Brian Monieson was a major figure in the commodity futures industry. As chairman of the Chicago Mercantile Exchange from 1983 to 1985 and founder, chairman of the board, and majority stockholder of GNP Commodities, a sizeable futures commission merchant, he wielded great influence and shouldered tremendous responsibility. In 1988 the Commodity Futures Trading Commission (CFTC) issued a complaint against Monieson, GNP, and two associated persons of GNP, Norman Furlett and Ira Greenspon. The latter two were charged with, among other things, fraudulently allocating customer trades in violation of Section 4b(A) of the Commodity Exchange Act (CEA). 7 U.S.C. § 6b(A). The complaint also charged GNP with derivative liability for Furlett and Greenspon’s activity under 7 U.S.C. § 2, as well as recordkeeping • violations, non-competitive trading, and a failure to supervise the traders under Commission Rule 166.3. 17 C.F.R. § 166.3. Most important for this case, the complaint charged Monieson with liability as a “controlling person” of Furlett and Green-spon under Section 13(b) of the CEA, 7 U.S.C. § 13c(b), and with failure to supervise under Rule 166.3.
After a hearing an Administrative Law Judge (ALJ) found all of the defendants guilty on all charges, imposing penalties and fines on each. The judge revoked Monie-son’s registration as a floor broker, permanently banned him from trading on any contract market, and levied a civil monetary penalty of $500,000 against him. The CFTC affirmed on appeal, though it reduced Monie-son’s lifetime trading ban to two years. Mo-nieson now appeals, 1 contesting both his liability and the sanctions.
I. BACKGROUND
A. Facts
The first task in this complicated case is to define the cast of characters. First, of course, is Monieson, who founded GNP in 1973. At the time of the activity under scrutiny he owned a majority of the company’s stock and served as chairman of the board. He was also regularly involved in the daily operation of GNP. For example, he made the decisions to hire both Furlett and
Next come Furlett and Greenspon. In 1983 GNP established a retail sales division, and Monieson hired Norman Furlett, a longtime friend, to head the division. Monieson hired Greenspon for the retail division in 1985. Both Furlett and Greenspon maintained personal trading accounts at GNP, as well as trading in a joint account and, of course, trading on behalf of customers.
At the same time it established the retail division, GNP established a compliance department to insure that the company and its employees abided by applicable rules. James Schlifke, an attorney, served as part-time compliance counsel in 1983 and 1984, became full-time in 1985, and in 1986 became GNP’s general counsel.
Kathryn Haun, a veteran GNP employee, became part of the compliance department in 1985. Haun established compliance procedures for GNP brokers and reviewed daily trading activity. She also assembled a chart depicting the results of her investigation of trades made by Furlett and Greenspon between February 3-14, 1986.
Closest to Monieson in the GNP structure were Fred Arditti and Donald Breitfelder. Arditti became president of GNP in early 1985. Breitfelder was GNP’s executive vice president from 1981 to March 1986. At all relevant times the compliance department reported to either Breitfelder or Arditti, who in turn reported to Monieson.
Other individuals important to this case are Roger Walter, Furlett’s personal clerk; Barbara Fiore, one of Greenspon’s clerks; and Paul Gelman, a trader at GNP who told Monieson of his suspicions concerning Fur-lett’s trading.
We now move to a brief summary of the facts, as found by the ALJ and adopted by the Commission. 2 Since Monieson is the only appellant in this case, this opinion concentrates on the facts and testimony most relevant to the charges against him.
In January 1986 Furlett’s clerk, Roger Walter, told general counsel Schlifke that both Furlett and Greenspon were placing orders to the trading floor without account numbers and later allocating winning trades to their own accounts and losing trades to customer accounts. In traders’ parlance, that practice is known as “bucketing” trades. In February Greenspon’s former clerk, Barbara Fiore, also told Schlifke that the traders were bucketing trades. Later that month Schlifke told Monieson about his conversations with Walter and Fiore, but Monieson concluded that those two were not very reputable; Fiore had been fired and Walter had been convicted of a felony in 1982, and therefore Monieson did not act on the allegations.
