SEC v. Seghers ( 2009 )


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  •                    REVISED JANUARY 16, 2009
    IN THE UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
    FOR THE FIFTH CIRCUIT   United States Court of Appeals
    Fifth Circuit
    FILED
    October 28, 2008
    No. 06-11146
    Charles R. Fulbruge III
    Clerk
    SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION
    Plaintiff - Appellee-Cross-Appellant
    v.
    CONRAD P SEGHERS
    Defendant - Appellant-Cross-Appellee
    Appeal from the United States District Court
    for the Northern District of Texas
    USDC No. 3:04-CV-1320
    Before JONES, Chief Judge, and GARWOOD and JOLLY, Circuit Judges.
    E. GRADY JOLLY, Circuit Judge:*
    This appeal arises out of a civil enforcement action brought by the
    Securities and Exchange Commission against Conrad Seghers for securities
    fraud relating to Seghers’s involvement with three hedge funds that he founded.
    Seghers appeals the jury verdict and the district court’s judgment in favor of the
    Commission, enjoining him from future securities fraud and imposing a civil
    fine. The Commission cross-appeals, seeking reversal of the district court’s
    *
    Pursuant to 5TH CIR. R. 47.5, the court has determined that this opinion should not
    be published and is not precedent except under the limited circumstances set forth in 5TH CIR.
    R. 47.5.4.
    No. 06-11146
    ruling that Seghers was not liable for the entire period alleged. The Commission
    further seeks reversal of the district court’s denial of disgorgement of the gains
    from Seghers’s fraudulent activity. We affirm the judgment against Seghers,
    vacate the finding limiting the period of Seghers’s liability, vacate the denial of
    disgorgement, and remand for further proceedings not inconsistent with this
    opinion.
    I.
    Conrad Seghers was a co-founder and control person of Integral
    Investment Management, L.L.C., which was the general partner of Integral
    Investment Management, L.P. Integral Investment Management, L.P., was the
    general partner of three hedge funds: Integral Arbitrage, L.P.; Integral Equity,
    L.P.; and Integral Hedging, L.P. (collectively, “the Integral Funds” or “the
    Funds”). Investors were limited partners in the Funds. Seghers and partner
    James Dickey offered and sold limited partnership interests in the Integral
    Funds to individual and institutional investors. Seghers promoted the Funds as
    low risk investments which, through a hedging strategy, were able to provide
    steady growth with limited downside risk.
    By June 2000, the majority of the Integral Funds’ assets were invested in
    the Galileo Fund, L.P., a separate investment fund managed by Seghers’s
    associate, Samir Bizri. Bizri conducted trading for the Galileo Fund. Seghers
    and Bizri agreed to a contract titled “Risk-Adaptive Portfolio Structures
    Agreement” (“RAPS agreement”). The RAPS agreement called for Bizri to use
    his proprietary hedging strategy to trade the Funds’ assets in the Galileo Fund.
    The agreement also called for Bizri to calculate, on a monthly basis, the value
    of the Galileo Fund account. The agreement contemplated investments in
    securities and derivatives that matured at fixed time periods. The assets were
    to be valued monthly according to what Seghers and Bizri have called an
    “amortization” method. Under this method, the value of the RAPS agreement
    2
    No. 06-11146
    is calculated according to assets’ historical cost plus or minus the value that the
    assets would have at expiration if markets remain at the same prices at
    expiration as on the valuation date, divided by the number of months remaining
    before maturation.
    Olympia Capital Associates, L.P., was hired in June 2000 as the fund
    administrator for the Integral Funds. Among its other duties, Olympia sent
    monthly and quarterly statements to the Funds’ investors, showing the value of
    each investor’s interest in the Funds. It was Seghers, however, who sent to
    Olympia monthly valuations of the Funds’ assets, including values for the
    Galileo Fund. Under the Integral Funds’ limited partnership agreements,
    Integral Investment Management, L.P., received certain fees and distributions
    based on the value of the Funds and the profit attributed to each investor’s
    account. Seghers, a principal of Integral Investment Management, received
    income based on the value and performance of the Funds, as reported to
    investors.
    Morgan Stanley Dean Witter (“Morgan Stanley”) was the broker-dealer for
    the Integral Funds and the Galileo Fund. In February 2001, Bizri discovered
    significant errors by Morgan Stanley in the Galileo Fund’s account. These errors
    included positions in the account at incorrect prices, unauthorized trades,
    duplicative trades, and margin calculation errors. Due to errors in the account,
    Morgan Stanley mistakenly made margin calls, forcing the liquidation of some
    of the assets in the Galileo Fund. A June 6, 2001 letter to Seghers from an
    assistant vice-president at Morgan Stanley documented that the statement
    values for Integral Equity, Galileo Fund, and Galileo Fund Offshore1 had been
    incorrect since February 2001. None of these troubles were reported to investors
    at the time they occurred.
    1
    Galileo Fund Offshore was a separate fund established for investment by Integral
    Investment Management.
    3
    No. 06-11146
    In July 2001, the Funds’ assets in the Galileo Fund account were
    transferred from Morgan Stanley to another broker-dealer, Spear, Leeds &
    Kellogg, L.P. Seghers did communicate the change to investors, but without
    explaining the details or extent of the errors that Morgan Stanley had made.
    After September 11, 2001, the Funds collapsed and Integral Hedging and
    Integral Equity lost most of their value. Olympia distributed statements to
    investors providing their account values as of September 30, 2001.                       Each
    statement contained a new disclaimer stating that the Fund is largely invested
    in RAPS Contracts, the net asset value of which is calculated on an amortization
    formula that spreads realized gains or losses over the time period until the
    expiration of the contract. The statement also disclosed that, if the Fund’s assets
    were calculated on the basis of a mark-to-market or liquidation value, the value
    of the Fund would be down by over 90%.
    II.
    The Commission, charging securities fraud, brought a civil enforcement
    action against Seghers, alleging violations of § 17(a) of the Securities Act of 1933,
    § 10(b) of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, Rule10b-5 thereunder, and §§
    206(1) and 206(2) of the Investment Advisers Act. The Commission alleged that
    Seghers committed fraud from June 1 through November 30, 2000 and March
    1 through September 30, 2001 because he knowingly caused Olympia to
    overstate the value of investors’ interests in the Funds by anywhere from 13%
    to 77% per month and because he did not disclose errors by Morgan Stanley that
    affected valuation of the Funds. The Commission sought an injunction against
    further securities fraud, a civil penalty, and disgorgement of Seghers’s ill-gotten
    gains. After a fourteen-day trial, the jury found by a preponderance of the
    evidence that Seghers had violated each securities fraud provision alleged.2
    2
    The Commission also brought claims against Seghers for selling unregistered
    securities under §§ 5(a) and 5(c) of the Securities Act. The jury found that Seghers’s offerings
    4
    No. 06-11146
    Seghers moved for judgment as a matter of law. The district court denied
    Seghers’s motion, but found that the Commission had only presented proof of
    Seghers’s mental culpability from June 6, 2001 through September 30, 2001. 3
    The district court noted, as evidence of Seghers’s mental culpability, the June 6,
    2001 letter Seghers received from Morgan Stanley documenting errors in the
    account statements for Integral Equity, Galileo Fund, and Galileo Fund
    Offshore. The court also noted a June 15, 2001, email from Seghers to Morgan
    Stanley stating that “every day” there were new errors, that “our web pages []
    are incorrect so frequently that they can never be trusted,” and that Morgan
    Stanley accounts are “continually full of multi-million dollar errors.”
    The district court permanently enjoined Seghers from committing
    securities fraud and imposed a civil penalty in the amount of $50,000. The
    district court denied the Commission’s motion to order disgorgement, finding
    that Seghers had lost over $900,000 of his own money along with the investors
    and was therefore not unjustly enriched by any ill-gotten gains.
    III.
    Both Seghers and the Commission appeal.
    Seghers argues on appeal that the district court erred in admitting the
    testimony of the Commission’s summary witness, Nina Yamamoto, and an
    accompanying summary chart. Seghers also contends that the evidence
    establishes that he made full and fair disclosures of material facts to investors
    as they were known to him, that the evidence is insufficient to sustain the
