770 F.Supp. 678
SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE
COMMISSION, Plaintiff,
v.
INTERNATIONAL LOAN NETWORK,
INC., Melvin J. Ford, and Odell Mundey,
Defendants.
Civ. No. 91-1102.
United States District Court,
District of Columbia.
July 18, 1991.
MEMORANDUM OPINION
THOMAS F. HOGAN, District Judge.
On May 15, 1991, the plaintiff Securities
and Exchange Commission (SEC) applied
to this Court for an ex parte temporary
restraining order enjoining defendants
from committing federal securities
violations and freezing defendants'
assets, among other things. The Court
granted the requested temporary relief
upon the SEC's showing that there was a
justifiable basis for believing that
defendants had sold securities in violation
of the registration provisions of the
Securities Act of 1933, 15 U.S.C. 77a et
seq., (the 1933 Act), and of the antifraud
provisions of the 1933 Act and the
Securities Exchange Act of 1934, 15
U.S.C. 78a et seq., (the 1934 Act).
On May 30, 1991, defendants
International Loan Network, Inc., and
Melvin Ford sought and received a
modification of the temporary restraining
order and asset freeze to permit
defendants to retain counsel on their
behalf and to enable them to meet
necessary business and living expenses,
among other things. Defendant Odell
Mundey subsequently sought and was
granted minor modifications of this Order.
After an expedited discovery period, the
SEC filed a Motion for a Preliminary
Injunction, Order Freezing Assets,
Appointment of a Receiver and Other
Ancillary Relief on June 21, 1991. After
the Oppositions and Reply were filed, this
Court conducted a three-day evidentiary
hearing from July 1, 1991 to July 3, 1991.
Counsel for all parties delivered lengthy
closing arguments on July 8, 1991.
FINDINGS OF FACT
The defendants in this case are the
International Loan Network, Inc. (ILN); its
president and founder, Melvin J. Ford;
and its vice president, Odell Mundey. The
substance of the case is the SEC's
allegation that the ILN and its various
affiliates and subsidiaries are nothing
more than a "Ponzi" [FN1] or pyramid
scheme which produces no significant
products or services but makes its money
almost solely through the sale of new
memberships in the organization. The
ILN, Ford, and Mundey argue that the ILN
*681 provides a variety of valuable
benefits and services to its members, that
none of its programs involves the offer or
sale of "securities" within the meaning of
the 1933 and 1934 Acts, and that the ILN
has in good faith attempted to comply with
federal and state securities laws in the
operation of its programs.
FN1. The term "Ponzi" scheme
derives from Charles Ponzi, a
notorious swindler who, during
eight months in the early 1900s,
took in over $9 million by selling his
own notes for $100 apiece with the
promise to repay investors $150
dollars within 90 days. See
Cunningham v. Brown, 265 U.S. 1,
44 S.Ct. 424, 68 L.Ed. 873 (1923).
After three days of live testimony and one
full day of argument, there is,
unfortunately, much that remains unclear
about the operation of ILN and its
programs. What appears in ILN
documents has been directly contradicted
by witness testimony and by transcripts of
ILN meetings and video presentations.
Programs as described in testimony and
in written material are frequently
incomprehensible. Questions propounded
by the Court to both witnesses and
counsel have been left unanswered. In
short, because of significant gaps in the
evidence presented, the Court's own
findings are necessarily limited. When in
doubt, however, the Court has relied on
the words of the ILN's founder and
president, Melvin Ford, whose oral
presentations have been preserved on
video and audio tapes introduced as
evidence in this case.
According to Ford, "ILN is a financial
distribution network whose members
believe that through the control of money
and through the control of real estate you
can accumulate wealth and become
financially independent." Plaintiff's Exhibit
101 at 12 (Transcript of Melvin Ford's
presentation at the Los Angeles,
California "President's Night" on April 18,
1991) (hereinafter President's Night
Transcript). This concept boils down to
one essential phrase, which is repeatedly
referred to by Ford and other ILN
representatives in the numerous exhibits
filed in this case: "The movement of
money creates wealth." President's Night
Transcript at 37.
To become a member of the ILN and gain
the opportunity to achieve the
organization's stated goal of financial
independence, a person must, at a
minimum, pay a $125 "basic" membership
fee. This fee, which is retained in its
entirety by the organization, entitles a
basic member to a variety of "benefits and
services" including discount shopping,
discount travel and car rental, and other
similar discounts. These benefits are
provided by Consumer Benefit Services,
Inc., by virtue of a contract with the ILN.
Beyond the basic membership, a person
may become a "club member" in ILN's
$100, $500, or $1,000 clubs. Each of
these clubs requires an investment of
these respective additional amounts, plus
the $125 basic membership fee. Club
memberships entitle members to the
benefits provided to basic members plus
newsletters and various seminars on
money management and other topics. In
addition, as a member of the $500 or
$1,000 club, a person becomes eligible to
participate in the ILN's Property Rights
Acquisition program (PRA), which offers
real estate training courses and
videotapes, among other things.
The PRA program, along with the Capital
Fund Bonus System and the Maximum
Consideration program, are the primary
programs alleged by the SEC to violate
the federal securities laws and will be
discussed in detail below. All are
marketed through a network of ILN
marketing representatives and
independent representatives. These
representatives invite potential members
to local ILN meetings and "President's
Nights," where the sales pitches for the
organization are made. Melvin Ford is the
central speaker at the President's Nights,
which are held in hotels throughout the
country and draw large crowds of
members and potential members. At
these meetings, Ford has been known to
enter with his family down a central aisle
to the soundtrack from the movie
"Flashdance." He then delivers a lengthy
presentation that is part motivational and
part financial evangelism. He rouses the
crowd with chants such as "I will not
accept defeat" and "I'm the captain of my
ship." He is both engaging and
persuasive. The highlight of his
presentation is his "reward" to the
audience members by showing them "how
you make money in ILN" through the three
programs that are the focus of this
lawsuit. President's Night Transcript at
31.
*682 I. ILN PROGRAMS
A. The Capital Fund Bonus System
According to Melvin Ford, the Capital
Fund Bonus System (the Capital Fund) "is
the most powerful financial system since
banking." President's Night Transcript at
31. This is the system by which ILN
members earn income by recruiting others
to join the ILN. Although the ILN's written
material makes it clear that a person need
not be a member of the ILN in order to
solicit new members, it is equally clear
that the Capital Fund is marketed so that
a person will first join the organization
himself and then recruit others to join.
The process is repeatedly explained at
ILN meetings and President's Nights with
the chant: "You come in, then you bring
in your wife and your kids." President's
Night Transcript, passim.
To earn money through the recruitment of
others, a person must apply to become an
"Independent Representative" of the ILN
and must sign an "Independent
Representative Agreement." This
agreement specifies that as an
Independent Representative, the person
must abide by all federal, state, county,
and local laws and regulations and must
not engage in "deceptive, misleading, or
unethical practices." ILN's Exhibit 2 at 10
("Income Opportunity" brochure describing
ILN's Capital Fund Bonus System)
(hereinafter Income Opportunity
brochure). For each new member
recruited, an Independent Representative
receives 50 percent of the new member's
club membership fee. [FN2] Each new
member represents a "Capital Fund" for
the Independent Representative, from
which additional income may derive.
Through these Capital Funds, an
Independent Representative receives
descending percentages of the club
membership fees paid by new members
recruited "downline" through the fifth level
of recruitment. ILN explains this in its
materials by referring to "Daddy Tom"
recruiting "Sister Sue," "Cousin Bob,"
"Aunt Mary," and "Uncle Joe." Each
person recruited by Daddy Tom becomes
a Capital Fund for Daddy Tom. He then
gets 50 percent of the club membership
fees paid by these new recruits.
Additionally, Daddy Tom receives 15
percent of the club fees paid by anyone
recruited by the people he recruited. He
also receives 15 percent of the third level
of recruits, and 10 percent of the fourth
and fifth levels of recruits. See Income
Opportunity brochure at 5-6.