GNP president Arditti was aware of the problem with Furlett and Greenspon both from what Schlifke had told him and from Kathryn Haun of the compliance department, who told him that she suspected illegal trading. Haun said that she had already told Monieson about her suspicions, but he was not convinced. When Arditti discussed Haun’s allegations with Monieson, the latter said that they were probably caused by a commission dispute between Haun and Fur-lett, and that he should stay out of it. This was similar to what had happened in January when Paul Gelman, another trader involved in a commission dispute with Furlett, told Monieson that he thought Furlett and Green-spon were bucketing trades. Believing that Gelman, who had no hard evidence of misconduct, was simply trying to gain leverage in his commission dispute, Monieson disregarded the charges.
Later in February, Schlifke and Arditti discussed the possible problems in Furlett’s
In May 1986 Furlett’s clerk, Roger Walter, testified about Furlett’s trading before the Chicago Mercantile Exchange. Afterward, Monieson called Walter into his office and asked if Furlett and Greenspon had been stealing. Walter said yes. Monieson then asked if they were still stealing, and Walter answered no. Monieson testified that he told Walter, “You’ve got to tell the truth, but you’re playing with people’s lives and you have to be very careful what you say.” Tr. 768. Walter, however, remembered Monie-son adding another, more ominous sentiment: “Pm not telling you to lie, but it’s okay to say you don’t remember.” Tr. 139.
Despite his dismissal of the numerous allegations, Monieson acknowledged that he knew there was a real problem with Furlett and Greenspon in May. He reacted, however, not by ordering any further investigation or taking action against the two traders, but by “[trying] to let that play out and disasso-date myself from a very, very close person [Furlett].” Tr. 769. He did so based on assurances — presumably Walter’s statement, or from Furlett himself, who spoke with Mo-nieson after Walter left the office — that the stealing had stopped. Tr. 768. Monieson allowed the two traders to stay at the firm until October 1986. At that time they left GNP and, with the help of Monieson’s attorney, started a new introducing brokerage called Comwest, which was guaranteed by GNP.
B. Prior Proceedings
1. The ALJ’s Initial Decision
The case was presented to the ALJ during a two-week hearing in November of 1989. As relevant to this appeal, the CFTC alleged that: (1) At various times between September 1984 and May 1986, Furlett placed orders to the floor at the Chicago Board of Trade and the Chicago Mercantile Exchange without proper account identification, and later fraudulently allocated the trades by placing losing trades in customer accounts and winning trades in personal accounts or the accounts of friends; (2) Between January and May 1986, Greenspon also placed orders without proper account identification and fraudulently allocated losing trades to customer accounts and winning trades to personal accounts or the accounts of friends; (3) Monieson was a controlling person of Furlett and Greenspon and did not act in good faith to prevent their violations, meaning he was hable to the same extent as the two traders; and (4) Monieson failed to supervise Furlett and Greenspon diligently.
After hearing testimony from several GNP employees regarding Furlett and Green-spon’s placement of orders and allocation of trades, and after reviewing records of their
The allocation occurred when Greenspon or Furlett would receive a fill on an order that had been placed without proper account identification. If the fill turned out to be one that was profitable, it often would be placed in one of Greenspon’s or Furlett’s accounts or in an account of one of their friends. If the fill turned out to be unprofitable, it often would be placed in the account of a customer.
Id. The ALJ rejected the traders’ argument that no fraud could have occurred because all of the trades were authorized by customers. Fraud could occur even with authorized trades, the ALJ reasoned, because even though the customer received a fill for the order, the fill may not have come from the trade he requested, but rather may have been switched with a more profitable fill that Furlett or Greenspon misappropriated for themselves.