    of interests in the Funds were exempt from the registration requirements of § 5 of the
    Securities Act under Rule 506 of SEC Regulation D. The Commission does not appeal this
    finding.
    3
    The district court’s finding that the evidence did not support liability prior to June 6,
    2001 appears to have no palpable effect on the ultimate judgment entered. In other words, the
    final judgment in this case, which enjoins Seghers from further securities fraud and imposes
    a civil fine, remains the same with or without the district court’s finding that the evidence of
    scienter was not sufficient for the entire period at issue.
    5
    No. 06-11146
    verdict against him and, consequently, that the district court erred in denying
    his motion for judgment as a matter of law.
    The Commission, on cross-appeal, disputes the district court’s ruling
    limiting Seghers’s mental culpability to the period after June 6, 2001. The
    Commission also argues that the district court erred in denying disgorgement.
    We hold that the district court did not err in admitting the Commission’s
    summary evidence. We further hold that the jury’s findings that Seghers
    violated the relevant securities laws are supported by legally sufficient evidence.
    More specifically, the jury’s verdict is supported by ample evidence that Seghers
    knowingly made materially misleading statements and knowingly withheld
    material facts about errors by the Funds’ broker, Morgan Stanley, that affected
    the valuation of the Funds’ assets and materially harmed investors.
    Consequently, we affirm the denial of Seghers’s motion for judgment as a matter
    of law and affirm the judgment of the district court.
    With respect to the cross-appeal, we hold that the district court erred in
    limiting the period for which Seghers was mentally culpable. We also conclude
    that there was sufficient evidence for the jury to find that Seghers acted
    knowingly or recklessly before June 6, 2001. Finally, we vacate and remand for
    further consideration the district court’s denial of disgorgement. Seghers’s
    personal losses in the Integral Funds do not, standing alone, insulate him from
    disgorgement.
    We now turn to the arguments of the parties.
    IV.
    Before addressing the substance of the evidence supporting the verdict, we
    will first consider the court’s evidentiary ruling concerning the summary chart.
    Nina Yamamoto, a Commission employee, prepared a summary chart to compare
    the total values of the Integral Funds reported to investors each month with the
    total values listed in statements of the banks and brokers who held the Funds’
    6
    No. 06-11146
    assets. Yamamoto created the chart by reviewing two boxes of documents
    containing records from Olympia and the various banks and brokers used by
    Integral Funds, the Galileo Fund, and Galileo Fund Offshore. For each month,
    the total value reported to investors was substantially higher than the value
    reported by the banks and brokers.4 Yamamoto’s summary chart was admitted
    into evidence. The court instructed the jury that
    Summary exhibits are not evidence in and of
    themselves. You must determine whether the
    evidence that is summarized in such an exhibit is
    credible or worthy of belief. You may give a
    summary exhibit entire weight, some weight, or
    no weight at all, depending on your assessment of
    the underlying evidence.
    Seghers argues that the summary was prejudicial and made an argument
    that was not otherwise proven, and that Yamamoto was proffered as an expert
    in disguise. He also contends that the underlying evidence Yamamoto used to
    produce the summary is inaccurate, because of errors in account statements
    produced by Morgan Stanley. Seghers contends that the chart is inconsistent
    with the underlying evidence because it alleges that Seghers overstated the
    value of the Integral Funds.
    We review the district court’s evidentiary rulings for abuse of discretion.
    Triple Tee Golf, Inc. v. Nike, Inc., 
    485 F.3d 253
    , 265 (5th Cir. 2007).
    Federal Rule of Evidence 1006 provides that
    The contents of voluminous writings, recordings,
    or photographs which cannot conveniently be
    examined in court may be presented in the form
    of a chart, summary, or calculation. The
    originals, or duplicates, shall be made available
    4
    Yamamoto’s chart displayed five items for each month from June though November
    2000 and February through September 2001: (1) the statement date; (2) the Funds’ asset value
    reported by Olympia to investors; (3) the Funds’ asset value calculated using reports by
    brokers and banks; (4) the difference in the preceding values; and (5) the difference expressed
    as a percentage.
    7
    No. 06-11146
    for examination or copying, or both, by other
    parties at reasonable time and place. The court
    may order that they be produced in court.
    We have held that summary charts in particular are admissible when
    (1) they are based on competent evidence already before
    the jury, (2) the primary evidence used to construct the
    charts is available to the other side for comparison so
    that the correctness of the summary may be tested, and
    (3) the jury is properly instructed concerning the use of
    the charts.
    United States v. Bishop, 
    264 F.3d 535
    , 547 (5th Cir. 2001).
    Although district courts must use caution when admitting summary
    evidence, “[f]ull cross examination and admonitions to the jury minimize the risk
    of prejudice.” Id.; see also United States v. Smyth, 
    556 F.2d 1179
    , 1184-85 (5th
    Cir. 1977) (holding that jury instruction neutralized possible prejudice from
    argumentative summary chart headings).
    Seghers contends that the summary chart asserted that he fraudulently
    overstated the value of the Funds and that the accounting method used by the
    Funds is necessarily fraudulent.         But neither the chart nor Yamamoto’s
    testimony contains such an allegation.          The Commission argued that the
    summary showed the extent to which Seghers had knowingly reported inflated
    values to investors, but Yamamoto’s testimony and chart only summarized the
    contents of account statements.5
    Seghers relies on our decision in United States v. Hart, 
    295 F.3d 451
    (5th
    Cir. 2002).    In Hart, we held that the admission of summary charts was
    reversible error because the government had not presented any independent
    testimony to support assumptions that the witness’s characterization of the
    5
    Seghers does not contend on appeal that Yamamoto’s summary chart is not based on
    evidence before the jury, that the underlying evidence was not voluminous, or that the
    evidence was not available to his counsel.
    8
    No. 06-11146
    evidence was proper.          
    Id. at 458-59.
          Here, the Commission presented
    independent evidence that values reported to the Integral Funds’ investors were
    substantially higher than those that appeared on the statements sent to the
    Integral Funds and the Galileo Fund. Daniel Jackson, a receiver appointed to
    control the Integral Funds, testified that he had examined the values reported
    to the Funds’ investors and those reported to the Funds by banks and brokers
    and found that the values reported to investors were often inflated.6 Moreover,
    Seghers testified that Bizri used an accounting method that would result in
    values that were different from mark-to-market values. And unlike the chart
    offered in Hart, Yamamoto’s chart did not purport to indicate that certain values
    ought to have been reported or that they were “overstated,” but only totaled
    values found in other records.
    Yamamoto’s testimony did not require that she be qualified as an expert
    because the production of the chart required her only to add values listed on
    various statements and divide the totals to calculate a percentage. We have held
    that “when a chart does not contain complicated calculations requiring the need
    of an expert for accuracy no special expertise is required in presenting the
    chart.” United States v. Jennings, 
    724 F.2d 436
    , 443 (5th Cir. 1984). Although
    Yamamoto’s preparation of the chart may have been tedious, it was not so
    complicated as to require special expertise.
    Seghers’s more serious contention is that some of the statements
    Yamamoto used to prepare her summary contained errors. Seghers has not
    6
    Seghers contends in a footnote to his discussion of Yamamoto’s testimony and chart
    that “These points apply equally to the testimony of the Funds’ receiver, Daniel Jackson.”
    However, because Jackson was not a summary witness and because Seghers did not
    adequately brief this argument, we do not address it. “A single conclusory sentence in a
    footnote is insufficient to raise an issue for review.” United States v. Charles, 
    469 F.3d 402
    ,
    408 (5th Cir. 2006).
    9
    No. 06-11146
    shown, however, that the statements used to prepare the chart were
    inadmissible. They were the same statements that were sent to the Integral
