Hedge Fund Traders Plead Guilty to Mismarking But Avoid Jail
Premium Point’s Ahuja and Shor made deal ahead of retrial
Their 2019 convictions were tossed over prosecutors’ errors
APR 22, 2022 | REPUBLISHED BY LINY : APR 25, 2022
The co-founder of Premium Point Investments and a former trader pleaded guilty to charges they overstated asset values at the now-defunct hedge fund, but they won’t serve any time behind bars.
Anilesh Ahuja, the fund’s co-founder, and trader Jeremy Shor were found guilty of conspiring to overvalue the hedge fund’s assets by more than $100 million and sentenced to prison in 2019, but U.S. District Judge Katherine Polk Failla in Manhattan overturned their convictions in December due to errors and misleading statements by prosecutors.
The pair had faced a new trial but reached a deal with the government allowing them to plead guilty to a single securities fraud count.
Under the deal, which was approved by Failla in a hearing on Friday, the two men won’t serve any prison time, pay a fine or serve probation.
Before their convictions were overturned, Ahuja was sentenced to more than four years in prison and Shor, almost 3 1/2.
But their surrender dates were delayed, initially because of the emerging Covid pandemic and later because the judge was considering throwing out the verdict.
As a result, neither man served any part of his sentence.
Inflated Targets
“We are pleased that Mr. Ahuja can finally put this ordeal behind him without having to spend a day in jail,”
his lawyers [Paul Weiss], Richard Tarlowe and Roberto Finzi, said in a statement
“After years of litigation, we are pleased to put this matter behind us with no additional punishment beyond the punishment already inflicted by the process,”
Shor’s lawyer, Justin Weddle, said in an email.
Federal prosecutor Daniel Gitner defended the deal before the judge on Friday, saying Ahuja and Shor had already made “substantial restitution” to investors.
“Today’s guilty pleas to securities fraud bring to a close the defendants’ scheme to mismark their funds’ books,”
U.S. Attorney Damian Williams said in a statement.
“This office stands by this prosecution, and is pleased that this matter has resolved with the defendants’ acceptance of responsibility.”
Prosecutors said Ahuja and Amin Majidi, a Premium Point portfolio manager who pleaded guilty and testified against his former colleagues, set inflated monthly targets for returns, then ordered Shor and other traders to manipulate the valuations accordingly.
Their goal was to make the firm’s performance seem better than it was so they could charge investors higher fees and keep them from withdrawing their money.
A jury found both Ahuja, 54, and Shor, 50, guilty of four criminal counts in July 2019, but their lawyers uncovered documents they said showed that a sworn statement by Majidi at the time of his guilty plea was virtually identical to one drafted by prosecutors.
That showed Majidi was willing to say whatever the government wanted, the defense lawyers argued.
Judge W Eugene Davis of the Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit held shares in Deutsche Bank @DeutscheBankAG – Per financial disclosures, Davis holds and/or has previously owned shares in Deutsche Bank. A panel Judge in the appeal, in Deutsche Bank v Burke, CA5, Texas. pic.twitter.com/ujLX2qZwBT
— LawsInTexas (@lawsintexasusa) September 29, 2021
‘Unacceptable’ Errors
The judge’s decision to throw out the original verdict was a setback for federal prosecutors in Manhattan, who have seen other cases collapse over their failure to share evidence.
“I tried my hardest to conduct a fair trial,”
Failla said in overturning the verdict.
“I no longer have confidence in the fairness of the trial.”
She declined to dismiss the charges against Ahuja and Shor though, saying that the errors made by the government — while “unacceptable” — were not severe enough to warrant throwing out the case.
Ahuja was a senior mortgage bond trader at Lehman Brothers, RBS Greenwich Capital and Deutsche Bank AG for four years before co-founding Premium Point in 2008.
The firm initially focused on the U.S. residential loan market and began amassing bonds backed by distressed assets in the wake of the global financial crisis.
It later expanded into the jumbo loan and home rental businesses and managed about $2 billion of assets at its peak.
Premium Point began winding down in late 2016 after posting large losses.
The fund revealed the following year that federal securities regulators were examining the way it valued its assets.
Its mortgage credit funds filed for bankruptcy protection in March 2018, and Ahuja, Majidi and Shor were charged two months later.
Former Chief Risk Officer Ashish Dole also pleaded guilty and testified for the prosecution at the trial.
The case is U.S. v. Ahuja, 18-cr-00328, U.S. District Court, Southern District of New York (Manhattan).