Next the ALJ discussed Monieson’s liability as a controlling person under Section 13(b) of the Commodities Exchange Act. 7 U.S.C. § 13e(b). Based on testimony from Schlifke, Arditti, Gelman, Walter, and Woods (a GNP clerk) that they believed that Furlett and Greenspon were placing orders without proper account identification, and that Monieson had known of this and done nothing to stop it, the ALJ found that Monieson had acted in bad faith and was therefore liable. Id. at 37,073-74.
The ALJ relied on the same testimony to find that Monieson had not fulfilled his duty to supervise Furlett and Greenspon diligently as required by CFTC Rule 166.3. Monié-son argued that he did not have supervisory responsibility because he was chairman of the board and was only responsible for setting general firm policy, but the ALJ disagreed. Rather, the judge credited the testimony of Arditti, Schlifke, and Breitfelder that Monieson was an active participant in the daily operation of GNP, and that they often sought his approval of routine decisions.
Having found liability, the ALJ proceeded to impose sanctions. Finding the violations to be extremely serious, the judge revoked Monieson’s registration as a floor broker and banned him from all future trading, stating that “he' is hereafter prohibited from trading on or subject to the rules of any contract market.” Id. at 37,079. The ALJ also ordered Monieson to cease and desist from further violations of the CEA and to pay a civil penalty of $500,000 — the same fine imposed on GNP itself.
2. CFTC Decision
On appeal the CFTC affirmed the ALJ’s conclusion that Furlett and Greenspon had bucketed trades. The Commission held that the Division of Enforcement had made, a prima facie case and that Furlett and Green-spon had not met their burden of producing an exculpatory explanation for their conduct. It also had “no doubt’” that Monieson was a controlling person of Furlett and Greenspon, and agreed with the ALJ that he had acted in bad faith by ignoring warnings from several employees regarding the misallocation of trades. On the question of supervisory liability, the CFTC held that Monieson exercised close control of GNP: the president and vice president reported directly to him, he settled commission disputes, and he made decisions regarding expenses for traders and the limits for certain kinds of trading. Once it concluded that Monieson had supervisory duties, the CFTC had no question that he had failed to supervise the traders diligently.
Reviewing the sanctions, the CFTC began by noting that Monieson was presumptively unfit for registration because, under Section 13(b), he was liable to the same extent as Furlett and Greenspon, who were clearly unfit for registration. Since Monieson did not rebut the presumption with evidence of mitigation or rehabilitation, the Commission concluded that he was properly removed from his position of public trust.
In the Matter of GNP Commodities, Inc.,
[1990-92
Next came the trading prohibition, which is appropriate only where “a nexus exists between respondent’s violations and the integrity of the futures market.” Id. at 39,222. Because the violations here were trading-related and involved proprietary house and customer accounts, the Commission found that some sanction was in order. Yet, since lifetime trading bans are rarely, appropriate, it reduced the prohibition to two years.
Finally, the Commission held that the $500,000 fines imposed on both GNP and Monieson were appropriate because the violations were “intentional and egregious” and because penalties must be sufficient to vindicate the important public policies underlying the CEA and CFTC rules. Id. at 39,223. It also upheld the cease and desist order.
II. DISCUSSION
We preface our analysis of the legal issues by setting out the standard of review. Factual determinations made by the Commission are upheld if supported by the weight of the evidence.
Gimbel v. CFTC,
A. Controlling Person Liability Under Section 13(b)
Monieson was found liable under Section 13(b) of the CEA, 7 U.S.C. § 13c(b), which provides as follows:
Any person who, directly or indirectly, controls any person who has violated any provision of this chapter may be held liable for such violation in any action brought by the Commission to the same extent as such controlled person. In such action, the Commission has the burden of proving that the controlling person did not act in good faith or knowingly induced, directly or indirectly, the act or acts constituting the violation.