    Funds and the Galileo Fund at the time Seghers was communicating the Funds’
    values to Olympia. Seghers testified that he also received monthly summaries
    showing the total value of the Galileo account from the brokers. Seghers was
    permitted to cross-examine Yamamoto concerning the accuracy of the
    statements she used to prepare her summary. Seghers also testified as a
    rebuttal witness concerning the accuracy of that evidence and testimony. In
    addition, the district court gave a cautionary instruction similar to one that we
    have previously approved. See 
    Bishop, 264 F.3d at 547
    . Any prejudice that may
    have arisen from the Commission’s use of the chart was countered by Seghers’s
    cross-examination and rebuttal testimony and by the court’s limiting instruction.
    We have often emphasized, and do so once again, that district courts must
    be very cautious when admitting summary evidence and charts because of their
    potential to carry undue weight with the jury. See, e.g., 
    Hart, 295 F.3d at 455
    .
    But the district court here did not abuse its discretion in admitting Yamamoto’s
    testimony and chart, especially since it allowed full cross-examination and
    rebuttal testimony and gave an appropriate limiting instruction.
    V.
    A.
    We now turn to Seghers’s argument that the evidence was insufficient to
    show fraud. Although several separate arguments are made, he does not focus
    on any specific statutory violation. Instead, he globally contends that the
    evidence was insufficient for the jury to find fraud with respect to any and all
    counts of the verdict. Seghers moved for judgment as a matter of law, a
    challenge to the legal sufficiency of the evidence. We treat Seghers’s claim of
    insufficient evidence as an appeal of the district court’s denial of his motion. We
    review the district court’s ruling on the motion de novo, applying the same
    10
    No. 06-11146
    standard of review as the district court. Flowers v. Southern Reg’l Phys. Serv.
    Inc., 
    247 F.3d 229
    , 236 (5th Cir. 2001). Judgment as a matter of law is proper
    where “there is no legally sufficient evidentiary basis for a reasonable jury to
    have found for [a] party with respect to [an] issue.” 
    Id. (quotation marks
    omitted). Although our review is de novo, we recognize that “our standard of
    review with respect to a jury verdict is especially deferential.” Brown v. Bryan
    County, 
    219 F.3d 450
    , 456 (5th Cir. 2000). As such, judgment as a matter of law
    should not be granted unless the facts and inferences point “so strongly and
    overwhelmingly in the movant’s favor that reasonable jurors could not reach a
    contrary conclusion.” Omnitech Int’l, Inc. v. Clorox Co., 
    11 F.3d 1316
    , 1322 (5th
    Cir. 1994).
    The jury found that Seghers violated § 10(b) of the Exchange Act7 and Rule
    10b-5,8 and § 17(a) of the Securities Act.9 To prove a violation of §10(b) on the
    7
    Section 10, 15 U.S.C. § 78j, provides, in relevant part:
    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--
    ....
    (b) To use or employ, in connection with the purchase or sale of
    any security registered on a national securities exchange or any
    security . . . 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.
    8
    Rule 10b-5, 17 C.F.R. § 240.10b-5, 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,
    (a) To employ any device, scheme, or artifice to defraud,
    (b) To make any untrue statement of a material fact or to omit to
    state a material fact necessary in order to make the statements
    11
    No. 06-11146
    basis of false or misleading statements or misleading omissions, the Commission
    must show (1) material misrepresentations or materially misleading omissions,
    (2) in connection with the purchase or sale of securities, (3) made with scienter.10
    See Aaron v. Sec. & Exch. Comm’n, 
    446 U.S. 680
    , 695, (1980).11 To show a
    violation     of   §   17(a)(1),    the    Commission       must     prove    (1)   material
    misrepresentations or materially misleading omissions, (2) in the offer or sale
    of securities, (3) made with scienter. See 
    id. at 697.
    To show that a defendant
    made, in the light of the circumstances under which they were
    made, not misleading, or
    (c) To 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.
    9
    Section 17(a), 15 U.S.C. § 77q(a), provides:
    It shall be unlawful for any person in the offer or sale of any
    securities . . . by the use of any means or instruments of
    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.
    10
    Seghers does not contest that his statements to Olympia and his and Olympia’s
    statements to investors were made by the use of any means or instruments of transportation
    or communication in interstate commerce or by the use of the mails. See 15 U.S.C. § 77q(a),
    17 C.F.R. § 240.10b, 15 U.S.C. § 78j(b); 15 U.S.C. § 80b-6.
    11
    The scope of liability under Section 10(b) and Rule 10b-5 is the same. See SEC v.
    Zandford, 
    535 U.S. 813
    , 816 n.1 (2002).
    12
    No. 06-11146
    has violated § 17(a)(2) or § 17(a)(3), the Commission need only show that the
    defendant acted with negligence. See 
    id. at 702.
           The jury also found that Seghers violated §§ 206(1) and 206(2) of the
    Investment Advisers Act.12 The language of the anti-fraud provisions of § 206 of
    the Investment Advisers act is drawn from § 17(a)(1) and (3) the Exchange Act,
    and conduct falling within § 17(a)(1) and (3) will fall within the analogous
    provisions of § 206 when committed by an investment adviser against a client
    or prospective client.13 See Steadman v. Sec. & Exch. Comm’n, 
    603 F.2d 1126
    ,
    1134 (5th Cir. 1979). The parties stipulated at trial that Seghers acted as an
    investment adviser. Scienter is required to show a violation of § 206(1). See 
    id. Negligence is
    sufficient to show a violation of § 206(2). 
    Id. The case
    was submitted to the jury in the form of six questions, each
    asking whether the Commission had met its burden of proof by a preponderance
    of the evidence that Seghers had violated a specific statutory provision. As we
    have indicated, Seghers does not direct his appeal at any particular allegation
    or statute, but argues more generally that he did not commit any species of
    fraud, either because he did not make certain statements or because the
    12
    Section 206, 15 U.S.C. § 80b-6, provides, in relevant part:
    It shall be unlawful for any investment adviser, by use of the
    mails or any means or instrumentality of interstate commerce,
    directly or indirectly--
    (1) to employ any device, scheme, or artifice to defraud any client
    or prospective client;
    (2) to engage in any transaction, practice, or course of business
    which operates as a fraud or deceit upon any client or prospective
    client.
    13
    Although we have held that an investment adviser’s fiduciary status may be
    considered in assessing liability under Rule 10b-5, see Laird v. Integrated Resources, Inc., 
    897 F.2d 826
    , 837 (5th Cir. 1990), the Commission does not rely upon any heightened duty, but
    contends that Seghers violated the usual standards for assessing fraud under Rule 10b-5.
    13
    No. 06-11146
    Commission did not prove that he acted with the requisite state of mind.
    Correspondingly, we address his challenge to the sufficiency of the evidence in
    generality, holding that the Commission presented sufficient evidence to support
    its theory that Seghers made misrepresentations and misleading omissions that
    violated § 17(a) of the Securities Act, § 10 of the Exchange Act, Rule 10b-5, and
    § 206 of the Investment Advisers Act.
    B.
    We begin review of the sufficiency of the evidence by considering whether
    the Commission presented sufficient evidence that Seghers made material
    misrepresentations or materially misleading omissions to support allegations
    that Seghers violated § 17(a) of the Securities Act, §10 of the Exchange Act, Rule
    10b-5, and § 206 of the Investment Advisers Act. We have stated that “the
    standard for misrepresentation is whether the information disclosed, understood
    as a whole, would mislead a reasonable potential investor.” Trust Co. of
    Louisiana v. N.N.P. Inc., 
    104 F.3d 1478
    , 1490 (5th Cir. 1997). “[A] statement or
    omitted fact is ‘material’ if there is a substantial likelihood that a reasonable
    investor would consider the information important in making a decision to
    invest.” ABC Arbitrage Plaintiffs Group v. Tchuruk, 
    291 F.3d 336
    , 359 (5th Cir.
    2002) (quotation marks and citation omitted).
    The Commission presented evidence that beginning in June 2000 Seghers
    was responsible for making monthly statements to investors, through the Funds’
    manager Olympia, that were misleading to investors about the value of their
    account and the performance of the Funds. The Commission also presented
    evidence that Seghers made misrepresentations to investors about errors by
    Morgan Stanley that harmed the Funds and made their valuation difficult. The
