Supreme Court will consider stripping SEC of disgorgement powers

The Supreme Court agreed to consider stripping the SEC of its power to recoup illegal profits from wrongdoers, taking up a challenge to one of the agency’s most potent legal weapons.

The appeal by Charles Liu and Xin Wang contends that “disgorgement” isn’t one of the remedies Congress has authorized the SEC to seek against people who violate the nation’s securities fraud laws. The California couple is fighting a $27 million disgorgement order.

The SEC won disgorgement orders totaling $2.5 billion in fiscal 2018, compared with $1.4 billion in other types of penalties.

Disgorgement is designed to return ill-gotten gains to people who were harmed. Courts have traditionally viewed it as an “equitable” measure, which means judges make awards based on fairness rather than strict legal rules.

The 2002 Sarbanes-Oxley Act says judges hearing SEC enforcement actions can award “any equitable relief” they deem appropriate for the protection of investors.

But Liu and Wang’s attorneys say the SEC has sought so much money through disgorgement that it’s become a punitive measure, much like a penalty.

“The SEC collects huge sums of money by pursuing a penalty that it does not have the power to seek in federal court,” the appeal argued.

A police officer stands in front of the Supreme Court building in Washington, D.C., U.S., on Monday, March 26, 2012. The Supreme Court opens today its historic review of President Barack Obama's health-care law, three days of arguments that might result in the president's premier legislative achievement being found unconstitutional in the middle of his re-election campaign. Photographer: Andrew Harrer/Bloomberg

Liu and Wang point to a 2017 Supreme Court decision that said disgorgement is covered by a five-year statute of limitations that applies to penalties. That ruling explicitly declined to say whether the SEC has power to seek disgorgement in the first place.

The Trump administration and the SEC urged the Supreme Court to reject the appeal, saying Congress authorized the commission to seek disgorgement in three separate statutes. The administration told the justices the Supreme Court “has repeatedly characterized disgorgement as an equitable remedy.”

Liu and Wang were found to have defrauded people seeking to take advantage of a visa program for foreigners who make large investments in the U.S. The two were accused of falsely telling investors the money would be used for a cancer treatment center. A federal judge ordered the couple to return $27 million they collected.

Bloomberg News

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SCOTUS SEC SEC enforcement Regulatory actions and programs Penalties and fines
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