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| Mutual Benefits Corporation : Viatical or Life Settlement Contracts and other securities Summary: On October 22, 2007, the Court issued the Order signed by U.S. District Judge Federico A. Moreno granting the motion for settlement and granting the motion for attorney fees. According to the Order, the Court finds that an award of 25% of the $1,684,624.00 Settlement Fund (or $421,156.00) in attorneys’ fees would be fair and reasonable in this case. The Court finds that Class Counsel’s request to be reimbursed for $59,757.89 in expenses is reasonable, and therefore awards Class Counsel $59,757.89 for its costs in addition to the fee award. As summarized by the Joint Motion for Final Approval of Settlement dated October 12, 2007, Lead Plaintiffs have now filed a Third Amended Class Action Complaint asserting twelve separate causes of action against fifty-one defendants. In response to the Second Amended Complaint, eight motions to dismiss were filed by twenty of the defendants. In response to the Third Amended Complaint, another five motions to dismiss were filed, supplemental by several motions for re-hearing and/or reconsideration. All of these motions were thoroughly briefed by Class Counsel. As a result of over two yeas of highly contentious litigation, all the Motions to Dismiss were resolved. Substantial settlements have been negotiated against several of the named Defendants. … The three Settlements were reached after extensive arms-length negotiations. All of the parties aggressively presented their positions, and the negotiations required continuous efforts over a number of months to bear fruit. On July 17, 2007, Lead Plaintiffs and the Receiver moved for preliminary approval of the Settlement. A hearing on the motion was held on August 6, 2007. On August 13, 2007, the Court entered a Preliminary Approval Order. The primary terms of the Lombardi settlement are as follows: First, Lombardi will pay the greater of One Million Five Hundred Thousand Dollars ($1,500,000.00) or all proceeds from the liquidation of certain personal and business assets to be forfeited by Lombardi. The primary terms of the Livoti settlement are as follows: First, Livoti’s insurers have tendered the full amount of Mr. Livoti’s malpractice insurance coverage (which is a wasting policy) in the amount of Ninety Thousand Dollars ($90,000). Second, Mr. Livoti has agreed to contribute Fifty Thousand Dollars ($50,000) of his personal assets (most of which would be otherwise exempt from execution) towards the settlement. The primary terms of the Pettyjohn settlement are as follows: First, Pettyjohn will pay Forty- Four Thousand Six Hundred and Twenty Four Dollars ($44,624) within thirty (30) days of Preliminary Approval. The original complaint alleges that Mutual Benefits and certain related parties sold unregistered securities through offering materials that failed to disclose to the class material facts regarding their investments, and failed to disclose material facts necessary in order to make the statements made, in light of the circumstances under which they were made, not misleading. The Complaint alleges that Mutual Benefits, together with the assistance of others, then improperly commingled and dissipated the investors' funds. The complaint charges defendants with violations of Sections 12(a)(1), 12(a)(2), and 22(a) of the Securities Act of 1933 ("Securities Act"), and Sections 10(b) and 27 of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934. Specifically, the complaint alleges that since 1994, defendants have operated or aided and abetted a billion dollar Ponzi scheme and defrauded at least 29,000 investors -- many of whom are retirees -- by issuing a series of material and misleading omissions and false statements, breaching escrow agreements and breaching their fiduciary trust to investors. The complaint alleges that defendants failed to disclose and misrepresented the following material adverse facts which were then known to defendants or recklessly disregarded by them: (1) that new investor funds were diverted to cover shortfalls on the funds escrowed to cover life insurance premiums on policies assigned to earlier investors; (2) that there were gross inaccuracies in the calculated life expectancies of viators; (3) that insurance premium escrow accounts were commingled and deficient; (4) the Steingers' civil disciplinary backgrounds as well as $26-plus million in "consulting fees" paid to the Steingers or to entities that the Steingers controlled were not disclosed to investors; and (5) that MBC does not require that its sales agents be licensed, and that several of MBC's sales agents have been the subjects of state cease-and-desist orders in connection with the MBC offering. On May 5, 2004, the United States Securities & Exchange Commission ("SEC") and federal marshals raided MBC's south Florida offices, seized the company's records and shut down MBC's operations. Named as Defendants in the multi-count complaint are: Mutual Benefits Corporation, Viatical Benefactors, LLC ("VBLLC"), Viatical Services, Inc.,("VSI") Kensington Management, Inc.("Kensington"), Rainy Consulting Corp. ("Rainy"), Twin Groves Investments, Inc. ("Twin Groves"), P.J.L. Consulting, Inc. ("P.J.L."), SKS Consulting Inc. ("SKS"), Camden Consulting, Inc.("Camden"), Joel Steinger a/k/a Joel Steiner ("J. Steinger") Leslie Steinger a/ka. Leslie Steiner ("L. Steinger"), Peter Lombardi ("Lombardi"), Clark C. Mitchell ("Mitchell"), Edgar Escobar ("Escobar"), Anthony Lamarca ("Lamarca"); A.M. Livoti, Jr., P.A.; A.M. Livoti, Jr. (collectively "Livoti") Citibank, N.A. ("Citibank") Union Planters, N.A. ("Union Planters"), RBC Centura ("RBC") and First Southern Bank ("First Southern"). Each is alleged to have played a role in the Mutual Benefits fraud. The class is defined as "all persons who purchased, between 1994 and the present, interest in discounted life insurance policies known as viatical settlements from Mutual Benefits Corporation ("MBC") and were damaged thereby." Note: Mutual Benefits Corporation is a viatical and senior life insurance settlement broker. A viatical or life settlement contract involves the sale of a life insurance policy by a terminally ill person or senior citizen (known within the industry as a "viator") at a price discounted from the face value of the policy. Investors pay the premiums, and receive the face value of the life insurance policy when the insured, or viator, dies. In turn, the viator receives a portion of the proceeds of his life insurance policy in a lump sum. INDUSTRY CLASSIFICATION: SIC Code: Sector: Financial Industry: Insurance (Life)
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