SEC Charges Silvergate Capital, Former CEO, Alan Lane, for Misleading Investors About Compliance Program
The former Chief Risk Officer and CFO were also charged with misleading investors.
Washington, DC (STL.News) Alan Lane – The Securities and Exchange Commission charged Silvergate Capital Corporation, its former CEO Alan Lane, and former Chief Risk Officer (CRO) Kathleen Fraher with misleading investors about the strength of the Bank Secrecy Act/Anti-Money Laundering (BSA/AML) compliance program and the monitoring of crypto customers, including FTX, by Silvergate’s wholly owned subsidiary, Silvergate Bank. The SEC also charged Silvergate and its former Chief Financial Officer, Antonio Martino, with misleading investors about the company’s losses from expected securities sales following FTX’s collapse. All parties charged, aside from Martino, have agreed to settle the SEC’s charges.
According to the SEC’s complaint, from November 2022 to January 2023, Silvergate, Alan Lane, and Fraher misled investors in stating that Silvergate had an effective BSA/AML compliance program and conducted ongoing monitoring of its high-risk crypto customers, including FTX, in part to rebut public speculation that FTX had used its accounts at Silvergate to facilitate FTX’s misconduct. In reality, Silvergate’s automated transaction monitoring system failed to monitor more than $1 trillion of transactions by its customers on the bank’s payments platform, the Silvergate Exchange Network.
“At all times, but especially during moments of crises, public companies and their officers must speak truthfully to the investing public. Here, we allege that Silvergate, Lane, and Fraher fell not only woefully, but also fraudulently, short in that regard,” said Gurbir S. Grewal, Director of the SEC’s Division of Enforcement. “Rather than coming clean to investors about serious deficiencies in its compliance programs in the wake of the collapse of FTX, one of Silvergate’s largest banking customers, they doubled down in a way that misled investors about the soundness of the programs. In fact, because of those deficiencies, Silvergate allegedly failed to detect nearly $9 billion in suspicious transfers among FTX and its related entities. Silvergate’s stock eventually cratered, wiping out billions in market value for investors.”
The SEC’s complaint also alleges that Silvergate and Martino misrepresented the company’s bleak financial condition during a liquidity crisis and bank run following FTX’s collapse. The complaint alleges that Silvergate and Martino, in an earnings release and earnings call, understated Silvergate’s losses from expected security sales and misrepresented that it remained well-capitalized as of December 31, 2022. In March 2023, Silvergate announced it would wind down its banking operations, and its stock eventually plummeted to near $0.
The SEC’s complaint, filed in the U.S. District Court for the Southern District of New York, charges Silvergate, Lane, and Fraher with negligence-based fraud and charges Silvergate with violating certain reporting, internal accounting controls, and books-and-records provisions.
Without admitting or denying the allegations, Silvergate agreed to a final judgment ordering it to pay a $50 million civil penalty and imposing a permanent injunction to settle the charges. Lane and Fraher also settled the charges without admitting or denying the allegations, agreeing to permanent injunctions, five-year officer-and-director bars, and civil penalties of $1 million and $250,000, respectively. All the settlements are subject to court approval, and Silvergate’s payment may be offset by penalties paid to the Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System (FRB) and/or the California Department of Financial Protection and Innovation (DFPI).
The SEC charged Martino with violating certain of the antifraud and books-and-records provisions of the federal securities laws and aiding and abetting certain of Silvergate’s violations.
In parallel actions, FRB and DFPI today announced settled charges against Silvergate.
The SEC’s investigation was conducted by Elizabeth Goody, Michael Keating, Amy Mayer, Heidi Mitza, Pasha Salimi, Ivan Snyder, Katherine Stella, and Katherine Zucca, with assistance from Leigh Barrett and Margaret McGuire, and supervised by Mark R. Sylvester, Michael Brennan, and Jorge G. Tenreiro of the Crypto Assets and Cyber Unit. The litigation against Martino will be led by Hayden Brockett, Peter Mancuso, and Laura Meehan and supervised by Jack Kaufman and Mr. Tenreiro. The SEC appreciates the assistance of the FRB and DFPI.
SOURCE: SEC