This statute is patterned on similar provisions in the securities laws, 15 U.S.C. § 77o and 78t(a), the primary difference being that in securities cases the defendant must prove good faith, whereas under the CEA the Division of Enforcement has the burden of proving lack of good faith. See
Donohoe v. Consolidated Operating & Production Corp.,
Monieson challenges his liability under Section 13(b) in three ways. First, he asserts that the statute was only meant to apply in cases where the corporation was a “dummy” or “alter ego” that a defendant set up to shield himself from liability. The very purpose of the statute, he maintains, was to allow the CFTC to pierce the veil of such dummy corporations and reach the individual wrongdoer. See
In the Matter of Apache Trading Corp.,
[1990-1992 Transfer Binder] Comm.Fut.L.Rep. (CCH) ¶ 25,251 at 38,794 (CFTC March 11, 1992);
In the Matter of
1. Alter Ego
The CFTC responds to Monieson’s first argument by acknowledging that one purpose of Section 13(b) is to pierce the corporate veil to get at the individuals controlling the corporation. See Apache Trading, supra, at 38,794. It balks, however, at any suggestion that the statute may only apply in cases where the controlling person is at the helm of a dummy corporation. It correctly points out that the plain language of the Section contains no such restriction, and thus it may not be read so narrowly. In addition, it produces its own slice of legislative history indicating that Congress contemplated that even the chairman of the board of a large conglomerate could be liable under Section 13(b). H.R.Rep. No. 565, Part I, 97th Cong., 2d Sess. 142 (1982), reprinted in 1982 U.S.C.C.A.N. 3871, 3991.
Further, Section 13(b) speaks of controlling a “person,” not a corporation or firm. As used in the CEA the word “person” is “construed to import the plural or singular, and shall include individuals, associations, partnerships, corporations, and trusts.” 7 U.S.C. § 2. If Congress wanted to limit Section 13(b) to the alter ego situation, it would have been more specific; as it stands the Section encompasses those who control individuals, regardless of whether they are also using a corporation as an alter ego.
Finally, as this Court recently observed regarding the securities-law counterpart to Section 13(b), such statutes are “remedial, to be construed liberally, and requir[e] only some indirect means of discipline or influence short of actual direction to hold a control person liable.”
Harrison v. Dean Witter Reynolds, Inc.,
2. Controlling Person
As noted above, Section 13(b) is modelled on the controlling person provisions of securities law. Further, when interpreting Section 13(b) the CFTC has adopted the Securities Exchange Commission’s definition of “control” as “the possession, direct or indirect, of the power to direct or cause the direction of the management and policies of a person, whether through the ownership of voting securities, by contract, or otherwise.” Spiegel, supra, at 34,765 n. 4, quoting 17 C.F.R. § 230.405(f). Consequently, interpretations of the securities statute are relevant to interpreting Section 13(b). This Court recently outlined a two-prong test for a controlling person under that statute.
The court will first look to whether the alleged control person actually exercised general control over the operation of the entity principally liable. Control person liability will attach if such a person possessed the power or ability to control the specific transaction or activity upon which the primary violation was predicated, even if such power was not exercised.
Donohoe,
The next question is whether he had “the power or ability to control the specific transaction or activity upon which the primary violation was predicated.” Here that activity was Furlett and Greenspon’s placement of orders without account numbers and misallo-cation of trades. We emphasize that it is Monieson’s power that matters, not whether he exercised it by actually participating in or benefitting from the illegal acts. See
Harrison,
3. Lack of Good Faith
To make Monieson liable as a controlling person, the Division of Enforcement also had to prove that he acted with a lack of good faith or that he knowingly induced the acts constituting the violation. 7 U.S.C. § 13c(b). The CFTC found that Monieson failed to act in good faith because he did not respond adequately to the warnings of several employees about Furlett and Greenspon’s improper trading. Monieson argues that this finding essentially exposes him to strict liability: he relied on the results of the internal investigation, which he personally reviewed and found to be inconclusive. This may have been bad judgment, he says, but it surely does not amount to bad faith, and therefore he should not be held hable. Moreover, he notes that the CFTC’s own Division of Enforcement investigated Furlett and Green-spon’s trading over the same period covered by the internal investigation and, like him, found the evidence insufficient to justify any action against the traders. If the CFTC itself found the evidence inconclusive, Monie-son asks, why should he be penalized for thinking the same thing?
