US SEC to pay whistleblower $30m

WASHINGTON – An anonymous tipster living abroad will be receiving more than $30 million, in the largest whistleblower award ever doled out by US securities regulators as part of a program that aims to incentivise insiders to report wrongdoing. The Securities and Exchange Commission said on Monday that the whistleblower provided crucial information that helped investigators uncover a “difficult to detect” ongoing fraud.

“This record-breaking award sends a strong message about our commitment to whistleblowers and the value they bring to law enforcement,” SEC Enforcement Director Andrew Ceresney said.

The SEC won new powers in the 2010 Dodd-Frank Wall Street reform law to entice whistleblowers with monetary awards.
Prior to the new law, the SEC was only able to reward people for helping on insider-trading cases.

The new program lets the SEC pay a whistleblower who provides tips and original information that leads to an enforcement action with sanctions that exceed $1 million.

The SEC can award a whistleblower anywhere between 10 percent and 30 percent of the money the agency collects.
By law, the SEC is not allowed to reveal the identity of whistleblowers, and so as a result it does not disclose which case a whistleblower helped to crack.
Settlements with the SEC large enough to justify a $30 million-plus award are fairly uncommon.

Phillips & Cohen LLP, a law firm that represented the whistleblower, declined to provide details about the case but said its client will receive at least $30 million and possibly as much as $35 million.

“I was very concerned that investors were being cheated out of millions of dollars and that the company was misleading them about its actions,” said the whistleblower, in a press release issued by the law firm.

Monday’s announcement marks the fourth time the SEC has agreed to award a whistleblower living abroad – a fact that the agency said demonstrates the “international breadth” of the program.

Since the inception of the program in fiscal year 2012, the SEC has awarded more than a dozen whistleblowers.
Monday’s $30 million-plus award is more than double the previous record of $14 million, awarded to a whistleblower in 2013.-Reuters.

Related Posts

Fire-hit Fairy Café property set for rates relief

Vusumuzi Dube, Deputy Radar Editor BULAWAYO City Council (BCC) has granted a rates reprieve to the owners of a central business district property that was completely destroyed by fire earlier…

Government Engages Liquor Industry Stakeholders on Licensing Reforms

Peter Matika GOVERNMENT has intensified efforts to reform Zimbabwe’s liquor licensing system, bringing together key industry stakeholders in Bulawayo today to discuss reducing licence fees, streamlining application procedures and improving…

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

×
×