    Commission contends that, in combination, this evidence is sufficient to support
    the jury’s finding that Seghers violated the securities fraud provisions of the
    statutes charged.
    14
    No. 06-11146
    The Commission presented evidence reflecting that Seghers made
    materially false or misleading statements of the Funds’ values. The initial
    limited partnership agreements for each of the Funds provided that the general
    partner, Integral Investment Management, would use either the cash or accrual
    method of accounting to keep the Fund’s books and that each limited partner’s
    account would be valued according to certain principles. Listed securities would
    be valued based on the last reported sales price, that is, at market value. Bizri’s
    testimony indicated that the Funds’ assets in the Galileo Fund were invested in
    stocks and options that are listed on exchanges. At various times, including the
    summer and fall of 2000, the Galileo Fund was invested in money market
    accounts and government bonds. Based on the Funds’ initial limited partnership
    agreement, the jury could have found that investors would expect their
    investments to be valued at their market value for at least part of the period at
    issue.
    There is significant evidence, however, that the assets in the Galileo Fund
    were not valued at market value. Daniel Jackson, the Funds’ receiver, testified
    that the investors’ monthly statements did not report the market value of the
    Funds’ assets. Bizri testified similarly that he used a valuation method that
    differed from mark-to-market or market value accounting. And, as discussed
    above, the Commission introduced evidence showing that, in each month at
    issue, the investors’ statements reflected values significantly higher than those
    reported by the banks and brokers who held the Funds’ assets. The evidence
    established that Seghers discussed the valuations of the Galileo Fund with Bizri,
    and that Seghers alone sent those values to Olympia, who used them as the
    basis for the investors’ monthly reports. There is therefore evidence from which
    the jury could reasonably find that Seghers’s statements of the Funds’ value
    would be misleading to a reasonable investor.
    15
    No. 06-11146
    The Commission also presented evidence that Seghers failed to disclose
    and misrepresented errors by Morgan Stanley, the broker for the Integral Funds
    and the Galileo Fund. Bizri testified that he informed Seghers in March 2001
    of errors in Morgan Stanley’s statements for the Galileo Fund, including
    incorrect   pricing, unauthorized trades, duplicative trades, and margin
    calculation errors. Bizri testified that, as a result, he “didn’t know what
    positions we had in the account.” Bizri testified that he used broker statements
    to calculate the value of the Galileo Fund and that, because of the errors, he
    could not value the account between March and June of 2001. He testified that,
    on Seghers’s urging, he attempted to value the Galileo Fund by reconstructing
    the individual trades made “by hand.” Seghers testified that, in April 2001, he
    flew to California to meet with Morgan Stanley to discuss the errors.
    Notwithstanding his knowledge of Morgan Stanley’s errors and Bizri’s difficulty
    valuing the Galileo Fund, Seghers continued to communicate valuations of the
    Integral Funds to Olympia for reporting to investors.
    The Commission presented evidence that some of Morgan Stanley’s errors
    triggered margin calls, for which Morgan Stanley mistakenly forced early
    liquidation of some of the Galileo Fund’s assets. Bizri and Jackson testified that
    an improper margin call around April 2001 caused actual losses to the Galileo
    Fund. Jackson testified that the loss was approximately one million dollars.
    Seghers emailed Morgan Stanley on June 15, 2001, stating that “Morgan
    Stanley’s continued inaccuracies with respect to our account positions and
    incorrect order fills continue to materially damage our funds and the respective
    investors,” and that the Morgan Stanley accounts are “continually full of multi-
    million dollar errors.” Seghers did not disclose any of this information to
    investors but continued to report values for the Funds to Olympia, who reported
    to investors.
    16
    No. 06-11146
    The evidence against Seghers is clearly sufficient to support the jury’s
    verdict, notwithstanding his explanations and arguments to the contrary, which
    we discuss below. Seghers made statements of the value of the Funds’ assets
    that were significantly higher than the market values of those assets. The jury
    reasonably could have concluded that those statements were misleading in the
    light of the total mix of information available, including limited partnership
    memoranda indicating that Integral Investment Management would use cash
    or accrual accounting and value investors’ accounts using market values for all
    investments for which market values were available. In addition, Seghers’s
    statements to investors were inconsistent with statements he made to Morgan
    Stanley concerning the effects of Morgan Stanley’s errors and inconsistent with
    Bizri’s testimony that Bizri could not effectively value the Galileo Fund.
    The evidence also supports the finding that Seghers’s misrepresentations
    and omissions were material. The value of an investor’s account and the month-
    to-month performance of the Funds are indisputably relevant to the investor’s
    investment decision. Likewise, information that the Funds’ broker was making
    substantial errors in the Funds’ accounts and the account for the Galileo Fund
    could have affected investors’ decisions to invest or to remain invested in the
    Funds. Seghers’s own statement that Morgan Stanley’s errors “continued to
    materially damage” the Funds’ investors confirms that investors could consider
    knowledge of the errors important in making investment decisions.
    Substantial evidence supports the jury’s verdict that the Commission had
    proven Seghers’s violations of the charged statutes by a preponderance of the
    evidence.   Nevertheless, Seghers makes several arguments against the
    conclusion that he committed any securities fraud. We consider his arguments
    below, but ultimately find that the jury’s verdict was adequately supported by
    the evidence.
    17
    No. 06-11146
    First, Seghers contends that he did not perform any valuations for the
    Galileo Fund, but that Bizri was solely responsible for such calculations. This
    argument is immaterial because, even if Seghers did not perform the
    calculations, there was sufficient evidence for the jury to find that he made
    statements of the Galileo Fund’s values to Olympia, who in turn sent those
    statements to investors after it was hired in June 2000, and that Olympia had
    no other source for those values. Similarly, Seghers’s contention that he did not
    receive detailed account statements from Morgan Stanley showing the individual
    trades conducted on behalf of the Galileo Fund is irrelevant. Seghers testified
    that he received a monthly summary from Morgan Stanley showing the total
    value of the Galileo Fund account. Bizri also testified that he and Seghers
    discussed the Galileo Fund’s value in detail before Seghers reported it to
    Olympia and that Seghers critiqued and suggested changes to the valuations
    before he reported them.
    Second, we turn to Seghers’s primary argument explaining a non-
    fraudulent basis for the difference in the values reported to investors and market
    values. He contends that the value of the Galileo Fund was calculated by Bizri
    according to the “amortization method” of accounting. Seghers contends that
    values calculated on a mark-to-market basis should not be expected to match
    values calculated using this method.14 According to Seghers, the district court’s
    judgment should be reversed because the Commission impermissibly relied upon
    the theory that the use of the amortization method was fraudulent because it
    was in violation of generally accepted accounting principles (“GAAP”). Seghers
    14
    According to the year 2000 audit of Integral Arbitrage, the Galileo Fund was valued
    as follows: “Management of Galileo values the underlying securities such as swaps and other
    derivative contracts monthly at cost plus or minus a monthly allocation of the appreciation or
    depreciation in value that will be achieved upon expiration of the positions at the present
    market pricing.” The audit report, prepared by Deloitte and Touche, L.L.P., stated that this
    method of accounting is not in accordance with GAAP and that “[a]ccounting principles
    generally accepted in the United States of America require that such underlying securities be
    accounted for at fair value.”
    18
    No. 06-11146
    also contends that the Commission was required to show a violation of GAAP by
    expert testimony. It is certainly true that we have held that a violation of
    GAAP, without more, does not establish securities fraud. See Lovelace v.
    Software Spectrum, 
    78 F.3d 1015
    , 1020 (5th Cir. 1996); Fine v. Amer. Solar King,
    
