SEC Charges Three Sales Agents at StraightPath Venture Partners With Fraud and Unregistered Broker Activity
The Securities and Exchange Commission today charged Scott Hollender,
Gabriel Migliano, Jr. , and Frank Vecchio for selling interests in
shares of pre-IPO companies on behalf of StraightPath Venture Partners
LLC, despite not being registered broker-dealers, and for misleading
investors about the fees associated with those investments. The
Commission previously charged StraightPath Venture Partners,
StraightPath Management LLC, and its four principals in May 2022 in
connection with a $410 million fraud.
The SEC complaint
alleges that, between November 2017 and November 2021, Hollender,
Migliano, and Vecchio actively solicited investments for interests in
funds that were set up as series LLCs, each of which purported to
acquire shares of a single pre-IPO company. The defendants allegedly
provided investors with marketing materials, advised investors on the
supposed merits of the investments, and received transaction-based
compensation, all hallmarks of a broker, despite not being registered
as brokers. As alleged in the complaint, defendants collectively
solicited at least $13 million in investments from at least 115
investors, and, even though each of the defendants received upfront
commissions of approximately 10 percent on investments they
successfully solicited, the defendants falsely told investors that
there were no upfront fees associated with their investments.
According to the complaint, the defendants collectively received at
least approximately $3. 7 million in transaction-based compensation.
“StraightPath Venture Partners could not have cheated
investors without the unregistered sales agents who fraudulently
solicited them,” said Antonia M. Apps, Director of the New York
Regional Office. “The SEC will continue to hold individuals
accountable for their wrongdoing, including a failure to register. ”
The SEC’s complaint, filed in the U. S. District Court for the
Southern District of New York, charges defendants with violating
antifraud and other provisions of the federal securities laws. The
complaint seeks permanent injunctive relief, return of allegedly ill-
gotten gains, and civil penalties. The complaint also names GSH Empire
Inc. and 21st Century Gold & Silver Inc. , entities controlled by
Hollender and Vecchio, respectively, as relief defendants for purposes
of recovering ill-gotten gains that Hollender and Vecchio generated
through their alleged conduct.
The SEC’s ongoing
investigation is being conducted by Megan R. Genet, Tian Wen, Douglas
J. Smith, Lee A. Greenwood, Daniel Loss, Patricia Schrage, Alistaire
Bambach, and Steven G. Rawlings of the New York Regional Office
(NYRO), with assistance from Suman Beros. It is being supervised by
Sheldon L. Pollock. The litigation will be led by Mr. Loss, Ms. Wen,
and Ms. Genet. Assistance was provided by Ronald Krietzman, Michael
McAuliffe, and Stephen DeBella of the NYRO Broker-Dealer and Exchange
Program. The SEC appreciates the assistance of the Financial Industry
Regulatory Authority; the Office of the Montana State Auditor,
Commissioner of Securities and Insurance; and the New Jersey Bureau of
Securities.
Investors can learn more about the risks of
working with unregistered investment professionals by reading such SEC
investor bulletins as 10 Red Flags That An Unregistered Offering May
Be A Scam and Private Placements Under Regulation D.