The U.S. District Court for the Southern District of New York says it will not direct the Securities and Exchange Commission to contact German authorities on behalf ex-Goldman Sachs & Co. (GS) executive Fabrice Tourre, who is seeking to obtain certain documents related to the securities fraud case against him. Per Magistrate Judge Michael Dolinger’s ruling, a discovery request based on Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 34(a) doesn’t “extend” to having a
“government agency make requests to a foreign government under the terms of” a memorandum of understanding between both parties. Dolinger notes that while MOU between the SEC and its German equivalent allows both regulators to help each other in the enforcement of their respective securities laws, “there is no indication” that the MOU is supposed to offer a right or a benefit to a private party, such as allowing a securities fraud litigant to obtain discovery in Germany.
The SEC charged Goldman Sachs and Tourre over alleged misstatements and omissions related to collateralized debt obligations called Abacus 2007-AC1, a derivative product linked to subprime mortgages. The broker-dealer settled its securities case for $550 million. Meantime, Tourre, who is accused of giving Goldman Sachs “substantial assistance” in its alleged efforts to mislead investors, is seeking to have the SEC case against him dismissed. He is pointing to Morrison v. National Australia Bank Ltd., a US Supreme Court decision that was issued two months after the SEC filed charges against him.
This week, his lawyers argued that the SEC was attempting to circumvent the Supreme Court ruling, which limits the reach of civil claims over acts that occurred outside the country. The transactions involving Tourre that are under dispute took place abroad.
Goldman’s Tourre Shouldn’t Face SEC Lawsuit, His Lawyers Say, Bloomberg Businessweek, February 15, 2011
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