    919 F.2d 290
    , 297 (5th Cir. 1990).              “[T]he mere publication of inaccurate
    accounting figures, or a failure to follow GAAP, without more, does not establish
    scienter. The party must know that it is publishing materially false information,
    or the party must be severely reckless in publishing such information.” 
    Id. Other courts
    have held that securities fraud may be proved, even where
    improper accounting is alleged as the basis for misrepresentation, without
    showing violations of GAAP. See United States v. Rigas, 
    490 F.3d 208
    , 221 (2d
    Cir. 2007); United States v. Ebbers, 
    458 F.3d 110
    , 125-26 (2d Cir. 2006).
    In short, GAAP violations are neither necessary nor sufficient to prove
    securities fraud. It is possible to violate GAAP, yet not commit fraud, and it is
    possible to commit fraud without violating GAAP. As discussed above, the
    necessary elements of fraud in this case are materially misleading statements
    or omissions made with scienter. For the relevant periods in 2000 and 2001, the
    Commission presented evidence from which a jury could reasonably infer that
    Seghers knew he was causing Olympia to report to investors account values in
    excess of the market values reported by the Integral and Galileo Funds’ broker.
    The Commission’s proof of Seghers’s misrepresentations and omissions does not
    depend on compliance with GAAP, but instead depends on evidence that
    Seghers’s statements and omissions were false or misleading to investors.
    Furthermore, because a violation of GAAP was not necessary to the
    Commission’s case, a lack of expert testimony regarding GAAP does not require
    reversal here.15
    15
    The Nebraska district court found in In re Guenthner, that expert testimony is
    required to prove a violation of GAAP, just as it is generally necessary to establish the relevant
    19
    No. 06-11146
    Third, Seghers contends that Bizri’s use of the amortization method to
    value the Galileo Fund was “fully disclosed to investors in the Funds’
    prospectuses and the Deloitte & Touche audits.”16 The audit reports for the
    fiscal year 2000 provided by Deloitte & Touche, L.L.P., do disclose that the
    Integral Funds invested in an entity that values its assets under an amortization
    method and not according to fair value. However, the audit report is dated May
    11, 2001. The report could not therefore provide notice of any use of the so-called
    amortization method of accounting prior to the time the report was distributed
    to investors.
    Seghers points to amended limited partnership agreements that provide
    that for “any structured equity without a quoted market value, such as a swap
    or forward contract or limited partnership investment or for any security that
    is not listed or traded on an exchange, the value of these securities will be
    determined monthly by the General Partner.” The agreement then details an
    accounting method resembling the so-called amortization method for “Total
    Portfolio Swaps which are Bullet Swaps and only receive their appreciation or
    depreciation in value at the end of their term.” This evidence does not show that
    Seghers’s statements were not misleading. The Funds’ receiver, Daniel Jackson,
    testified that there was no evidence that the Funds’ investors agreed to modified
    standard of care applicable to a professional. 
    395 F. Supp. 2d 835
    , 846 (D. Neb. 2005). Some
    courts have disagreed, holding that expert testimony is helpful to show GAAP violations, but
    that the government need not always present expert testimony regarding GAAP. See United
    States v. Rigas, 
    490 F.3d 209
    , 221 (2d Cir. 2007); United States v. Goyal, 
    2008 WL 755010
    , *3
    (N.D. Cal. March 21, 2008). We do not address this issue.
    16
    Seghers also contends that the valuation method was approved by investors in limited
    partnership agreements the investors executed, citing six exhibits submitted in a motion to
    supplement and correct the record Seghers filed after oral argument was heard in this case.
    Seghers, however, misidentified the exhibits with which he sought to supplement the record.
    Despite the confusion, we discovered in our own review of the record that the exhibits were in
    fact admitted at trial. Given that the exhibits were a part of the trial record, we dismiss
    Seghers’s motion to supplement as moot. Nevertheless, the agreements did not provide
    adequate notice to investors that the amortization method would be used to value the Funds’
    assets.
    20
    No. 06-11146
    partnership agreements allowing for the use of an amortization accounting
    method. In addition, the record does not make clear whether the Funds’
    investments in the Galileo Fund fall under the category for which the limited
    partnership agreements provide for an alternative accounting method. There
    is evidence that the Galileo Fund was, at various times, invested in conventional
    assets such as government bonds, that had listed market values. Even during
    those periods, there was substantial difference in the market value and the
    value reported to investors. Therefore, even taking into account the limited
    partnership agreement language to which Seghers points, the jury could have
    found it misleading to provide investors with monthly statements listing only
    account values calculated on a non-market basis, without clear disclosures that
    they were calculated on an alternative basis.
    Fourth, Seghers contends that the Commission’s evidence that he reported
    inflated values to Olympia is flawed because it relied upon Morgan Stanley’s
    monthly account statements, which the parties stipulated contained numerous
    errors from February 2001 onward. Seghers testified at trial that there were
    other errors in statements during the period from June through November 2000,
    but did not testify about their frequency or magnitude, mentioning specifically
    only two errors in August 2000. Seghers contends on appeal that the “Morgan
    Stanley Data has been hopelessly confused and misleading since mid-2001.” But
    for at least an earlier period in June through November 2000, the Commission
    presented evidence of the monthly values of the assets of the Integral Funds
    that, the jury could find, approximates their mark-to-market values.
    Fifth, with regard to the errors by Morgan Stanley, Seghers contends that
    he made adequate disclosure to investors in a June 20, 2001 letter stating, “we
    have made a change from Morgan Stanley to Spear, Leeds & Kellogg, L.P., a
    division of Goldman Sachs. As we have switched to Spear, Leeds, & Kellogg,
    errors from Morgan Stanley are being resolved and the monthly performance
    21
    No. 06-11146
    figures and statements should be available in a more timely manner.” A July 31,
    2001 investor update letter stated that the Integral Funds retained Spear, Leeds
    & Kellogg “due to their specialization in derivatives and market leading risk
    management systems” and that “[w]e are also still in the process of resolving
    outstanding issues with Morgan.” Seghers’s references to unspecified “errors”
    and “issues” do not preclude a finding that the statements were misleading and
    that Seghers omitted information necessary to make his relatively benign
    explanation for switching brokers not misleading. Seghers did not disclose to
    investors that the Integral Funds’ previous broker, Morgan Stanley, had been
    making serious errors since February of 2001. Seghers threatened to sue
    Morgan Stanley, making a settlement demand of $35 million on August 1, 2001.
    Yet, he continued providing valuations of the Funds’ assets to Olympia without
    informing investors of these developments or of the errors relating to the Funds’
    accounts.
    After considering Seghers’s various arguments, we certainly cannot say
    that a reasonable jury could only exonerate Seghers of the securities fraud
    alleged. There was evidence to support findings that Seghers made statements
    that would mislead a reasonable investor and that he made omissions that
    would have the effect of misleading investors. The jury reasonably could have
    rejected Seghers’s testimony and found that reasonable investors would be
    misled by Seghers’s statements concerning the value of the Funds and his failure
    adequately to disclose Morgan Stanley’s errors.      There was evidence that
    Seghers not only reported values based on an unfamiliar accounting method, but
    that he did so knowing that the errors made by the Funds’ broker made the
    accounting method less reliable and materially damaged the value of the Funds.
    Viewing this evidence in combination and in the light most favorable to the
    verdict, there is sufficient evidence for the jury reasonably to have found that
    Seghers made material misrepresentations and materially misleading omissions.
    22
    No. 06-11146
    C.
    The next question is that of scienter and whether the evidence supports
    the jury’s finding that Seghers acted with the mental state required for the
    securities fraud violations at issue.17 Scienter is a mental state that embraces
    an intent to deceive, manipulate or defraud, and includes severe recklessness.
    See Nathenson v. Zonagan Inc., 
    267 F.3d 400
    , 408 (5th Cir. 2001). Severe
    recklessness is
    limited to those highly unreasonable omissions or
    misrepresentations that involve not merely
    simple or even inexcusable negligence, but an
    extreme departure from the standards of
    ordinary care, and that present a danger of
    misleading buyers or sellers which is either
    known to the defendant or is so obvious that the
    defendant must have been aware of it.
    