FN2. Independent Representatives
receive a share of the $100, $500,
and $1,000 club membership fees
paid by those they recruit, but not
of the $125 administrative fee that
is also paid by all new members
but retained by the ILN.
The opportunity to earn income through
the ILN Capital Fund program is
substantial. At the evidentiary hearing
conducted in this case, Lee Steverson,
the director of membership for the ILN,
testified that he had earned over $68,000
since 1989 through the Capital Fund. Mr.
Steverson had only directly sponsored 12
people into the ILN. The Court also heard
testimony that H.L. Barner, an associate
marketing representative for the ILN, had
250 people in his "downline" and had
earned substantial income by recruiting
new ILN members.
The success of those like Barner and
Steverson was highlighted by Melvin Ford
at President's Nights throughout the
country. At an April 1991 President's
Night in Los Angeles, California, Ford told
the audience that a member's downline
could grow to over 3,000 Capital Funds
and that there were people in California
making over $30,000 in one month
through the Capital Fund. "It's too simple,
isn't it," he said, "You come in, then you
bring in your wife and your kids."
President's Night Transcript at 40. [FN3]
FN3. Ford also stressed the
income many ILN members had
received through the Capital Fund
in a videotape called "Common
Ground" that was shown to many
potential ILN members at meetings
around the country. The tape
included testimonials of several
people who had earned substantial
income through the Capital Fund.
See Plaintiff's Exhibit 24 (Video
Tape "Common Ground" and
Transcript) (hereinafter Common
Ground Transcript). H.L. Barner,
among others, gave testimony that
he had received a Capital Fund
check that matched his income as
a captain in the U.S. Army.
B. The Property Rights Acquisition
Program (PRA)
This program has been through several
incarnations, almost all of which offered
*683 the opportunity for those investing
$1,000 or more to receive huge cash
returns on their investments or the right to
acquire property worth many times the
amount of their investments. To
participate in the current PRA program as
well as all of its predecessor programs, a
person must first have purchased a $500
or $1000 club membership.
1. The Property Acquisition Certificate
(PAC) Program
Instituted in the fall of 1989, this was the
first in the series of programs leading up
to the current PRA program. This
program was marketed as an opportunity
for every ILN member to achieve a
"guaranteed lifetime income." See
Plaintiff's Exhibit 24 at 29 (Video Tape
"Common Ground" and Transcript)
(hereinafter Common Ground Transcript).
[FN4] Under the PAC program, investors
of $10,000 were told they would receive
either $100,000 of equity in real estate
within 90 days or $100,000 in income
payable in monthly installments of
approximately $1,500 starting within 180
days (the Standard PAC). ILN
guaranteed investors that if the monthly
checks fell below $1,000 per month, ILN
would refund the $10,000 investment plus
50 percent interest. See Common
Ground Transcript at 31. Investors of
$25,000 were told they would receive
either $250,000 worth of equity in real
property within 90 days or income of
$50,000 per year for their lifetimes,
payable in monthly installments of just
over $4,000 (the Super PAC). ILN
guaranteed investors in the Super PAC
that if their monthly payments fell below
$2,500, ILN would refund the entire
$25,000 investment plus 50 percent
interest. See Common Ground Transcript
at 33.
FN4. In keeping with the
evangelistic tenor of ILN's
marketing, Melvin Ford described
the Property Acquisition Certificate
as a "ceremonial document"
backed up by a contract providing
people with guaranteed benefits.
Common Ground Transcript at 30.
The PAC program was discontinued in
mid-1990 after an investigation and
settlement with securities regulators in
North Carolina. Much of the money taken
in through the PAC program was returned
to investors. Significantly, counsel for the
ILN admitted during closing arguments
that the PAC program "quite possibly"
involved the offer and sale of a security.
2. The PAC-List Program
This transitional program took the place
of the PAC program after its
discontinuance in early 1990. Under this
program, investors of $1,000, $5,000, or
$10,000 allegedly were promised the
rights to real property or, the evidence
indicates, large cash "settlements" within
180 days. The duration of this program is
unclear from the evidence, but the
program operated in all material respects
like the Property Rights Assignment
program that took its place within a very
short period of time.
3. The Property Rights Assignment
(PRA) Program
The PRA program was initiated in May
1990. Written materials describing the
program promised investors "an
opportunity to acquire property below
market value." Plaintiff's Exhibit 39 at 1
(Property Rights Assignment brochure).
ILN offered this opportunity through the
assignment of tax lien sale certificates or
rights to property acquired by ILN through
foreclosures or government-assisted
programs. According to the PRA
brochure, purchasers of $1,000 PRAs
would be assigned property rights
assessed at $10,000; purchasers of
$5,000 PRAs would be assigned property
rights assessed at $50,000; and
purchasers of $10,000 PRAs would be
assigned property rights assessed at
$100,000. The assignments were to be
made within 180 days of the purchase of
a PRA.
The oral descriptions of the PRA
program, as testified to by several SEC
witnesses who had purchased PRAs,
differed significantly. These witnesses
testified that at meetings conducted by
ILN representatives, potential purchasers
were promised the option of cash
payments of five times their investments
in lieu of the property rights assignments.
In other words, for a $1,000 PRA, a
purchaser had the option of $10,000
worth of property rights *684 or $5,000 in
cash. At least two of the witnesses
testifying for the SEC stated that they had
no interest in acquiring property and they
had been persuaded to purchase PRAs
solely because of the promise of a large
cash return through no effort of their own.
These witnesses specifically asked the
people recruiting them whether they would
have to recruit others in order to receive
their money. They were told that if they
were not interested in recruiting, then the
PRA program was the program for them.
Each of these witnesses was shown
checks made out to others who had
purchased PRAs. The checks were for
amounts of five times the amounts
originally invested and were dated within
30 days of the dates of the original
investments. One witness testified that
she and others at the ILN meeting she
attended specifically inquired about why
ILN's written documents did not mention
the five-to-one cash option. She was told
that the Internal Revenue Service (IRS)
was investigating the program and that
because of this, even though the program
was legal, the cash option could only be
mentioned in private. This witness and
others also testified that they were
promised a full refund if they were
dissatisfied with the program. At least two
of the SEC's witnesses testified that they
had submitted written requests for refunds
as early as February 1991, but still had
not received any money back. [FN5]
None of these witnesses were impeached
at the hearing and the Court thus accepts
their testimony as credible.
FN5. The SEC alleges that over
$11 million in refunds has been
requested and only $2 million has
been paid. The SEC also alleges
that of the $500 million in real
property and tax lien certificates
that the ILN has promised to its
investing members since May
1990, the company has only $4
million in cash, $5 million in real
estate equity and $75 million in
assessed value of tax lien
certificates with which to satisfy
these obligations.
Several witnesses for defendants testified
that they had never heard Ford or Mundey
guarantee a five-to-one cash return to
PRA purchasers. Moreover, ILN's director
of membership, Lee Steverson, testified
that Independent Representatives were
repeatedly reminded through memoranda
and other written documentation not to
make such unauthorized offers.
Nevertheless, the unrebutted testimony of
Lewis Goolsby, a former consultant for
ILN who was involved in designing
software for the PRA program, revealed
that in May 1990, Odell Mundey directed
him to print "settlement" checks for all
PRA members at five times their initial
investment. Goolsby testified that $22
million in checks were printed and
delivered to Mundey. The checks were
not subsequently distributed through a
single mass mailing, but were held back
so that they could be distributed either
shortly before or actually at the
President's Nights and other ILN meetings
in various cities throughout the country.
The evidence before the Court indicates
that some of the checks were never
distributed.
Steverson's explanation for the five-to-one checks was that they were
settlements for the company's inability to
assign property to PRA purchasers within
the 180-day time period promised.
According to Steverson, the property that
ILN had acquired at the time was too
overvalued to assign, therefore, the
company offered PRA purchasers cash
settlements of 50 percent of the assessed
value of the property rights they had
expected, which, the Court notes, equals
five times the initial PRA investment.
