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Judge Rejects New SEC Claims against BofA
The lawsuit over bonuses paid to Merrill Lynch executives is set for trial on March 1.
U.S.
District Judge Jed Rakoff said yesterday the SEC must file a separate
lawsuit in order to pursue the claims that BofA failed to disclose
“extraordinary losses” by Merrill Lynch in the weeks before
shareholders voted on the deal in 2008, according to the news report.
Rakoff
said “there is no impediment” to the SEC filing the new claims in a
second case, and that a trial date could be set as early as this
summer, Bloomberg reported. SEC spokesman John Nester said the
Commission intends to promptly file the new allegations.
Merrill
Lynch was acquired by Bank of America January 1, 2009, in a deal that
has been under scrutiny by both the SEC and the New York Attorney
General’s office (see SEC BofA Probe Getting Wider).
The SEC recently filed its second amended complaint
against the bank. The complaint, made public yesterday, alleges that
BofA learned prior to the December 5, 2008, shareholder meeting vote
that Merrill Lynch experienced a net loss of $4.5 billion in October
and estimated that it had experienced billions of dollars of additional
losses in November.
According to the complaint, the actual and
estimated losses together represented approximately one-third of the
value of the merger at the time of the shareholder meeting and more
than 60% of the aggregate losses Merrill Lynch sustained in the
preceding three quarters combined.
“Bank of America’s failure
to disclose this information violated its undertaking to update
shareholders concerning fundamental changes to previously disclosed
information, and rendered its prior disclosures materially false and
misleading,” the SEC said.
The case is Securities and Exchange Commission v. Bank of America Corp., 09-cv-06829, U.S. District Court, Southern District of New York.
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