Securities fraud investigations often begin long before criminal charges are filed. A regulatory inquiry, subpoena, search warrant, target letter, grand jury investigation, investor complaint, or request for financial and trading records may indicate that authorities are examining an investment offering, financial disclosure, trading activity, investor communication, or alleged misuse of confidential information.
Levenson Law Firm represents executives, financial professionals, investment advisers, brokers, business owners, promoters, employees, and other individuals facing serious Pennsylvania state and federal securities fraud investigations and prosecutions throughout Pittsburgh and Western Pennsylvania.
Securities fraud cases frequently involve extensive investment records, trading data, offering documents, financial statements, electronic communications, corporate records, witness testimony, and expert analysis. Effective criminal defense begins with examining what the government must prove, reviewing the transactions and communications in context, and identifying what the evidence establishes—and what it does not.
Criminal charges begin with allegations. Effective criminal defense begins with understanding what the evidence proves—and what it does not.
From there, we develop a legal strategy tailored to the facts, the law, and the individual client.
The strategy depends on the case. The commitment does not.
Securities fraud generally involves allegations that a person knowingly used false statements, material omissions, deceptive conduct, manipulation, or confidential information in connection with the offer, purchase, sale, or trading of securities or other investments.
Federal prosecutors may pursue securities fraud under several statutes, including 18 U.S.C. § 1348 and provisions of the federal securities laws addressing manipulative or deceptive conduct. The precise elements depend on the statute and theory charged.
Securities fraud allegations may arise from:
Not every investment loss, unsuccessful business venture, disputed valuation, inaccurate projection, or regulatory violation constitutes criminal securities fraud. The government must prove the required criminal intent and each element of the charged offense beyond a reasonable doubt.
Securities fraud investigations may begin through investor complaints, regulatory examinations, suspicious trading activity, whistleblower allegations, internal company disputes, audits, civil litigation, unusual market activity, or investigations into related financial conduct.
Investigators and regulators may seek:
Federal investigations may involve the Securities and Exchange Commission, the Department of Justice, the Federal Bureau of Investigation, or other agencies and regulators connected to the allegations. The SEC conducts civil enforcement investigations, while criminal prosecutions are brought by the Department of Justice.
Early legal guidance can be important before responding to regulators, producing records, participating in testimony or interviews, or attempting to explain disputed investment activity.
Securities fraud allegations may lead to federal criminal charges, Pennsylvania criminal charges, civil enforcement proceedings, regulatory action, industry discipline, or private litigation. These proceedings may occur at the same time and may involve overlapping records, testimony, and factual allegations.
Parallel proceedings create significant strategic issues. Information provided in a regulatory examination, civil deposition, administrative response, or industry inquiry may later be reviewed by criminal investigators or prosecutors.
The defense strategy should account for the possible interaction among criminal, civil, regulatory, employment, licensing, and financial consequences.
The elements depend on the offense charged. Under 18 U.S.C. § 1348, federal prosecutors may allege that a person knowingly executed or attempted to execute a scheme to defraud another person in connection with certain securities or to obtain money or property through false or fraudulent representations connected to the purchase or sale of qualifying securities.
Important issues may include:
Insider-trading allegations commonly focus on whether securities were traded while a person possessed material nonpublic information obtained or used in breach of a fiduciary duty or another relationship of trust and confidence. Such allegations may also involve the communication or “tipping” of information to another person.
Securities fraud prosecutions frequently depend on large volumes of documentary, financial, and electronic evidence. Those materials must be reviewed in context rather than accepted solely through summaries, spreadsheets, trading analyses, selected communications, or expert opinions prepared for the investigation.
Depending on the circumstances, the defense may examine:
The defense must evaluate not only what the records appear to show, but also what they fail to establish. A trading pattern, financial loss, internal disagreement, or optimistic projection does not by itself prove fraud.
The appropriate defense depends on the facts, the available evidence, the client’s role, and the stage of the investigation or prosecution.
Potential issues may include:
Every securities fraud case requires careful analysis of the government’s theory, the client’s actual responsibilities, the complete investment record, and the information available when the challenged decisions or statements were made.
A securities fraud conviction may result in imprisonment, fines, restitution, supervised release, forfeiture, and other criminal penalties. Sentencing may be affected by the alleged investor loss, the number of investors, the client’s role, the use of sophisticated means, abuse-of-trust allegations, and other proposed enhancements.
Criminal securities fraud under 18 U.S.C. § 1348 carries a statutory maximum penalty of up to 25 years of imprisonment. The sentence actually imposed depends on the offense of conviction, the facts, the Federal Sentencing Guidelines, and the statutory sentencing factors.
Securities fraud allegations may also affect:
Because criminal, civil, regulatory, and professional consequences may overlap, the defense strategy should consider the full range of risks from the beginning of the investigation.
Securities fraud investigations may involve allegations of other state or federal offenses, including:
The presence of multiple allegations may affect the complexity of the case, the potential sentencing exposure, and the strategy required.
Clients work directly with Amy Jones throughout the representation. Levenson Law Firm intentionally maintains a limited caseload so that each matter receives the time, preparation, and individualized attention serious securities fraud cases require.
We begin by examining the government’s or regulator’s theory, reviewing the available investment, financial, trading, and electronic evidence, identifying legal and factual issues, and understanding the client’s role and objectives.
Depending on the case, representation may include advising a client during an investigation, responding to subpoenas or document demands, preparing for testimony or interviews, communicating with prosecutors and regulators, coordinating with regulatory or industry counsel, challenging evidence, preparing for trial, negotiating an appropriate resolution, or developing a sentencing and mitigation strategy.
No lawyer can honestly promise a particular result. What we can promise is careful preparation, sound professional judgment, candid advice, and individualized representation throughout every stage of the case.
The strategy depends on the case. The commitment does not.