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SEC Awards First Payout To Whistleblower In Anti-Securities Fraud Campaign
Harriet Davies
22 August 2012
The Securities and Exchange Commission
has awarded a whistleblower $50,000 in the first payout under a new scheme designed to encourage people to provide evidence on securities
fraud. The award is 30 per cent of the amount the SEC collected in the case,
which saw a court order over $1 million in sanctions, with final
judgments against other defendants still being considered. So far $150,000 of this has been collected, but if any further
payments are ordered and/or collected, more will go to the
whistleblower, who did not wish to be identified. Whistleblower awards are capped at 30 per cent of the resulting
amount collected by law. The 2010 Dodd-Frank Act allows for
whistleblower awards when the information provided is deemed “high
quality” and leads to an enforcement action by the regulator resulting
in sanctions over $1 million. Another whistleblower in the same case was denied an award by the
Commission as the information he or she provided “did not lead to or
significantly contribute to the SEC’s enforcement action,” it said. The whistleblower who did receive a payout provided documents and
other significant information which allowed the SEC to build its case
faster and prevented additional victims, the Commission said. “We’re seeing high-quality tips that are saving our investigators
substantial time and resources,” said Mary Schapiro, SEC chairman, who
backed the programme.