A controlling person acts in bad faith if he “ ‘did not maintain a reasonably adequate system of internal supervision and control over the [employee] or did not enforce with any reasonable diligence such system.’ ”
Harrison,
For beginners, Monieson never took any solid step toward investigating the many warnings he received about Furlett and Greenspon. Allegations that someone is mis-allocating trades are serious business, and Monieson, who consistently addressed the day-to-day affairs of GNP, ought to have done more than dismiss the complainants as lacking credibility. He also ought to have
Monieson also could have ordered an expanded in-house investigation in February, when he saw that the chart did not completely exculpate the traders, or in May, when by his own admission he knew there was a significant problem. Such an investigation could have either confirmed or dispelled the rumors once and for all. As it happened, Monieson left things in the air. Controlling persons cannot deliberately or. recklessly avoid obtaining knowledge about potential wrongdoing. See
Donohoe,
We recognize that the scope of the duty to enforce a system of supervision might vary with the controlling person’s position. As chairman of the board, Monieson probably had less information about daily affairs at GNP than a front-line supervisor.' He therefore had more of a right to rely on the recommendations of subordinates and to base decisions on the information presented to him, rather than personally investigating each complaint. In this ease Arditti (and the Division of Enforcement) agreed with Monie-son that the evidence of Furlett and Gréen-spon’s trades in early February 1986 was inconclusive, while Schlifke disagreed. Is Monieson thus being penalized because, in hindsight, he took the wrong person’s recommendation? No. While the chart compiled by Haun depicted trading in early February .1986, Monieson received complaints from Walter,, Gelman, and Haun before that time, but dismissed them as being incredible or malicious. Further, while the CFTC considered the trading results from early February to be insufficient to prosecute, it did not give up its investigation and move along. If it had this case would never have been tried. Just as the CFTC found the trading activity suspicious enough to merit further investigation, so should Monieson have continued to monitor Furlett and Greenspon. When there aré repeated charges of illegal behavior from different sources, a controlling person has a duty to act; he cannot simply avoid addressing the issue and hope it goes away. We therefore conclude that the weight of the evidence supports the CFTC’s finding of liability under Section 13(b).
B. Liability for Failure to Supervise Under CFTC Rule 166.8
-.Monieson was also held liable for failing to supervise Furlett and Greenspon diligently as required by CFTC Rule 166.3, 17 C.F.R. § 166.3, which provides:
Each Commission registrant, except an associated person who has no supervisory duties, must diligently supervise the handling by its partners, officers, employees and agents ... of all commodity interest accounts carried, operated, advised, or introduced by the registrant and all other activities of its partners, officers, employees and agents ... relating to its business as a Commission registrant.
We disagree. Although it may be atypical for a board chairman to have supervisory responsibility, the actions of an individual are more important than his title. In this case Monieson supervised Arditti and Breitfelder, who reported directly to him. He also settled commission disputes and reviewed the internal investigation of Furlett and Green-spon. He was the top link in the supervisory chain, not a disconnected director.
Having concluded that Monieson can be, and was, a supervisor, the only question is whether he lacked diligence in overseeing Furlett and Greenspon. Our discussion of his good faith as a controlling person provides the answer: Monieson did not supervise diligently when he dismissed complaints out of hand and never got around to ordering a thorough in-house investigation or- any other action, even when he knew the gravity of the situation. We therefore affirm the CFTC’s holding.
