The company agreed to a $38.8M settlement with the SEC over allegations it defrauded investors and lied about business prospects both before and after its SPAC merger with a media company.
The deal with the SEC comes on the heels of the settlement of private class action lawsuits, which targeted the company over fraud allegations. The private suits, as well as the SEC suit, revealed that, despite the company’s representations that it was rapidly growing with millions of monthly paying subscribers and over $124M in annual revenue, it in fact had limited revenue and no paying users.
The U.S. District Court approved the settlement agreement between the company and SEC, which required disgorgement as well as reimbursement to its investors. The company publicly admitted the above facts as true but stated that former members of the management team were behind the scheme to falsify its books and records.
The company set aside $125 million in preparation to settle allegations with the SEC and also plans to seek reimbursement from the former CEO “for costs and damages arising from the actions that are the subject of government and regulatory investigations.”
The former CEO, who is now also facing criminal charges for misleading investors, stepped down shortly after a short-seller released a report labeling the company a fraud. The report also claimed that while the company purported to design key components in-house, it appeared to simply be licensing components from third parties. The company is already facing securities litigation alleging it misled investors after announcing it would go public through a multi-billion dollar merger with a special purpose acquisition company (“SPAC”).
According to the report, the SEC filed 53 actions against public companies and subsidiaries, which is the lowest number since 2014, and down 15% from last year. The decrease in actions is likely due to the continuation of the COVID-19 pandemic, as well as the installation of a new SEC Chair. Like last year, the most common allegation type stemmed from Issuer Reporting and Disclosures, which accounted for more than half of all cases (commonly brought as administrative proceedings). 58% of actions brought by the SEC resulted in cooperation by public company defendants, with a median settlement amount of $1 million. Other noteworthy trends presented in the report are set forth below.
|
Average |
Reporting and Disclosure Actions |
Other Actions |
Total |
New Actions |
67 |
27 |
26 |
53 |
Actions Filed as Administratice Proceedings |
79% | 81% | 92% |
87% |
Defendants with Settlements Noting Cooperation |
58% | 46% | 71% |
58% |
Defendants with Monetary Settlements Imposed |
91% | 89% | 100% |
94% |
Average Monetary Settlements Imposed by SEC |
$27 Million | $29 Million | $47 Million |
$38 Million |
Median Monetary Settlements Imposed by SEC |
$4 Million | $1 Million | $1 Million |
$1 Million |
Disgorgement and Prejudgment Interest Imposed by the SEC in Civil Actions |
$326 Million | $113 Million | $0 |
$113 Million |
Director/Officer | Role | Company |
Lina Maria Garcia | President, Chief Compliance Officer | UCB Financial Advisers, Inc. |
Amount | Director/Officer | Role | Company |
$5,312,071.00 | Guy S. Griffithe | President | Renewable Technologies Solution, Inc. |
$1,816,817.00 | Kevin Kuhnash | Former CEO | Lucent Polymers, Inc. |
$831,670.00 | Jason Jimerson | Former COO | Lucent Polymers, Inc. |
$240,934.00 | William D. Wright | Corporate Controller | CEB Inc. |
$195,046.00 | Dale Redman | Former CEO | ProPetro Holding Corp. |
$100,000.00 | John A. Paulsen | Former Managing Director | New York State Common Retirement Fund |
Source: U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission