Stanford employee raised concerns with regulators in 2003

While R. Allen Stanford's investors were swallowing claims of vast returns on safe investments, some of his employees weren't so sure.
FEB 20, 2009
By  Bloomberg
While R. Allen Stanford's investors were swallowing claims of vast returns on safe investments, some of his employees weren't so sure. And though one of them tried as early as 2003 to pass on to regulators his concerns about the bank, nothing came of it until Stanford's operations were raided and shut down Tuesday. The Texas billionaire with a reputation for jet-setting and lavish spending faces civil charges for allegedly lying about his investment strategy. But in 2003, when his offshore banking empire was exploding in size, even asking managers one question too many could get you fired, Miami broker Charles Hazlett said. Mr. Hazlett was a top performer at Stanford's bank, having sold $10 million in certificates of deposit in a single quarter of 2002. The company rewarded him with a new BMW. But when a client asked Mr. Hazlett for details about the investments, no one at the bank would give him even basic information about risk ratings and asset allocation, he said in an interview. Eventually, Mr. Hazlett said, he called a meeting with a top officer of the bank to ask how the investments worked. Instead of answers, he got an ultimatum: Resign or be fired. "I kind of peaked when I won the car and was doing great, but as soon as I started questioning things at the bank, they were setting up to let me go," Mr. Hazlett said. It wasn't just promises to investors of earning twice the normal rates on certificates of deposit that fed his suspicions, Mr. Hazlett said. The company also lacked detailed balance sheets. And it used a small and little-known accounting firm. The Securities and Exchange Commission has been criticized for missing the same red flag — a tiny accounting firm — when investigating Bernard Madoff, who allegedly ran a $50 billion Ponzi scheme for years despite the SEC's receiving numerous tips about him. Mr. Hazlett said he repeated his concerns during an arbitration hearing over his departure from Stanford and believed regulators would follow up on them. "I figured it was a matter of time before people figured things out," he said. But Mr. Hazlett said he never called officials directly because he didn't have any proof of wrongdoing — just a sense of being stonewalled. It turned out Mr. Hazlett wasn't the only employee who wanted to know more about Stanford's portfolio. Even the man responsible for selling multimillion dollar CDs and overseeing the bank's investments said he was rebuffed when he asked where the money was, court records show. Michael Zarich, the company's senior investment officer, told authorities he didn't know where 90 percent of Stanford's portfolio was invested. Mr. Zarich said he was trained to deflect questions about the investment strategy while pitching to wealthy clients in Antigua, where the bank chartered. His tutor on the evasive pitch was Stanford chief financial officer Laura Pendergest-Holt, Mr. Zarich said. He said she laid out the strategy in a series of training sessions in Memphis in 2005, according to court documents. "I was trained not to divulge too much information, but it just wouldn't leave an investor with a lot of confidence," he said in a Feb. 4 meeting with SEC lawyers. Clients would "just push, push, push," he told the lawyers. "'Give me an actual security. Give me something,'" he said they demanded. But when he tried to learn how the money was invested, Ms. Pendergest-Holt and Stanford's deputy James Davis turned him away, Mr. Zarich said. Ms. Pendergest-Holt and Davis are among those charged in the civil complaint. Another lower-level employee in Texas said he and his colleagues were suspicious of the company's rapid growth and web of overseas ties. He spoke on condition of anonymity because he still works in the industry. In fact, the only two people who knew where the money was were Mr. Stanford and Mr. Davis, Stanford's former college roommate, the SEC alleged in a civil complaint filed Tuesday. Mr. Zarich said Ms. Pendergest-Holt also armed him with answers for potential investors worried about the size of Stanford's tiny, Antigua-based auditor. Mr. Zarich assured investors that CAS Hewlett had been working with Mr. Stanford and his father since 25 years earlier, when major accounting firms "wouldn't even give Stanford the time of day." If that didn't work, he said, he told clients that using a name-brand firm "would erode the yields." Mr. Zarich is cooperating with the investigation, his lawyer said in a statement. An SEC spokesman would not elaborate on the agency's initial announcement about the case. In his training sessions with Ms. Pendergest-Holt, Mr.Zarich said, he learned how answer the "typical question" of whether Allen Stanford could run off with their money. "The answer was it would be extremely difficult," Mr. Zarich told investigators. As investigators closed in on him last month, Mr. Stanford finally had no choice but to address former employees' concerns. Complaints from "former disgruntled employees" had complicated an "otherwise routine investigation," he wrote in an internal e-mail. Mr. Hazlett said he knew better. After Mr. Madoff's arrest in December, he said, "I went around telling people, Stanford is next." Mr. Stanford was found Thursday in Virginia, where FBI agents acting at the SEC's behest served him with legal documents. He was not arrested and has not been charged with any crime, though federal agents continue to investigate the case.

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