More Struggles for SEC's Case Against BOFA

The Wall Street Journal has reported that on Monday evening, U.S. District Judge Jed S. Rakoff of the Southern District of New York denied the SEC’s motion to expand charges against Bank of America in connection with the company’s 2009 merger with Merrill Lynch. A previously filed SEC suit accused the bank of concealing plans to pay billions of dollars in bonuses to employees at Merrill Lynch before shareholders were asked to approve a merger of the two firms.  Most recently, the SEC moved to amend that complaint to include allegations that Bank of America also failed to disclose “extraordinary financial losses at Merrill Lynch prior to a shareholder vote to approve a merger between the two companies.” The SEC's proposed second amended complaint alleged that Bank of America negligently failed to disclose those losses before the shareholder vote, violating its fiduciary duty to its investors and making its previous disclosures materially false and misleading.

Judge Rakoff had previously rejected a $33 million settlement between the SEC and Bank of America last fall because it failed to hold accountable any of the executives or lawyers who were allegedly responsible for omissions in documents submitted to shareholders ahead of a vote that approved the acquisition. However, the SEC still declined to charge individuals in its proposed second amended complaint, stating that the “executives are not alleged to have deliberately concealed information from counsel or otherwise acted with scienter or intent to mislead.  Nor is any counsel alleged to have acted with scienter or intent to mislead.”

In a letter addressing the SEC’s proposed second amended complaint, Bank of America’s counsel stated that “the new theories the SEC seeks to advance in this case are baseless.”  The WSJK has now reported that on Monday evening, Judge Rakoff ruled that the S.E.C. cannot amend its complaint against Bank of America a second time, but can instead file a new complaint.

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