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Massachusetts Securities Regulators Have Sued Securities America, Inc.

Posted by: Jeffrey B. Kaplan
January 26, 2010
Topic: Medical Capital Investment Fraud

On January 26, 2010, the Enforcement Section of the Massachusetts Securities Division of the Office of the Secretary of the Commonwealth ("Massachusetts Regulators") sued Securities America, Inc., accusing the brokerage firm of committing securities fraud on a massive scale in course of recommending and selling Medical Capital notes. Specifically, Securities America sold approximately $697 million in promissory notes that were issued by entities wholly owned by Medical Capital Holdings, Inc. ("Medical Capital"). Unfortunately for Securities America's customers and other investors, the notes were part of an alleged Ponzi scheme. Medical Capital has defaulted on more than $1 billion of the notes that it issued, and Securities America sold $358 million of those defaulted notes. The United States Securities and Exchange Commission ("SEC") sued Medical Capital several months ago, alleging that Medical Capital was a massive investment fraud, and Medical Capital now lies in an SEC receivership and is the subject of various injunctions and asset-freeze orders.

Similar to at least two nation-wide class-action lawsuits and dozens of FINRA securities arbitration claims that have been filed against Securities America, the Massachusetts lawsuit alleges that Securities America failed to conduct proper due diligence of Medical Capital or ignored red flags or which it was aware and then committed numerous material omissions and made misleading statements when it sold Medical Capital notes to investors. In other words, Securities America is accused of failing to disclose numerous red flags, warning signs, and material risks to investors. Securities America also is accused of ignoring repeated pleas by its own President and by a third-party due diligence vendor to make certain risk disclosures to investors.

Medical Capital claimed to provide financing to healthcare providers by purchasing the providers' accounts receivables and making loans to those providers. The accounts receivables then allegedly were packaged into notes and sold through private placements to investors. Approximately 20,000 investors purchased $2.2 billion in Medical Capital investments, including hundreds or thousands of Securities America customers. Securities America had approved the Medical Capital notes for sale by its brokers to Securities America customers.

Dimond Kaplan & Rothstein, P.A. represents numerous Medical Capital investors who have lost tens of millions of dollars. If you suffered Medical Capital investment losses, please contact attorney Jeffrey B. Kaplan of Dimond Kaplan & Rothstein, P.A. at (888) 578-6255 or jkaplan@dkrpa.com for a free case evaluation.


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