Steverson acknowledged that some cash
settlements were made within one month
of the initial PRA purchase, rather than at
the end of 180 days, and that settlement
checks were distributed at President's
Nights. This testimony was corroborated
by the testimony of H.L. Barner, an
associate marketing representative for
ILN, who received such a cash settlement
of $50,000 in June 1990 for a $10,000
PRA he purchased in May 1990. Barner
acknowledged that he had shown his
check to potential PRA purchasers,
although he claims he only did this in the
privacy of his home and not at public
meetings. Despite Steverson's and
Barner's consistent testimony that no
guarantees about cash returns were ever
made, both had family members who
received five-to-one cash payments.
Steverson's fiancee received a $5,000
payment for her $1,000 PRA. Barner's
*685 wife, mother, mother-in-law, brother,
and uncle all purchased PRAs and
received checks in amounts equalling five
times their investments. Most, if not all,
received their checks within 30 days of
their investments. None received
property rights assignments. In fact,
defendants have presented no evidence
that anyone ever received a property
rights assignment under the former PRA
program.
Although the Court accepts the testimony
of Steverson and Barner that the word
"guarantee" was not used in connection
with the PRA program, the Court finds
incredible any testimony that potential
recruits were not led to believe they could
expect cash returns on their PRA
investments. [FN6] The Court makes this
determination based upon inconsistencies
in Steverson's and Barner's testimony,
their inability to explain details of the
programs, and their demeanor on the
witness stand. Additionally, if the PRA
program had not been marketed as
providing five-to-one cash payments,
there would have been no reason for the
ILN to make these payments other than
for display to potential investors. ILN was
only otherwise obligated to provide a
refund if it could not provide the promised
property rights assignments.
FN6. One of the SEC's witnesses,
Shirley Pleasant, testified that not
only did H.L. Barner show her
copies of five-to-one checks
received by Barner and his wife, he
also told her that she and her
husband would be "stupid" to take
property rights when they could get
cash.
4. The Property Rights Acquisition
Program (PRA)
In March 1991, the PRA program was
revised yet again. [FN7] The name was
changed from Property Rights Assignment
program to Property Rights Acquisition
program. Under this program, a $1,000
PRA entitled the purchaser to three real
estate training courses. Purchasers of
$5,000 PRAs were entitled to seven
courses and five videotapes with
accompanying workbooks. Purchasers of
$10,000 PRAs were entitled to 12 real
estate courses and 12 videotapes with
accompanying workbooks. In addition,
purchasers of any of these PRAs receive
the right to use the PRA Selection Service
to acquire tax lien certificates or real
property, based on availability. As it has
been described to the Court, this service
consists of a listing of available properties
and tax lien certificates that PRA
members may review and make
selections from. If a PRA member
chooses to acquire any of the property
rights on the selection list, the member
must pay all acquisition costs and related
expenses. To date, under both the former
PRA program and this new program, only
one property selection list has ever been
distributed to PRA members.
FN7. Lee Steverson testified that
purchasers of the old PRAs had
the option of continuing in the old
program or transferring into the
new program. No other evidence
was introduced regarding the
retroactivity or nonretroactivity of
the new PRA program.
C. The Maximum Consideration Program
The Maximum Consideration Program,
like the revised PRA program, is a fairly
recent addition to the ILN portfolio of
programs. Perhaps this is why the
program is a source of confusion for not
only the Court but, as the recently
concluded hearing revealed, for many
others including counsel and witnesses.
Three times the Court has read the
"Representative's Guide to Maximum
Consideration" and the transcript of
Melvin Ford's explanation of the program
at a recent President's Night. Three times
the Court has been left wondering where
the truth lies.
According to the written materials
describing the program, Maximum
Consideration is a "special award
opportunity for representatives of ILN who
have evidenced that they are in the
process of acquiring real property for
purposes other than a personal
residence." Defendants' Exhibit 39 at 1 (A
Representative's Guide to Maximum
Consideration). To be eligible for the
award, a person must have achieved
$3,000 in PRA sales and have placed a
verifiable earnest money deposit check on
an agreement to purchase real estate
other than for use as a personal
residence. Purchasing a *686 PRA
apparently satisfies the second
requirement. Once eligible, only the top
10 producers of PRA sales are
guaranteed an award. This award is a
minimum of $5,000. Others, however, are
eligible for awards of up to five times their
original PRA purchase price or real estate
contract deposit, based upon PRA sales
volume, the amount of money invested,
and the length of time they have been in
the program. The Representative's Guide
to Maximum Consideration is explicit that
all awards other than those guaranteed to
the top ten producers are in the sole
discretion of ILN.
Oral representations of the program differ
significantly. According to Melvin Ford,
the purpose behind the Maximum
Consideration program is to "raise[ ] the
volume in the Capital Fund." President's
Night Transcript at 46. As the Court
understands Ford's explanation, a person
who purchases a $1,000 PRA, a $5,000
PRA, and a $10,000 PRA, for a total of
$16,000, is eligible for an award of up to
$80,000 because, according to Ford, "all
of a sudden the velocity of money
increases to such a point, the ability to
create wealth expands to such a degree,
that we could come back and give
somebody an award for up to $80,000."
President's Night Transcript at 46-47. To
be eligible for this award requires three
things, according to Ford: a person must
purchase a PRA or have a real estate
contract, he or she must sign an
acknowledgement form stating that ILN
has not guaranteed anything, and he or
she must sell $3,000 worth of PRAs. For
those who don't want to recruit anybody,
they are urged to simply bring in their
spouses at the $5,000 PRA and then their
$3,000 sales volume requirement will be
satisfied.
In his President's Night presentation,
Melvin Ford is careful not to make any
guarantees. Over and over again he
explains that Maximum Consideration is
an award and not a guarantee. At the
same time, however, he urges people to
participate in the program by explaining
that "the system does work." President's
Night Transcript at 48. "No, we can't
guarantee you any money," he says, "but
we sure have got a system that can
produce some." Id. at 53. [FN8]
FN8. At one point Ford explained
to his audience that "I have to use
the right words here--you know, we
could intend to do a lot of things,
but you only say it a certain way."
President's Night Transcript at 53.
Guarantee or no guarantee, the evidence
before the Court reveals that several
members of ILN's marketing team, as well
as others outside the company, received
"Maximum Consideration" award checks
as recently as April 1991. These awards
were distributed at President's Nights just
as the former settlement checks had
been. The display of these checks no
doubt had the same effect on potential
PRA purchasers as the settlement checks
had on a number of witnesses and
affiants who testified that they were
persuaded to purchase PRAs when they
saw the checks that others had received.
[FN9]
FN9. Additionally, Patricia Redden,
who attended a recent President's
Night in Baltimore, Maryland,
testified that Ford represented that
by putting money into the ILN, a
person would receive five times
that amount in return.
II. ILN SUBSIDIARIES AND AFFILIATES
In addition to the basic memberships,
club memberships, and Capital Fund,
PRA, and Maximum Consideration
programs, the ILN owns several
subsidiaries that defendants argue are
legitimate, profit-making enterprises
providing real services to ILN members
and others. Whatever the legitimacy or
value of the services provided by these
entities, the evidence presented makes it
clear that all are wholly dependent upon
the ILN for funding and ultimate
managerial direction.
A. ILN Development Corporation (ILNDC)
This subsidiary was incorporated in June
1990 to acquire real estate throughout the
United States, including property for
assignment to PRA members. The
evidence presented by the SEC indicates
that the ILNDC did not receive any
particular allocation of revenues from the
PRA program with which to make its
acquisitions. Instead, *687 when the
ILNDC needed funds for a particular
acquisition, it would request the money
from Ford and the funds would be made
available.
B. ILN College Education Services, Inc.
(ICES)
This for-profit subsidiary officially began
operating on October 1, 1990. Since then
it has incurred operating expenses of
about $300,000 and has generated
revenues of $110,000. According to its
acting president, Jayme Sokolow, PhD.,
the funds to meet ICES's expenses come
from the ILN.