C. Sanctions
Monieson maintains that even if he is liable for the charged offenses, the sanctions against him are excessive. Sanctions in CFTC enforcement proceedings should be determined with regard to the gravity of the offense and the need for deterrence. 7 U.S.C. § 13a. When monetary penalties are levied, the Commission will also consider the defendant’s net worth. 7 U.S.C. § 9a. In arriving at a specific sanction or combination of sanctions, the Commission will consider “the nature of the violations, the existence of any injuries inflicted on others by reason of these violations, and a review of the sanctions imposed in the past for similar violations.” In the Matter of The Siegel Trading Co., [1977-1980 Transfer Binder] Comm. FutL.Rep. (CCH) ¶ 20,452 at 21,847 (CFTC July 26, 1977).
If an administrative agency chooses a sanction that falls within statutory limits, review is highly deferential.
[I]f the order of an administrative agency finding a violation of a statutory provision is valid and the penalty fixed for the violation is within the limits of the statute the agency has made an allowable judgment in its choice of remedy and ordinarily the Court of Appeals has no right to change the penalty because the agency might have imposed a different penalty.
G.H. Miller & Co. v. United States,
1. Trading Ban
The ALJ banned Monieson from trading on any contract market for life, even though the Division of Enforcement had not asked for any ban at all. The Commission then reduced the prohibition to two years, noting that some restriction was called for but that lifetime bans were rarely appropriate. According to the Commission some trading ban was justified because there was a nexus between Monieson’s wrongdoing and the integrity of the futures market. This “nexus” requirement comes from
In the Matter of Incomco, Inc.,
[1990-1992 Transfer Binder] Comm.Fut.L.Rep. (CCH) ¶ 25,198 at 38,537 (CFTC Dec. 30, 1991), where the Commission wrote that “[a] trading prohibition is a remedial sanction imposed to protect the futures markets from conduct which inherently threatens their orderly operation.”
Id.
Monieson argues that there was no nex
While this argument has some surface appeal, the CFTC has employed a broader, equally defensible interpretation of what affects the integrity of the futures market, and we will defer to that interpretation. See
Rosenthal & Co. v. CFTC,
Thus a trading ban was justified, leaving only the question of whether a two-year ban is too severe a penalty for Monieson’s acts. In answering that question we keep in mind that administrative agencies are given the discretion to employ sanctions so as “to deter violations and achieve the objectives of the statute.”
Glover Livestock,
2. Revoked Registration
The Commission also revoked Monieson’s registration as a floor broker. Monieson was presumptively unfit for registration because he had violated Section 13(b) of the CEA and Rule 166.3. See
Silverman v. CFTC,
3. $500,000 Civil Penalty
Finally, the Commission imposed a $500,000 penalty on Monieson, equal to the unappealed penalty against GNP itself. Because this was within the statutory range of $100,000 for each violation,
6
7 U.S.C. § 9, we review for a rational relationship to the of
To decide whether the fine here is rationally related to the offense, we look to the three factors listed in Siegel, supra, and cited by the CFTC here. First is the nature of the violations. Monieson’s offenses are serious. Duties are imposed on controlling persons and supervisors to encourage them to weed out illegal activity aggressively, and when this system of self-regulation breaks down, both the integrity of the market and customers suffer. There can be little tolerance for those who do not fulfill their responsibilities if the CFTC wants to keep the commodity futures industry free of corruption. Grave as such violations are, however, the fact is that Monieson did not personally benefit from Furlett and Greenspon’s fraud. His was an act of reckless nonfeasance, not malfeasance. While that is enough for liability, it ought to make a difference when meting out punishment.
The second consideration is the injury caused to others by the violations. Customers lost $180,000 as a result of the scheme here, while Furlett and Greenspon gained $120,000, bringing the total injury to $300,-000. Of course, as the CFTC noted, the harm could actually have been larger (records were not available for all trades made during the life of the scheme) or smaller (customers would have suffered some losing trades no matter what happened), but $300,-000 is the best estimate we have. GNP Commodities, supra, at 39,222-23. Using that figure, it is difficult to fathom how the CFTC saw fit to fine Monieson two-thirds more than the total harm caused by a scheme that he did not devise or profit from. Moreover, it appears that the Commission did not distinguish between Monieson and GNP: it gave them both the same fine and justified its decision by discussing GNP’s offenses, calling them “intentional and egregious,” while never separately discussing Monieson’s culpability. Id. at 39,223. It also based its decision on the exemplary purpose of penalties and the need to inflate the fine in order to compensate for undetected violations. Id. But any undetected violations were GNP’s fault: it was GNP that failed to keep proper records, not Monieson, so that cannot be used against Monieson. Thus there was no basis besides general deterrence for augmenting his fine, and though that is a legitimate factor, it seems slim justification for such a large increase.