    Fine, 919 F.2d at 296-97
    . Scienter may be found if a reasonable jury can
    conclude that the defendant knew his statements were false when made. See 
    id. at 297.
           There was ample evidence that Seghers acted with the knowledge that he
    was misleading investors. Despite his protestations to the contrary, Seghers and
    Bizri’s testimony provided evidence that Seghers knew the market values of the
    Funds’ assets and chose to report higher values. Indeed, one of the accounting
    firms Seghers approached in August 2000 warned him that an unusual
    accounting technique would be misleading to investors. Seghers was also given
    the prescient warning that attempting to “invent” a method of accounting not
    accepted in the accounting world would mislead investors and expose Seghers
    to potential litigation. Another accounting firm advised Seghers that, if he used
    17
    The parties stipulated that limited partnership interests in the Integral Funds are
    securities. Seghers does not contest on appeal that his statements to investors and monthly
    account statements sent to investors were in and in connection with the offer and sale of these
    securities.
    23
    No. 06-11146
    an “amortization” method of accounting, he would need to have all financial
    statement users explicitly agree to the method of accounting. As discussed
    above, the evidence does not support a finding that all of the Funds’ investors
    agreed to the method of accounting that was actually used. And, tellingly,
    Olympia and Seghers ultimately decided to include a disclosure in investors’
    statements for September of 2001, explaining that the Galileo Fund used non-
    market value accounting, and disclaiming Olympia’s responsibility for valuing
    those assets. This disclosure was not included in the many preceding months.
    Based on this and other evidence, the jury reasonably could have found that
    Seghers knowingly and intentionally misled investors.
    We have already made reference to the evidence that Seghers was aware
    of the presence and extent of Morgan Stanley’s errors. Bizri testified that he told
    Seghers of the errors in March of 2001. Bizri testified that, when he informed
    Seghers that he could not value the Galileo Fund, Seghers threatened him by
    referencing their contractual agreement and Bizri’s immigration status.
    Jackson, the receiver for the Funds, testified about an email from Seghers to
    Bizri confirming Seghers’s knowledge of errors, including the improper April
    2001 margin call that caused losses to the Galileo Fund that were not reported
    to investors. A reasonable jury could conclude that Seghers knew about the
    effects that Morgan Stanley’s errors were having on the assets of the Integral
    Funds and on the ability to produce accurate valuations, and that he knowingly
    or recklessly misled investors by omitting this information when communicating
    valuations for the Funds and when disclosing a change in the Funds’ broker.
    The jury also could have reasonably found that Seghers had a motive to
    overstate the value of the Integral Funds and to conceal problems with the
    Funds. We have held that motive, although not alone sufficient, is relevant to
    showing scienter. See 
    Nathenson, 267 F.3d at 410-11
    . See also R2 Investments
    LDC v. Phillips, 
    401 F.3d 638
    , 644-45 (5th Cir. 2005) (holding that
    24
    No. 06-11146
    circumstantial evidence of scienter must be greater where a clear motive for
    alleged misstatements or omissions is not alleged).        Integral Investment
    Management received fees and distributions that varied directly with the profits
    attributed to the investors’ accounts.      Seghers, as a principal of Integral
    Investment Management, stood to gain financially in direct proportion to
    reporting high valuations of the Funds and from attracting new investments
    from existing or prospective clients and increasing the size of the Funds.
    We therefore hold that the Commission presented sufficient evidence for
    a reasonable jury to find that Seghers acted with scienter in making material
    misrepresentations and omissions to investors.
    D.
    In summary, the Commission presented sufficient evidence that Seghers
    made material misrepresentations and omissions and that he did so knowingly
    or recklessly. Viewing the evidence in the light most favorable to the verdict,
    Seghers has failed to demonstrate that no reasonable jury could find that he
    violated securities laws. We therefore AFFIRM the district court’s judgment
    against Seghers for violations of § 17(a) of the Securities Act, § 10 of the
    Exchange Act, Rule 10b-5, and § 206 of the Investment Advisers Act, and its
    denial of his motion for judgment as a matter of law.
    VI.
    We now turn to the Commission’s argument on cross-appeal that the
    district court erred, in its ruling on Seghers’s motion for judgment as a matter
    of law, when it concluded that the evidence was insufficient for the jury to find
    Seghers mentally culpable before June 6, 2001. As we have earlier noted, this
    conclusion had no ultimate effect on the verdict and the judgment, which only
    adjudged Seghers generally liable for committing securities fraud, under the
    specifically named statutes, and additionally imposed a civil penalty of $50,000
    and an injunction against further such conduct. The Commission, however,
    25
    No. 06-11146
    contends that, although the district court did not overrule any part of the jury
    verdict and did not grant judgment as a matter of law in favor of Seghers as to
    any violation, it effectively granted partial judgment as a matter of law on each
    jury finding of securities fraud by concluding that Seghers was not mentally
    culpable for a segment of the time during which fraud was alleged to have been
    perpetrated. As noted above, judgment as a matter of law should not be granted
    unless the facts and inferences point “so strongly and overwhelmingly in the
    movant's favor that reasonable jurors could not reach a contrary conclusion.”
    