For a $500 fee, ICES provides a five-year
membership that includes the provision of
books, teaching and study aids,
educational materials, and assistance in
obtaining educational financing and
scholarships. For an additional fee, the
membership is open to non-ILN members.
According to Dr. Sokolow, ICES is
currently in the process of establishing a
foundation for the purpose of granting
scholarships to ICES members on a
funds-available basis. The application for
tax-exempt status for the foundation is
currently pending before the Internal
Revenue Service. Despite the fact that
the foundation is not yet officially in
existence and has no funds whatsoever,
Dr. Sokolow acknowledged that a
brochure sent to ILN members last year
represented that by enrolling a child in
ICES, the child would be eligible to
receive $25,000 in scholarships from the
ICES Foundation. The brochure
represented that the Foundation was
funded through a $1 million endowment
and was expecting another $1 million
endowment by the end of 1991.
C. ILN Financial Services, Inc. (IFS)
This subsidiary was created to provide
insurance, tax, and personal finance
services to ILN members and the general
public. A $550 fee covers a variety of
services from the IFS, including tax
preparation and a quarterly tax newsletter.
D. ILN Real Estate Services (IRES)
This ILN subsidiary was established in
February 1991 to provide real estate
brokerage services and assistance in
obtaining mortgages. It also provides real
estate training for ILN club members and
PRA members. Additionally, according to
its president, James Wilson, the company
is available to do construction
management and consulting. Mr. Wilson
testified that although IRES had not
turned a profit before this Court issued its
Temporary Restraining Order, the
company was expected to turn a profit by
the end of the year. There is some
evidence in the record that ILN
representatives have promised members
that the ILN would loan money to its
members for the acquisition of property,
although this service is not provided by
IRES. See Plaintiff's Exhibit 50 at 12.
E. Imaginative Concepts & Designs, Inc.
(ICON)
This subsidiary does not provide any
direct benefits to members. Rather, it is a
printing and graphics company, formed in
October 1990 to compete for large
commercial accounts. It purchased a
large amount of sophisticated graphics
equipment with money from ILN that its
president, Vanessa Bigelow, testified the
company intended to pay back.
Additionally, according to Ms. Bigelow,
ICON intended to begin paying its own
salaries this year. These salaries have at
all times been paid by the ILN. Although
Ms. Bigelow referred to various oral
contracts that the company had entered
into indicating that it would soon be self-sufficient, rebuttal testimony offered by
the SEC indicated that these so- called
"contracts" were greatly exaggerated.
Accordingly, the Court has no evidence
before it to support the claims that ICON
would have been able to operate
independently of the ILN in the near
future.
CONCLUSIONS OF LAW
The SEC has the authority to bring this
litigation by virtue of 20(b) of the 1933
Act and 21(e) of the 1934 Act. The
language of 21(e) states that
"[w]henever it shall appear to the
Commission that any person is engaged
or is about to engage in acts or practices
constituting a violation of any provision of
this title, the rules or regulations
thereunder ..., it may in its *688 discretion
bring an action in the proper district court
... to enjoin such acts or practices, and
upon a proper showing a permanent or
temporary injunction or restraining order
shall be granted without bond."
(Emphasis added). The language of
20(b) is substantially similar.
[1] Under the law of this district, a proper
showing is "a justifiable basis for
believing, derived from reasonable inquiry
or other credible information, that such a
state of facts probably existed as
reasonably would lead the SEC to believe
that the defendants were engaged in
violations of the statutes involved." SEC
v. General Refractories Co., 400 F.Supp.
1248, 1254 (D.D.C.1975) (Pratt, J.).
[FN10] In SEC v. Vaskevitch, 657
F.Supp. 312 (S.D.N.Y.1987), the court
noted that the SEC is entitled to a
preliminary injunction if "the evidence
establishes a strong prima facie case of
previous violations and a reasonable
likelihood that the wrong will be repeated."
Id. at 315. With respect to an asset
freeze, the court noted that it "certainly
has the ability to ensure that the
defendants' assets are not secreted or
dissipated before entry of final judgment
concluding this action." Id.
FN10. To grant permanent
injunctive relief, the standard in this
circuit requires that the SEC prove
statutory violations by a
preponderance of the evidence.
SEC v. Savoy Industries, 587 F.2d
1149 (D.C.Cir.1978), cert. denied,
440 U.S. 913, 99 S.Ct. 1227, 59
L.Ed.2d 462 (1979).
[2] A major difference between this
preliminary injunction standard and the
common law standard is that in SEC
enforcement cases, the court is "guided
by the primary objectives of the statute
involved using public interest standards
as opposed to private litigation
requirements." General Refractories, 400
F.Supp. at 1254 (citations omitted).
When in conflict, the public interest is
paramount. Id. (citations omitted).
The threshold question this Court faces in
determining the appropriateness of
injunctive relief is whether any of ILN's
programs involve the offer or sale of a
"security" as defined by 2(1) of the 1933
Act and 3(a)(10) of the 1934 Act. If
securities are involved, the Court will have
to determine whether the SEC has made
a prima facie case that defendants have
violated and are likely to continue to
violate 17(a) of the 1933 Act and
10(b) of the 1934 Act and rule 10b-5
thereunder by offering and selling
securities based on misrepresentations
and incomplete information.
I. ARE ILN'S PROGRAMS
SECURITIES?
A. Statutory and Case Law
The statutory definitions of a security in
2(1) of the 1933 Act and 3(a)(10) of the
1934 Act are very broad, covering stocks,
notes, and bonds as well as investment
contracts and profit-sharing agreements.
If the ILN programs at issue in this case
are "securities," it will be because they fall
into definition of "investment contracts" as
defined in the relevant decisional law.
[3] The Supreme Court set forth the basic
test regarding investment contracts in
SEC v. W.J. Howey Co., 328 U.S. 293, 66
S.Ct. 1100, 90 L.Ed. 1244 (1946): "The
test is whether the scheme involves an
investment of money in a common
enterprise with profits to come solely from
the efforts of the promoter or a third
party." Id. at 301. The test is meant to
coincide with a broad construction of the
1933 and 1934 Acts, which, as remedial
legislation, were "designed to protect the
American public from speculative or
fraudulent schemes of promoters." SEC
v. Glenn W. Turner Enterprises, Inc., 474
F.2d 476 (9th Cir.), cert. denied, 414 U.S.
821, 94 S.Ct. 117, 38 L.Ed.2d 53 (1973).
Thus, the definition of a security
"embodies a flexible rather than a static
principle, one that is capable of adaptation
to meet the countless and variable
schemes devised by those who seek the
use of the money of others on the promise
of profits." Howey, 328 U.S. at 299, 66
S.Ct. at 1103. Form should be
disregarded in favor of substance and
economic reality. Tcherepnin v. Knight,
389 U.S. 332, 336, 88 S.Ct. 548, 553, 19
L.Ed.2d 564 (1967).
Two landmark cases involving pyramid
schemes are particularly relevant to the
case now before the Court. In SEC v.
*689 Glenn W. Turner Enterprises, Inc.,
474 F.2d 476 (9th Cir.), cert. denied, 414
U.S. 821, 94 S.Ct. 117, 38 L.Ed.2d 53
(1973), the Ninth Circuit held that a
pyramid scheme involving the sale of
certain "Adventures" and "Plans"
constituted the sale of "investment
contracts" within the meaning of the
federal securities laws. The court
affirmed the lower court's issuance of a
preliminary injunction prohibiting the sale
of these Adventures and Plans and
freezing the defendants' assets except for
those expended in the regular course of
business.
