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DS News April 2017

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35 ยป VISIT US ONLINE @ DSNEWS.COM SEC DROPS CASE AGAINST FORMER THORNBURG EXECS e U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) dropped its case against two former executives of now-shuttered ornburg Mortgage in early February, ending a lawsuit brought in the aftermath of the recession. In papers filed in federal court in Albuquerque, New Mexico, the SEC said it would no longer pursue its civil case against former ornburg CEO Larry Goldstone and former CFO Clarence Simmons, which had been set for a retrial on February 21. e SEC's lawsuit, filed in 2012, accused Goldstone, Simmons, and former ornburg Chief Accounting Officer Jane Starrett of hiding the company's fast-deteriorating financial condition at the onset of the financial crisis. At the time, the SEC claimed that Goldstone and Simmons defrauded investors by overstating ornburg's income by more than $400 million and falsely reporting a profit rather than a loss for the fourth quarter in its 2007 annual report. e SEC, though, dropped that claim in September following the initial trial. A jury returned a mixed verdict last July in the initial trial, and the decision to drop the case represents a setback for the agency's efforts to hold executives accountable for the U.S. housing meltdown and financial crisis. e jury found Goldstone and Simmons not liable on five of 10 counts while deadlocking on the other claims. e SEC later in September dropped three remaining claims and said it would no longer pursue what the defense called its central allegation. Randall Lee, a lawyer for Goldstone and Simmons, said his clients were "thrilled" to have been cleared of the charges. "We always believed that the evidence in this case demonstrated that our clients had acted in good faith in attempting to navigate through the early stages of the financial crisis," Lee said in a statement. ornburg, which specialized in making jumbo home loans larger than $417,000 to borrowers with good credit, filed for bankruptcy in May 2009 amid the U.S. financial crisis. Goldstone continued to face a claim based on statements he made after ornburg's annual report was filed. Both Goldstone and Simmons also faced a claim that they misrepresented or omitted facts to the company's auditors. ey denied wrongdoing. Starrett agreed in May to pay $25,000 to settle the lawsuit without admitting or denying the allegations.

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