Compliance
Former President Of California-Based Investment Firm Charged With Fraud By SEC

The Securities and Exchange
Commission has charged the former president of a
purported private equity real estate firm based in San
Bernardino, CA,
with defrauding some 500 investors.
The SEC alleges that investors purchased promissory notes under
the false
premise that they were secured by specific properties or other
collateral.
According to a statement yesterday from the US authority, Larry
Polhill used
his firm, American Pacific Financial Corporation, to buy and sell
real estate
and distressed assets.
He offered investors the opportunity to invest in the company
through
unregistered notes that would yield them interest payments of 5
to 17 per cent
per year.
“However, the collateral that Polhill and APFC claimed made the
investments
secure was often non-existent or otherwise impaired. The
properties
underlying the investments were sometimes even sold without
notice to
investors. When APFC eventually filed for bankruptcy, it
named the investors
as unsecured creditors who were owed nearly $160 million.
None of
Polhill’s investment offerings were registered with the SEC,” the
authority
said.
Investors could also invest in APFC-sponsored funds that pooled
investor
money to make loans to the firm. The company’s investor base grew
as a result and
it began making larger investments in distressed assets by buying
numerous
companies out of bankruptcy.
But while some investments were successful, the “vast majority
failed
unbeknownst to investors,” the SEC said.
Polhill has agreed to settle the SEC’s charges and be barred from
acting as
the officer or director of any public company.
The settlement is, howeber, subject to the approval of the US
District Court
for the Central District of California.