In Glenn W. Turner, a subsidiary of the
corporate defendant, Dare to Be Great
(Dare), offered to prospective purchasers
four different Adventures and a $1,000
Plan. For Adventures I and II, at a cost of
$300 and $700 respectively, purchasers
received tapes, records, and other self-motivation material, as well as the right to
attend group sessions. For Adventures III
and IV and the $1,000 Plan, purchasers
received the same things received by the
purchasers of Adventures I and II, plus
the opportunity to sell the Adventures and
the $1,000 Plan to others in return for a
commission correlating in amount to the
type of Adventure sold. The court held
that Adventures III and IV and the $1,000
Plan were investment contracts because
they met the test set forth in Howey.
Obviously, the purchase of Adventures
involved an investment of money. The
Glenn W. Turner court found it just as
obvious that the money was invested in a
"common enterprise," which it defined as
"one in which the fortunes of the investor
are interwoven with and dependent upon
the efforts and success of those seeking
the investment or of third parties." 474
F.2d at 482 n. 7 (citations omitted). It was
the final element, requiring profits "to
come solely from the efforts of others,"
Howey, 328 U.S. at 301, 66 S.Ct. at 1104,
that the Ninth Circuit had the most
difficulty with. Because the income
opportunities through Dare required
individuals to sell Adventures and Plans to
others, the income was not based "solely"
on the efforts of others. The Ninth Circuit
nevertheless held that the word "solely"
"should not be read as a strict or literal
limitation on the definition of an
investment contract, but rather must be
construed realistically, so as to include
within the definition those schemes which
involve in substance, if not form,
securities." 474 F.2d at 482. The court
then held that the Dare scheme was "no
less an investment contract merely
because [the investor] contributes some
effort as well as money to get into it." Id.
The Ninth Circuit's approach was
adopted and elaborated upon by the Fifth
Circuit in SEC v. Koscot Interplanetary,
Inc., 497 F.2d 473 (5th Cir.1974). In that
case, Koscot was, like Dare, a subsidiary
of Glenn W. Turner Enterprises. Through
Koscot, investors could make money by
both selling cosmetics and by recruiting
"supervisors" and "distributors" to sell
cosmetics and recruit others. [FN11] To
obtain the right to make money through
the recruitment of others required an
investment of at least $1,000. Such an
investment qualified a person as a
"supervisor" who could then recruit other
supervisors. For every supervisor
recruited, the recruiting supervisor
received $600 of the $1,000 paid by the
new supervisor. For $5,000, an investor
could become a "distributor" who could
then recruit both supervisors and
distributors in return for a share of their
investments.
FN11. The court's analysis of the
existence of a security focused on
the recruitment aspects of the
Koscot scheme, not the sale of
cosmetics.
In Koscot, the Fifth Circuit reversed the
lower court's denial of a preliminary
injunction motion brought by the SEC.
Because it could not be disputed that the
scheme involved an investment of money,
the court focused on the second and third
elements of Howey. In discussing the
common enterprise element, the court
recognized that "[t]he critical factor is not
the similitude or coincidence of investor
input, but rather the uniformity of impact of
the promoter's efforts." 497 F.2d at 478.
Citing Howey, it noted that the profits
need not be pooled, but the "feasibility
and success of the enterprise, in
attracting individuals to invest" *690 must
rely on the management of the enterprise.
Id. (citing Howey, 328 U.S. at 300, 66
S.Ct. at 1103 ("A common enterprise
managed by respondents or third parties
with adequate personnel and equipment is
therefore essential if the investors are to
achieve their paramount aim of a return
on their investments.")). Using this
analysis, the Fifth Circuit held that "the
requisite commonality is evidenced by the
fact that the fortunes of all investors are
inextricably tied to the efficacy of the
Koscot meetings and guidelines on
recruiting prospects and consummating a
sale." 497 F.2d at 473.
Having determined that the first and
second elements of Howey had been met,
the Fifth Circuit moved on to adopt the
Ninth Circuit's interpretation of "solely
from the efforts of others." The court
noted that a literal interpretation of the
requirement would frustrate the remedial
purposes of the 1933 and 1934 Acts.
Thus, the court agreed with the Ninth
Circuit that "the critical inquiry is 'whether
the efforts made by those other than the
investor are the undeniably significant
ones, those essential managerial efforts
which affect the failure or success of the
enterprise.' " Id. at 483 (citing Glenn W.
Turner, 474 F.2d at 482).
It should be noted that within this district
there is some variance from the law set
forth in Glenn W. Turner and Koscot. In
Meredith v. Conticommodity Services,
Inc., 1980 Fed.Sec.L.Rep. (CCH)
97,701 (D.D.C.1980) (Gasch, J.), the
district court rejected the Fifth Circuit's
commonality approach as impermissibly
collapsing the second and third elements
of Howey. It read Koscot and another
Fifth Circuit case, S.E.C. v. Continental
Commodities Corp., 497 F.2d 516 (5th
Cir.1974), to find commonality whenever
the investors' success depended upon the
skill of the promoter. In place of the
Koscot approach it seemed to favor a
definition of commonality requiring some
correlation between the profits and losses
of individual investors and the fortunes of
the investors as a group (horizontal
commonality) or with the enterprise itself
(vertical commonality).
With respect to the third element of
Howey, this circuit appears to be in
relative agreement with the Glenn W.
Turner and Koscot opinions. In One-O-One Enterprises, Inc. v. Caruso, 848 F.2d
1283 (D.C.Cir.1988), the court rejected
the application of the Howey test to stock
options, which it held were traditional
securities instruments, but noted without
disapproval that Howey requires profits to
come significantly from the efforts of
others although not solely from their
efforts. See also Baurer v. Planning
Group, Inc., 669 F.2d 770 (D.C.Cir.1981)
(recognizing that other courts of appeals
had adopted the standard set forth in
Glenn W. Turner and applying it to
promissory notes at issue in the case).
B. Does ILN Offer or Sell Securities?
As a preliminary matter, defendants urge
the Court to disregard the ILN's former
PAC, PAC-List, and PRA programs
because these programs are no longer in
existence. Defendants argue that only the
current PRA program, instituted in March
1991, is relevant to this litigation.
Because one of ILN's own executives
testified that purchasers of the original
PRAs had the option of transferring into
the new PRA program or continuing in the
original program, it is clear that the PRA
program as it has existed since May 1990
is relevant to the pending motion before
the Court. Additionally, the Court may
consider the PAC and PAC-List programs
insofar as they assist the Court in
determining whether the applicable
preliminary injunction standard has been
met, i.e., whether the SEC has made a
prima facie case of past violations and a
reasonable likelihood that the wrongs will
be repeated. See SEC v. Vaskevitch, 657
F.Supp. 312, 313 (S.D.N.Y.1987); SEC v.
General Refractories, 400 F.Supp. 1248,
1255 (D.D.C.1975). [FN12]
FN12. Additionally, the Court finds
the former PAC, PAC-List, and
PRA programs relevant under a
doctrine typically used when
mootness is an issue. The
Supreme Court held as long ago
as 1897 that "voluntary cessation
of allegedly illegal conduct does
not deprive the tribunal of power to
hear and determine the case."
United States v. W.T. Grant Co.,
345 U.S. 629, 73 S.Ct. 894, 97
L.Ed. 1303 (1953) (citing United
States v. Trans-Missouri Freight
Ass'n, 166 U.S. 290, 17 S.Ct. 540,
41 L.Ed. 1007 (1897)). Not only
does the power to hear a case
remain intact, so too does the
court's power to grant injunctive
relief. W.T. Grant, 345 U.S. at
633, 73 S.Ct. at 897. This is so
because there may still be a
dispute over the legality of the
challenged practices and the
defendant remains free to "return
to his old ways." Id. at 632, 73
S.Ct. at 897. Additionally, "a public
interest in having the legality of the
practices settled, militates against
a mootness conclusion." Id.
Without commenting at this
juncture about the legality of the
ILN's former programs, the Court
believes the rationale behind this
mootness doctrine to be applicable
to the case at bar.
*691 Accordingly, the Court will review
ILN's various programs to determine
whether any of them involves the offer or
sale of investment contracts as defined by
Howey, Glenn W. Turner, and Koscot.
