The Office of the Inspector General of the Securities and
Exchange Commission not long ago submitted a semi-annual
report to Congress. There are two items in the report of
interest to those of us who have argued that the SEC has turned a
blind eye towards, or even assisted, unscrupulous hedge funds that
make their fortunes destroying public companies for profit.
The first item reads as follow:
“The OIG has opened an
investigation into complaints from an investor alleging that the
SEC failed to investigate instances of market manipulation and
other misconduct in connection with the review, and eventual
non-approval, of a developmental drug. The investor also has
alleged that the SEC failed to investigate a recent bear raid on
the stock of the company that developed the drug, causing a severe
plunge in the stock price. The OIG has reviewed several hundred
pages of documents, including numerous emails and attachments
provided by the complainant. The OIG expects to complete its
investigation and issue a report of investigation in the next
reporting period.”
I have confirmed that this is a reference to the bear raid on
Dendreon,
described in considerable detail by Deep Capture.
There is plenty of evidence — including, perhaps, those
documents and emails referred to by the OIG — pointing to
miscreancy in this case. Indeed, it is one of the more despicable
cases of market manipulation on record – and many cancer
patients were deprived of potentially life-extending treatment as a
result. We look forward to reading the OIG’s report –
it should be a doozy.
The second item of interest in the OIG report is this:
“The OIG continued its
investigation of an allegation that SEC staff engaged in
retaliation against a company after it publicly complained about
naked short selling in the company’s stock. During this
reporting period, the OIG took the sworn testimony of the staff
attorney who worked on the matter and reviewed numerous relevant
documents. The OIG has completed its investigative work and plans
to issue its report of investigation prior to the end of the next
semiannual reporting period.”
It has long been a contention of Deep Capture that the SEC
has not just ignored allegations of naked short selling, but has
gone after companies that complain about it, often at the behest of
the short sellers themselves. This report, too, should be
interesting, to say the least.
It wasn’t so long ago that people who did battle against
abusive short selling and captured government officials were
labeled as conspiracy theorists. Now, thanks to SEC Inspector
General David Kotz and a few other honest people in government
– people like Senator Ted Kaufman – we might finally
see some light shed on some of the shenanigans that have made
America look an awful lot like a third world basket case.
Yes, there are hedge funds that do bad things.
Yes, there are government officials who help them.
It’s an ugly reality, and the OIG is to be commended for
treating serious allegations as they should be treated – i.e.
seriously.
Mark Mitchell is a
reporter for DeepCapture.com. He
previously worked as an editorial page writer for The Wall Street
Journal in Europe, a business correspondent for Time magazine
in Asia, and as an assistant managing editor responsible for the
Columbia Journalism Review’s online critique of business
journalism. He holds an MBA from the Kellogg Graduate School of
Management at Northwestern University. Email:
mitch0033@gmail.com