    Omnitech, 11 F.3d at 1322
    .
    We first note that it is not entirely clear that the Commission is aggrieved
    by the district court’s legal conclusion that there was insufficient evidence to find
    fraud before June 6, 2001. The jury was not asked to pin down its findings to a
    particular date. The jury was only asked to find whether the Commission had
    met its burden of proof for each statutory provision of which a violation was
    alleged. The stipulated facts, however, provided that the “relevant time periods
    [the jury] should consider are June 1, 2000 through November 30, 2000; and
    March 1, 2001 through September 30, 2001.” Accordingly, the jury was not
    required to find that Seghers committed fraud for every segment of the entire
    period. The district court’s memorandum opinion, although it found the evidence
    lacking for a portion of the relevant time period, did not necessarily conflict with
    the jury’s general finding of securities fraud.
    Nevertheless, the Commission argues that it is aggrieved in the sense that
    the district court’s conclusion can affect the amount of disgorgement that
    Seghers may be required to pay. Thus, we do hold that, given the deferential
    standard by which we review a jury verdict, the district court’s conclusion that
    the evidence was not legally sufficient to support the jury’s finding for any period
    before June 6, 2001 is erroneous. The district court apparently found that
    Seghers did not act with negligence or scienter before June 6, 2001 because that
    26
    No. 06-11146
    was the date of the letter from Morgan Stanley documenting the presence of
    errors in Morgan Stanley’s statements since February 2001. However, as
    discussed above, Bizri testified that he told Seghers of the errors before June 6.
    Seghers also testified that he traveled to California in April 2001 to meet with
    representatives from Morgan Stanley to discuss errors in the Integral and
    Galileo Fund accounts. Furthermore, apart from the errors in Morgan Stanley’s
    statements, there was significant evidence that beginning in June 2000 Seghers
    made monthly statements to investors, through the Funds’ manager Olympia,
    that were misleading to investors about the value of their account and the
    performance of the Funds. Because there was sufficient evidence that Seghers
    was mentally culpable for events during this period of time, the jury reasonably
    could have found that Seghers knew of significant Morgan Stanley errors before
    receiving the June 6 letter documenting them. Therefore, we VACATE that part
    of the district court’s judgment limiting Seghers’s mental culpability to the
    period after June 6, 2001. The Commission presented sufficient evidence that
    Seghers acted with scienter or negligence to defraud investors before that date.
    VII.
    We next consider the Commission’s further argument on cross-appeal that
    the district court erred in denying disgorgement on the grounds that Seghers
    lost his own money in the Integral Funds.
    The Commission sought disgorgement in the amount of $952,896, plus
    prejudgment interest. In denying disgorgement, the district court noted that
    “[t]he primary purpose of disgorgement is to deprive securities law violators, like
    Seghers, of their ill-gotten gains.” The court reasoned that “[b]ecause Seghers
    lost over $900,000 of his own money with the investors, he was not unjustly
    enriched by any ill-gotten gains. The Court finds that the Permanent Injunction
    will sufficiently deter Seghers from committing further securities fraud, and the
    27
    No. 06-11146
    imposition of a Civil Penalty will sufficiently punish him for securities violations
    proved at trial.”
    The district court has broad discretion whether to order disgorgement and
    to determine the amount of the award. See Sec. and Exch. Comm’n v. AMX, Int’l,
    Inc., 
    7 F.3d 71
    , 73 (5th Cir. 1993). However, the district court abuses its
    discretion when it bases its decision on an error of law. E.g., Hodges v. Mack
    Trucks, Inc., 
    474 F.3d 188
    , 199 (5th Cir. 2006). We have stated that the purpose
    of disgorgement is to deprive the wrongdoer of his ill-gotten gains and deter
    future violations of the law. 
    AMX, 7 F.3d at 76
    n.8. Other courts have rejected
    defendants’ arguments that disgorgement may not be ordered where the
    defendant has lost funds in his fraudulent scheme. See Sec. & Exch. Comm’n v.
    JT Wallenbrock & Assoc., 
    440 F.3d 1109
    , 1116 (9th Cir. 2006) (affirming order
    of disgorgement notwithstanding that the defendant lost money in his Ponzi
    scheme); Sec. & Exch. Comm’n v. First Pacific Bancorp, 
    142 F.3d 1186
    , 1192 n.6
    ( 9th Cir. 1998) (“[n]or does the fact that [the defendant]’s scheme ultimately
    failed and he lost a $1,000,000 of his own funds release him from his obligations
    toward the defrauded investors”); Sec. & Exch. Comm’n v. Commonwealth Chem.
    Sec. Inc., 
    574 F.2d 90
    , 102 (2d Cir. 1974) (rejecting the defendants’ argument
    that losses in manipulated stock wiped out profits).
    We have held that “[t]he court’s power to order disgorgement extends only
    to the amount with interest by which the defendant profited from his
    wrongdoing.” Sec. & Exch. Comm’n v. Blatt, 
    583 F.2d 1325
    , 1335 (5th Cir. 1978).
    If the Commission shows a causal relationship between the defendant’s
    wrongdoing and the amount by which he was unjustly enriched, that amount of
    money may be disgorged even if the defendant has otherwise disposed of,
    reinvested, or spent the particular assets that he wrongfully obtained. See Sec.
    & Exch. Comm’n v. Banner Fund Int’l, 
    211 F.3d 602
    , 617 (D.C. Cir. 2000). A
    defendant is not immune from disgorgement merely because he has spent or lost
    28
    No. 06-11146
    the proceeds of his fraudulent scheme. See 
    id. Any profits
    that Seghers
    obtained by wrongdoing are ill-gotten gains whether he retained them or lost
    them in the Integral Funds or another investment.
    We hold that the district court erred in finding that Seghers was not
    unjustly enriched merely because he lost money in the Integral Funds. Seghers
    contends that he did not profit from any fraudulent activity, and we make no
    conclusion as to whether he actually did profit from fraud. But if the district
    court finds that Seghers did, in fact, profit from the securities fraud for which he
    is liable, any such profits may be subject to disgorgement. Seghers’s profits,
    fees, and other compensation derived from wrongdoing, if any, are not
    diminished by how he chose to continue to invest these ill-gotten profits.
    Because the district court based its decision not to order disgorgement on
    the erroneous conclusion that Seghers was not unjustly enriched because of his
    losses in the Integral Funds, we VACATE the district court’s judgment denying
    disgorgement and REMAND for reconsideration by the district court. We do not
    hold that an order of disgorgement necessarily is required in this case, but only
    that the matter must be reconsidered by the district court. We repeat that the
    district court enjoys broad discretion to order and determine the amount of
    disgorgement.
    VIII.
    For the foregoing reasons, the judgment against Seghers for violations of
    § 10(b) of the Exchange Act and Rule 10b-5, § 17(a) of the Securities Act, and §§
    206(1) and 206(2) of the Investment Advisers Act is AFFIRMED. The district
    court’s ruling on Seghers’s motion for judgment as a matter of law is AFFIRMED
    in part and VACATED in part. On remand, the district court will disregard its
    conclusion that Seghers was not liable before June 6, 2001. The district court’s
    denial of disgorgement is VACATED. The case is REMANDED for further
    proceedings not inconsistent with this opinion.
    29
    No. 06-11146
    AFFIRMED IN PART, VACATED IN PART, and REMANDED.
    30
    