1. The Basic Membership and Club
Memberships
[4] With respect to the $125 basic
membership and the $100, $500, and
$1,000 club memberships, standing alone,
it is clear to the Court that the Howey test
cannot be met. Simple membership in
any of these plans does not convey the
opportunity to earn income separate from
what may be earned through the Capital
Fund Bonus System and the Maximum
Consideration Program. Regardless of
the value that the Court may place on the
"benefits" and "services" offered by virtue
of basic or club memberships, these
memberships do not, in and of
themselves, involve the offer or sale of
securities.
2. The Capital Fund Bonus System
[5] The Capital Fund Bonus System is a
pure pyramid scheme, virtually
indistinguishable from that enjoined by the
court in the Glenn W. Turner case.
Independent Representatives earn
income from the system solely through the
recruitment of new members. As Melvin
Ford said at the April 1991 President's
Night, the recruitment of members by
simply saying "you come in, then you
bring in your wife and your kids," is what
"makes ILN what it is." President's Night
Transcript at 54. "And if a lot of people do
that," says Ford, "it is thousands and
thousands of people that are going to
have an opportunity to change their life, to
get that extra leg up in life." Id.
Defendants have carefully crafted the
Capital Fund program so that it does not
fit the Howey test precisely. The
Independent Representative Agreement
that must be signed to participate in the
program specifically states that one need
not be an ILN member in order to earn
money through the program. If one need
not be an ILN member, then the program
does not fit the first prong of the Howey
test, requiring an "investment of money."
Howey, 328 U.S. at 301, 66 S.Ct. at 1104.
To the Court, the distinction is merely
technical and appears to be a deliberate
attempt to avoid the application of the
test. A reading of the transcript of Melvin
Ford's presentation at a recent President's
Night, as well as the testimony of those
who have repeatedly heard him speak,
makes it clear that the intent is for a
person to become a member first and
then recruit new members. Thus, the oft-repeated slogan, "you come in, then you
bring in your wife and your kids."
President's Night Transcript, passim.
[FN13] Looking to the substance, rather
than the form, of the Capital Fund
program, this Court holds that the first
prong of the Howey test has been met.
FN13. Additionally, it is probable
that many people are unaware that
they can participate in the Capital
Fund Bonus System without first
becoming an ILN member. The
Independent Representative
Agreement is four pages long and
contains 33 lengthy provisions in
relatively small type. The provision
stating that one need not be an ILN
member to be an Independent
Representative is buried amongst
these other provisions. See
Income Opportunity brochure at 8.
To the extent that people sign up
immediately following Ford's
motivational speech, it is highly
unlikely that they are aware of this
totally unemphasized provision.
The second element of the Howey test
requires the investment to be in a
"common enterprise." Howey, 328 U.S. at
301, 66 S.Ct. at 1104. This test is met
whether the Court looks to Glenn W.
Turner, Koscot, or the opinion of my
colleague on this court in Meredith v.
Conticommodity Services, Inc., 1980
Fed.Sec.L.Rep. (CCH) 97,701 *692
(D.D.C.1980) (Gasch, J.). In Meredith,
the court intimated that commonality
requires a correlation between the profits
and losses of individual investors and the
fortunes of the investors as a group or
with the enterprise itself. The profits of
investors in the Capital Funds Bonus
System are directly related to the fortunes
of other investors: it is through the
constant recruitment of new members in
one's "downline" that income is earned. If
the people directly recruited by an
Independent Representative do not
vigilantly spread the word "you come in,
then you bring in your wife and your kids,"
then that Independent Representative will
not earn much income through the
program. Additionally, investors' profits
are linked to the success or failure of ILN
as a whole because it is the ability to
proclaim the organization's success that is
the central selling point of the program.
The testimonials presented in the
videotape "Common Ground" illustrate the
crucial role that the organization plays in
recruitment.
Just as the Capital Fund program meets
the commonality element of Howey, so
too does it meet the "solely from the
efforts of others" element of Howey. 328
U.S. at 301, 66 S.Ct. at 1104. Without a
doubt, to earn money through the Capital
Fund program requires some effort on the
part of the investor. If an investor does
not recruit a single new ILN member, that
person will receive absolutely no income
through the program. However, only a
minimal effort is needed in order to earn
substantial income through the program.
As Melvin Ford repeatedly says: "you
come in, then you bring in your wife and
your kids." If each of them recruits one
person, who recruits one person, who
recruits one person, an investor will
already have a five-level "downline."
Moreover, to be credited with recruiting a
new member may involve as little as
inviting someone to an ILN meeting or
President's Night. If the ILN marketing
representatives or Melvin Ford himself are
successful in persuading the potential
recruit to join, the person who extended
the invitation, otherwise known as the
"sponsor," will be credited as having made
the recruitment and will earn income from
it. Adopting the approach of the Ninth and
Fifth Circuits, as well as that condoned by
this circuit, this Court holds that "the
efforts made by those other than the
investor are the undeniably significant
ones." Glenn W. Turner, 474 F.2d at 482.
Thus, the Capital Fund Bonus System
involves the offer or sale of an investment
contract within the meaning of the 1933
and 1934 Acts. [FN14]
FN14. The Court has already held
that the basic membership and
club memberships, standing alone,
are not investment contracts. It is
important to note, however, that
one cannot become a club member
without a sponsor, who earns
income from the fees paid by all
new club members he "brings in."
Thus, the club memberships do not
currently have an existence apart
from the Capital Fund Bonus
System.
3. The PAC, PAC-List, Original PRA,
and Revised PRA programs
[6] The PAC and PAC-List programs, as
well as the original PRA, fit relatively
neatly into the Howey mold: Clearly, each
involved an investment of money.
Similarly, each involved a common
enterprise in the Koscot sense that the
fortunes of investors were inextricably tied
to the efforts of ILN management and in
the narrower sense that the fortunes of
individual investors correlated to the
fortunes of ILN itself. Purchasers of each
of these programs relied entirely on ILN to
provide them with the rights to acquire
real estate or with straight cash. If ILN
had gone bankrupt or been otherwise
unable to make good on its obligations (as
the evidence indicates may have been
near), the fortunes of those awaiting large
returns on their investments would have
plummeted. As to the third element of
Howey, it is clear from the evidence that
purchasers of the PAC, PAC-List, and
PRA relied solely on the efforts of others
to obtain profit, whether through the
assignments of property or the payment of
cash. Accordingly, the Court holds that
the PAC, PAC-List, and original PRA
programs involved the offer or sale of
investment contracts within the meaning
of the 1933 and 1934 Acts.
*693 The PRA program initiated in March
of this year appears to have been
specifically tailored to avoid being deemed
an investment contract. The program still
involves an investment of money, but for
that money, according to the written
descriptions of the program, a purchaser
is entitled only to real estate training
courses, videotapes, and the opportunity
to receive a list of property from which
they may select to purchase real estate or
tax lien certificates at their own expense.
Not only does the written material fail to
offer any kind of cash return, it fails to
offer any assignment of property rights.
Clearly, if ILN's written material were all
the Court had to go on, the newly initiated
PRA program would not be held to be an
investment contract. If, however, the
program continues to be orally marketed
as providing five-to-one cash returns to
investors, then the program would almost
certainly be deemed an investment
contract within the meaning of Howey. At
this preliminary stage, the Court finds it
unnecessary to conclusively determine
this question. This is so because the
Court will hold below that the Maximum
Consideration Program, which is
inextricably intertwined with the PRA
program, constitutes the offer or sale of
an investment contract within the meaning
of the 1933 and 1934 Acts.
4. The Maximum Consideration Program
[7] To participate in this "special award
opportunity" a person must purchase a
PRA or have made a deposit on a real
estate contract. This requirement,
obviously, involves an investment of
money. The money is placed into a
"common enterprise" because, as is made
clear in ILN's own brochures, the ability to
obtain an award through the program is
within the sole discretion of ILN and
depends upon the availability of funds.
