Getaway Drivers May Get Off Scot-Free - 10/29/2007

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Copyright © 2001
Stanford Law School


2007 News and Press Releases

News News 2007


HEADLINE NEWS:

Getaway Drivers May Get Off Scot-Free
Roger Parloff

Fortune. October 29, 2007

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EXCERPT: Last month the Supreme Court heard arguments in a case known as Stoneridge Investment v. Scientific-Atlanta, which may prove to be the most important securities case of the decade. Based on the Justices' questions at the Oct. 9 oral argument, a majority think investors should be barred from bringing class - action suits against third parties that allegedly helped a corporation commit a fraud on its shareholders. In the case of Enron, that might have meant that private plaintiffs lawyers could not have recovered $7.3 billion by going after the likes of Citibank and J.P. Morgan Chase, which served as counterparties in fishy deals. Now the Securities and Exchange Commission plans to take on some even bigger questions. Chairman Christopher Cox has told legislators that the agency will hold roundtable discussions on the way shareholder class actions affect U.S. capital markets, competitiveness, and shareholder value. In other words: Do class actions hurt investors more than they help them, and if so, how can they be fixed? The Stoneridge case turns on a 1995 law in which Congress decreed that only federal prosecutors and SEC lawyers are allowed to pursue third-party "aiders and abettors" of fraud, while private class-action lawyers are barred from doing so. On the surface the 1995 law seems unfathomable: Why shouldn't private lawyers be allowed to help investors recoup their losses from aiders and abettors? In a bank heist, for instance, the getaway car driver is just as guilty as the stickup man. But Congress was striking a very crude compromise reflecting deep skepticism about whether shareholder lawsuits really benefit shareholders at all. Why the skepticism? In the typical fraud suit, the vast majority of investors who get hurt--i.e., the ones who bought when the stock price was allegedly inflated by the fraud and sold after it had fallen back to true value--purchased their stock from other innocent investors. Those innocent sellers inadvertently benefited from the fraud (i.e., they sold at an artificially inflated price), but the law doesn't require them to cough up their windfalls.

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