Document Info

Docket Number: 06-11146

Filed Date: 1/16/2009

Precedential Status: Non-Precedential

Modified Date: 4/17/2021

Authorities (25)

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United States v. Bishop , 264 F.3d 535 ( 2001 )

Securities and Exchange Commission v. Amx, International, ... , 7 F.3d 71 ( 1993 )

Aaron v. Securities & Exchange Commission , 100 S. Ct. 1945 ( 1980 )

United States v. Melvin R. Jennings , 724 F.2d 436 ( 1984 )

Omnitech International, Inc. v. Clorox Co. , 11 F.3d 1316 ( 1994 )

In Re: Alcatel , 291 F.3d 336 ( 2002 )

Corrected Opinion United States of America v. Lewis Miller ... , 556 F.2d 1179 ( 1977 )

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

howard-fine-oakhill-south-corporation-eugene-vanderford-dr-charles , 919 F.2d 290 ( 1990 )

United States v. Rigas , 490 F.3d 208 ( 2007 )

rebecca-lovelace-individually-and-on-behalf-of-all-those-similarly , 78 F.3d 1015 ( 1996 )

United States v. Hart , 295 F.3d 451 ( 2002 )

Nathenson v. Zonagen Inc. , 267 F.3d 400 ( 2001 )

Charles W. STEADMAN, Petitioner, v. SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE ... , 603 F.2d 1126 ( 1979 )

Securities & Exchange Commission v. Guenthner , 395 F. Supp. 2d 835 ( 2005 )

Triple Tee Golf, Inc. v. Nike, Inc. , 485 F.3d 253 ( 2007 )

Trust Company of LA v. N N P Incorporated , 104 F.3d 1478 ( 1997 )

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