Thus, the profits or losses of those
investing correlate to the profits or losses
of ILN as a whole. Additionally, Melvin
Ford's explanation of the program as
"increasing" the "velocity of money" and
"expanding" the "ability to create wealth,"
almost mandates the conclusion that a
common enterprise is involved. [FN15]
Finally, the profit earned through the
Maximum Consideration program is
expected to come almost entirely from the
efforts of others. The only effort a
participant must expend is the effort to sell
$3,000 worth of PRAs. This can be done
with minimal effort, Ford explains, by
following the simple slogan, "you come in,
then you bring in your wife and your kids."
Although defendants have argued that
there is no reason for either a purchaser
of a PRA or a participant in the Maximum
Consideration program to expect to profit,
the evidence is to the contrary. The Court
has already found that the oral
representations of both ILN's
representatives and Ford himself
conveyed the message that for an
investment of $1,000, $5,000, or $10,000,
a person could expect a five-to-one return
within a relatively limited period of time.
Repeatedly telling potential recruits that
there are no guarantees, but "the system
does work," is tantamount to making
promises of large cash returns, whether
they be through "settlements" from the old
PRA program or "awards" from the new
Maximum Consideration program.
Accordingly, the Court holds that the
Maximum Consideration program involves
the offer or sale of investment contracts
within the meaning of the 1933 and 1934
Acts.
FN15. The Court continues to be
puzzled about why neither defense
counsel nor any of defendants'
witnesses has been able to explain
how the velocity of money creates
wealth. The Court regrets that
Melvin Ford did not take the stand
to more fully explain his novel
theory.
Because the Court has held that the
Capital Fund Bonus System, the PAC,
PAC- List, and PRA programs, and the
Maximum Consideration program each
involve the offer or sale of securities,
defendants are in violation of 5 of the
1933 Act for failing to file registration
statements for each of these securities
with the SEC.
II. HAVE DEFENDANTS VIOLATED THE
ANTIFRAUD STATUTES?
Section 17(a) of the 1933 Act and 10(b)
of the 1934 Act and rule 10b-5
promulgated thereunder prohibit fraud or
misrepresentation *694 in the offer or sale
of securities. Rule 10b-5 provides that:
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,
(1) to employ any device, scheme, or
artifice to defraud,
(2) to 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
circumstances under which they were
made, not misleading, or
(3) 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.
Section 17(a) of the 1933 Act is
substantially the same except that it
applies only to fraud or
misrepresentations in connection with the
offer or sale of securities, not with the
purchase or sale of securities. Despite
their similarities, the rule and the statute
have been interpreted differently by the
Supreme Court. In Aaron v. SEC, 446
U.S. 680, 100 S.Ct. 1945, 64 L.Ed.2d 611
(1980), the Supreme Court held that
scienter is a necessary element of a
violation of 10(b), rule 10b-5, and
17(a)(1), see also Ernst & Ernst v.
Hochfelder, 425 U.S. 185, 96 S.Ct. 1375,
47 L.Ed.2d 668 (1976), but that scienter
need not be proven as an element of a
violation of 17(a)(2) or (a)(3). [FN16]
Nevertheless, the Supreme Court has
acknowledged that scienter may be a
factor to consider for 17(a)(2) and
(a)(3). Both the SEC and the defendants
agree that scienter may be proven by a
showing of recklessness. See, e.g., SEC
v. Carriba Air, Inc., 681 F.2d 1318 (11th
Cir.1982); Coleco Indus., Inc. v. Berman,
567 F.2d 569 (3d Cir.1977), cert. denied,
439 U.S. 830, 99 S.Ct. 106, 58 L.Ed.2d
124 (1978); Sanders v. John Nuveen,
554 F.2d 790 (7th Cir.1977).
FN16. The subsections (1), (2),
and (3) are substantially the same
in both the statute and the rule.
In addition to the scienter requirement, to
the extent the alleged violations fall under
subsection (2), involving a
misrepresentation or omission, there is a
materiality requirement. This simply
means that the misrepresentations or
omissions must have been such that a
reasonable investor would consider them
important. Basic, Inc. v. Levinson, 485
U.S. 224, 108 S.Ct. 978, 99 L.Ed.2d 194
(1988).
[8] With respect to whether
misrepresentations have been made
concerning ILN's programs, the evidence
is clear that ILN is nothing more than a
glorified chain letter, destined to collapse
of its own weight. Despite the inevitability
of this outcome, potential investors were,
until the issuance of the temporary
restraining order in this case, continuing
to be promised great wealth through their
participation in the ILN. The pyramid
nature of the organization was never fully
revealed to them.
Although defendants have not addressed
materiality in either their brief or their oral
argument, they have argued vigorously
that there is no evidence of scienter. As
the Court has already noted, ILN's written
materials do not make false claims of
huge cash returns on investments.
Additionally, ILN's Independent
Representatives and Marketing
Representatives have been repeatedly
instructed not to make false statements or
veer from the official written descriptions
of ILN's programs. ILN has frequently
sent memos to its marketing employees
instructing them not to use unauthorized
materials to try to promote ILN. This
seems to the Court to almost prove too
much. It is a valiant effort to create a
paper trail showing defendants' efforts to
comply with the law. The problem is that
the paper trail is contradicted by oral
statements of Ford and others and by
ILN's history and stated goals.
ILN's original Super-PAC program
"guaranteed" regular monthly cash
payments for life. No explanation was
ever given for where the cash was to
come from to make the promised
payments. To the Court, the program
appears to have been a deliberate
attempt to induce unsophisticated *695
investors to invest $10,000 or $25,000 in
an impossible dream. When this program
was scrapped, the PAC-List and original
PRA programs took its place and,
although they looked better on paper, the
evidence has revealed that the oral
statements about these programs
contained just as many unsupported
promises as the PAC program. On paper,
the programs offered the rights to property
assessed at 10 times the amount invested
within 180 days. ILN failed to inform
investors that it did not have the property
to make good on these promises. Orally,
the programs were pitched as offering the
option of a five-to-one cash payment
within 180 days. No explanation has been
given for where this money was to come
from. When asked by the Court, one
witness said she was told that ILN
invested in real estate with the money
from PRAs. No evidence of such
investments was ever presented to the
Court, however, except for Lee
Steverson's statement that the real estate
acquired by ILN was too valuable to
assign to PRA purchasers. This
statement was not corroborated by
defendants' own counsel who, when
asked by the Court how ILN made its
money, responded that it was through the
sale of basic memberships and PRAs.
[FN17]
FN17. Illustrative of defendants'
method of making money is the
affidavit of William Watson, a
former consultant to ILN who was
responsible for designing computer
software programs to manage the
funds raised by the company.
Watson testified that when asked
to design the software for the PAC-List program (the predecessor to
the original PRA), he had concerns
about the program that he
expressed in a meeting with Ford
and Mundey:
At this meeting, held during the
Spring of 1990 in Ford's office, I
compared the whole PAC idea to
the medieval alchemists' idea that
gold could be made from manure
and to the similarly implausible
notion of a perpetual motion
machine. That brought laughter.
That's what we have here: a
"perpetual money machine," Ford
or Mundey said, insisting
erroneously that the financial drag
of the huge PAC list return rate
could be overcome by the volume
of dollars in the PAC list money
pool.
Plaintiff's Exhibit 30 at 3 (Affidavit
of William Watson).
With respect to the March 1991 version
of the PRA program and the Maximum
Consideration program, it is clear to the
Court from the testimony presented and
from the transcript of the April 18, 1991
President's Night that the oral
presentations about these programs are
intended to induce purchasers by stopping
just short of guaranteeing them large cash
"awards." At the President's night, Melvin
Ford slipped on his language three times
in a row, stating at first that "you will
receive" and correcting himself with "you
will be eligible" to receive a lump-sum
award. Ford even went so far as to
explain to the audience that "I have to use
the right words here--you know, we could
intend to do a lot of things, but you only
say it a certain way." President's Night
Transcript at 53. The Court finds the
repeated oral statements made in
contradiction to ILN's written materials is
strong evidence of defendants' scienter.
