Featured

Former State Street executive faces U.S. fraud trial

By Godwin Hills

A former executive at State Street Corp (STT.N) is set to face trial on U. S. charges that he participated in a scheme to defraud the bank’s clients.

He did so by charging them secret commissions on billions of dollars in trades.

Jury selection is scheduled to begin on Monday in federal court in Boston in the case of Ross McLellan. McLellan is a former executive vice president at the bank accused of committing securities fraud and wire fraud.

He is one four former employees of the Boston-based bank who have since 2016 faced charges by the U.S. Justice Department.

Their charge is that they engaged in schemes to overcharge institutional clients, allowing State Street to earn millions of dollars.

Two of those former executives – Edward Pennings and Richard Boomgaardt – pleaded guilty last year and are expected to testify at trial, according to court papers.

McLellan, 46, has pleaded not guilty and denies wrongdoing.

The case followed a 2014 settlement between State Street and the UK Financial Conduct Authority.

In this case the bank paid a fine of 22.9 million pounds, or 38 million dollars at the time, for charging six clients mark-ups on certain transactions.

In January 2017, State Street agreed to pay 64.6 million dollars to resolve related U.S. criminal and civil investigations and entered into a deferred prosecution agreement.

According to prosecutors, McLellan, Pennings, Boomgaardt and others from 2010 to 2011 conspired to add the secret commissions for trades performed for the six clients,  utilising bank’s “transition management” business.

That service helps large institutional clients like pension funds move their investments.

They move their investments between and among asset managers or liquidate large investment portfolios with the objective of minimising the costs of transitioning the investments.

The six clients included a Middle Eastern sovereign wealth fund and Irish and British government pension funds, according to court papers.

Prosecutors say that McLellan also participated in a separate scheme to apply hidden fees to fixed-income trades conducted for funds advised by a New York-based insurer, resulting in about 700,000 dollars in overcharges.

Related posts

Railway: We `ll no longer treat roof top riding with levity- NRC

By Meletus EZE

Medical Technology: Govt. to partner specialized institutions 

Charles Okonji 

AFRICA on difficult road to recovery –IMF

Our Reporter

Yuletide: NMDPRA promises stable fuel supply, cautions marketers

Our Reporter

Kidnappers Release Ex-minister, Isaac Adewole’s Son

By Aliyu DANLADI

FIFA dishes out to clubs $209m from 2018 World Cup earnings

Editor