Collyer

Filed Date: 8/26/2013

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 8/31/2023

Authorities (39)

Securities and Exchange Commission v. First Jersey ... , 101 F.3d 1450 ( 1996 )

fed-sec-l-rep-p-96275-david-e-rolf , 570 F.2d 38 ( 1978 )

Securities Exchange Commission v. Monarch Funding ... , 192 F.3d 295 ( 1999 )

daniel-chill-paul-kay-giza-schectman-mayer-ballas-douglas-marshall , 101 F.3d 263 ( 1996 )

securities-and-exchange-commission-v-texas-gulf-sulphur-co-a-texas , 401 F.2d 833 ( 1968 )

fed-sec-l-rep-p-90277-securities-and-exchange-commission-v-thomas , 155 F.3d 129 ( 1998 )

Fed. Sec. L. Rep. P 95,887 Sundstrand Corporation v. Sun ... , 553 F.2d 1033 ( 1977 )

Securities & Exchange Commission v. Banner Fund ... , 211 F.3d 602 ( 2000 )

Securities and Exchange Commission v. John D. Lauer and ... , 52 F.3d 667 ( 1995 )

Graham v. Securities & Exchange Commission , 222 F.3d 994 ( 2000 )

Fed. Sec. L. Rep. P 96,030 Henry T. Sanders v. John Nuveen &... , 554 F.2d 790 ( 1977 )

Securities and Exchange Commission v. Danny O. Cherif, and ... , 933 F.2d 403 ( 1991 )

fed-sec-l-rep-p-90166-98-cal-daily-op-serv-1915-98-daily-journal , 139 F.3d 674 ( 1998 )

securities-and-exchange-commission-v-allen-george-03-3791-carl-e , 426 F.3d 786 ( 2005 )

Weiss v. Securities & Exchange Commission , 468 F.3d 849 ( 2006 )

Charles A. Roth v. Securities and Exchange Commission , 22 F.3d 1108 ( 1994 )

Securities and Exchange Commission v. Charles W. Steadman, (... , 967 F.2d 636 ( 1992 )

Securities and Exchange Commission v. Falstaff Brewing ... , 629 F.2d 62 ( 1980 )

Dolphin & Bradbury, Inc. v. Securities & Exchange Commission , 512 F.3d 634 ( 2008 )

Rockies Fund, Inc. v. Securities & Exchange Commission , 428 F.3d 1088 ( 2005 )

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