DoL Recovers More than $12M for CA Company ESOP Participants
March 11, 2010 (PLANSPONSOR.com) - The U.S. Department of Labor has
obtained consent judgments providing for restitution of more than $12 million by
plan officials and service providers involved with the employee stock ownership
plan sponsored by The Employee Ownership Holding Co. of Stockton, California, and
Fife, Washington.
The judgments also provide for release of a fund
currently holding more than $11 million, thereby making more money available to
provide benefits to the ESOP’s participants and beneficiaries, according to a
press release. In addition, the
defendants will be barred for at least 10 years from serving in a fiduciary
capacity to plans, and the attorney service providers will be required to comply
with strict requirements in connection with their future involvement with
employee benefit plans.
Under the judgments and a settlement agreement filed in a
related private lawsuit, the settling defendants must pay $8 million in cash
into a settlement fund, pay $800,000 in civil penalties to the federal
government and return property to The Employee Ownership Holding Co. with an
estimated value of $4 million for the benefit of the ESOP and its participants,
the announcement said.
In 2008, the DoL sued the firm's board of directors, ESOP
trustees, attorney, certified public accountant, and valuation adviser,
alleging that the defendants imprudently used ESOP assets to purchase company
stock from President and Chief Executive Officer Clair R. Couturier Jr. at an
inflated price, and engaged in transactions that caused millions of dollars of
harm to the ESOP and its participants, while enriching themselves (see CA Firm Charged with Misusing ESOP Assets).
In addition to $26
million in cash, in exchange for the stock, Couturier received a $5.5 million
property in Palm Desert, California, $2.7 million in cash to pay taxes on that
property, a $200,000 car, and a country club membership.
PLANSPONSOR staff
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