[9] The Court is further convinced that an
ultimate finding of scienter is likely
because of the failure of defendants Ford
and Mundey to testify in rebuttal to the
claims against them. Neither defendant
was called by his own counsel or the SEC
at the preliminary injunction hearing, but
each had previously asserted his fifth
amendment rights during depositions.
[FN18] The Supreme Court held in Baxter
v. Palmigiano, 425 U.S. 308, 318, 96
S.Ct. 1551, 1557, 47 L.Ed.2d 810 (1976),
that the fifth amendment does not prohibit
drawing adverse inferences against
parties to civil proceedings "when they
refuse to testify in response to probative
evidence offered against them." The
Court implied, however, that a party's
silence should be "given no more
evidentiary value than [i]s warranted by
the facts surrounding his case." Id. See
also Lefkowitz v. Cunningham, 431 U.S.
801, 808 n. 5, 97 S.Ct. 2132, 2137 n. 5,
53 L.Ed.2d 1 (1977) (Baxter permits
consideration of silence as one of the
factors to be considered). Defendants
make elaborate arguments why the SEC's
behavior in *696 this case, the fast track
on which this litigation has been
proceeding, and the preliminary nature of
this proceeding do not warrant any
adverse inference from the individual
defendants' decisions not to testify.
Nevertheless, in light of the probative
evidence the SEC has gathered against
defendants Ford and Mundey, the Court
will draw a limited adverse inference from
their failure to testify in their own defense.
That is, the Court will consider the
defendants' failure to testify, in addition to
all of the other probative evidence
introduced, to support its conclusion that
an ultimate finding of scienter is likely.
FN18. This fact is in the record by
virtue of a brief submitted by
counsel for Odell Mundey. This
brief argued that the Court should
not draw an adverse inference
from either defendant's failure to
testify prior to the preliminary
injunction hearing.
RELIEF
The Court has held that the Capital Fund
Bonus System, the PAC, PAC- List, and
original PRA programs, and the Maximum
Consideration program all involve the
offer or sale of investment contracts within
the meaning of the 1933 and 1934 Acts.
The Court has also held that defendants
have violated 5 of the 1933 Act by
offering and selling unregistered
securities. Furthermore, the Court has
held that the SEC has made a prima facie
case of violations of the antifraud
provisions of both Acts through the
abundant evidence of misrepresentations
and scienter. Defendants have given no
indication that they will voluntarily cease
offering or selling the programs this Court
has held to be investment contracts.
Rather, it is obvious to the Court from the
testimony and argument during the
preliminary injunction hearing, as well as
from the deluge of letters and phone calls
to Chambers, that there exists an
organized and widespread effort to
continue to build the pyramid upon which
the organization rests. [FN19]
Accordingly, a preliminary injunction is
necessary to prevent further violations
and to protect the investing public. The
Court shall enjoin defendants and their
officers, agents, and employees from
offering or selling those programs that the
Court has held to be investment contracts.
FN19. Several hundred letters,
most of them form letters which
were obviously widely distributed
among ILN's members, have been
sent to Chambers in support of
ILN. The Court has made these
letters part of the public record in
this case. Although fewer in
number, there have been some
calls and letters from those who do
not support ILN and seek a refund
of their investments. In one such
letter, a woman indicated that she
had invested over $38,000 in ILN
from a loan secured by her house.
She had requested a refund, but
had not received it and is currently
facing foreclosure.
In addition to organizing a broad
letter-writing campaign, ILN
supporters made their presence
known throughout the four days of
the preliminary injunction hearing.
This hearing, which was continued
over the Fourth of July holiday,
was attended by numerous
spectators who crowded the
Courtroom and filled the exterior
hallway.
In addition to injunctive relief, the SEC
seeks a continuation of the asset freeze
and the appointment of a receiver. It is
undisputed that the Court has the
authority to enter an appropriate freeze
order in an SEC enforcement action. See
S.E.C. v. American Board of Trade, Inc.,
830 F.2d 431 (2d Cir.1987); S.E.C. v.
Glenn W. Turner Enterprises, Inc., 474
F.2d 476 (9th Cir.1973); S.E.C. v. Manor
Nursing Centers, 458 F.2d 1082 (2d
Cir.1972). As the Second Circuit has
noted, in deciding whether to issue such
an order, "the disadvantages and possible
deleterious effect of a freeze must be
weighed against the considerations
indicating the need for such relief." Manor
Nursing Centers, 458 F.2d at 1106.
[10] In this case, a continuation of the
asset freeze virtually would put ILN out of
business. If the case were ultimately
resolved in defendants' favor, it would
probably be too late to resurrect the
company and build back its goodwill.
Nevertheless, the Court has been
presented with probative evidence that
defendants took in over $80 million dollars
through a pyramid scheme that was
bound to collapse once the market
became saturated. The revenue earned
by ILN was predominantly from the sale of
new PRAs and the club memberships
necessary to purchase PRAs. The small
amount of revenue earned through ILN's
legitimate businesses, such as the sale of
basic memberships and the sale of
services by ILN's various subsidiaries,
would not have been enough to keep the
*697 company afloat absent the revenues
generated through the illegal sale of
unregistered securities. According to the
SEC's as-yet- undisputed allegations, the
ILN has $500 million worth of obligations
to investors, but has only $4 million in
liquid assets, $5 million in real property,
and tax lien certificates for property worth
$75 million in assessed value. The Court
is concerned that if the ILN's assets do
not remain frozen, there may be little left
for distribution to the investors if this case
ultimately results in a permanent
injunction and disgorgement. Accordingly,
the Court will continue the asset freeze
with respect to ILN's assets. The Court
will, however, lift the freeze on the
personal assets of defendants Ford and
Mundey. The Court has thus far been
presented with no evidence of improper
diversion of assets or secreting of assets
by the individual defendants. Unless and
until the SEC produces such evidence,
defendants Ford and Mundey shall be
entitled to access to their personal assets.
Because of the draconian nature of the
relief ordered in this case, the Court will
refrain from appointing a receiver at this
time. Instead, the Court will leave the
disbursement agent in place for 30 days,
or until further Order of this Court, so that
defendants may review this ruling and
exercise their rights to appeal, if they
choose. The disbursement agent shall
have the powers set forth in the temporary
restraining order. In addition, he shall
have the authority to make payments to
legitimate creditors who are not part of the
ILN family.
By accompanying Order, the SEC is
directed to submit a proposed Order
consistent with the terms outlined in this
Memorandum Opinion. Defendants will
then have the opportunity to comment on
the proposed Order. Until the Court's final
ruling on the Order, the temporary
restraining order shall remain in effect,
except with respect to the individual
defendants' personal assets.
ORDER
In accordance with the Memorandum
Opinion issued herewith and for the
reasons stated therein, it is this 18th day
of July, 1991,
ORDERED that the SEC shall, by 4:30
p.m., July 19, 1991, file with the Court and
serve on defendants by hand, a proposed
Order consistent with the terms set forth
by the Court in the Memorandum Opinion
issued herewith; and it is
FURTHER ORDERED that defendants
shall, by 4:30 p.m. July 22, 1991, file with
the Court and serve on the SEC by hand,
any objections or comments to the
proposed Order; and it is
FURTHER ORDERED that counsel for all
parties shall meet and propose, by July
23, 1991 a plan for a speedy resolution of
this case by a trial on the merits within
approximately 60 to 90 days; and it is
FURTHER ORDERED that there shall be
a status conference in this case on July
24, 1991, at 1:30 p.m., in Courtroom 9, for
the purpose of scheduling the final phase
of this case; and it is
FURTHER ORDERED that, pending the
issuance of a final Preliminary Injunction
Order, the Temporary Restraining Order
shall remain in effect in this case, except
that the freeze shall be and hereby is
lifted with respect to the individual
defendants' personal assets.
END OF DOCUMENT
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