The third consideration under
Siegel
is the penalties used in similar cases. Although an agency sanction is “not rendered invalid in a particular ease because it is more severe than sanctions imposed in other cases,”
Glover Livestock,
Neither of these cases involved a fine restricted by the offender’s net worth; rather, the CFTC simply believed that $70,000 was sufficient to punish the offender and dissuade others from similar misconduct. Indeed, a fine like Monieson’s has been reduced even when the defendant violated the CEA “knowingly, repeatedly, and flagrantly, and then attempted to conceal the activity from the Commission.” Incomco, supra, at 38,536. There the Commission reduced a $550,000 fine to $105,000, finding that it more accurately corresponded to the gravity of the offenses, which included conversion of $550,-000 of customer funds and deliberate avoidance of Commission reporting requirements. Id. The CFTC and ALJ, however, did not discuss or distinguish any of these yardstick decisions.
D. Ex Parte Communications
Monieson’s final claim is that the CFTC’s decision is tainted because the ALJ sent a letter to the Commission mentioning the case while the appeal was still pending and because the Commission was under pressure from Congress to intensify its enforcement of the CEA.
ALJ George Painter’s letter to the CFTC expressed his dismay at a proposal by the Chicago Mercantile Exchange to change its rule requiring orders for trades to bear the customer’s account number. Under the proposed rule orders could be placed without account numbers, so long as the accounts were identified by the end of the business day. In the letter Judge Painter worries that the proposed rule would make it easy for brokers to misallocate trades. While explaining his position, he congratulates the Division of Enforcement for its efforts in uncovering the fraud at GNP. An appendix to the letter written by another, but with which Judge Painter expressed his agreement, discussed this case as an example of a situation where requiring order numbers on tickets proved vital in uncovering a fraud.
Monieson believes that the ALJ’s letter contravenes a provision of the Administrative Procedure Act prohibiting ex parte comments on pending eases. See 5 U.S.C. § 557(d)(1)(B). That statute, however, only forbids communication with “any interested person outside the agency.” Id. (emphasis added). Members of the CFTC are certainly inside the agency, and, in any event, the letter was sent to Jean Webb in the CFTC’s Office of the Secretariat. Jean Webb is not a member of the Commission and so was not involved in reviewing the case. In addition, the statements in the letter and appendix did not amplify or add to the record already before the CFTC. Since the letter did not tell the CFTC anything it did not already know, we see no reason to use it as a basis for overturning the decision. We do believe, however, that the comments were gratuitous and ill-advised, and while ALJs certainly ought to feel free to participate in policy debates, they should take care to avoid referring to pending cases.
As to the claim that political pressure forced the Commission’s hand, we note that at least one Circuit has recognized that in extreme cases Congressional interaction with agencies can go too far. “[W]hen an investigation focuses directly and substantially upon the mental decisional processes of a Commission in a case which is pending before it, Congress is no longer intervening in the agency’s legislative function, but rather, in its judicial function.”
Pillsbury v. FTC,
III. CONCLUSION
In sum, we conclude that the weight of the evidence supports the CFTC’s findings that Brian Monieson was a controlling person of Furlett and Greenspon and that he acted with a lack of good faith. The evidence also supports the finding that he failed to dili
Affirmed as Modified.
Notes
. GNP originally joined Monieson in this appeal, but has since voluntarily withdrawn pursuant to Fed.R.App.P. 42(b).
. We review the ALJ’s findings of fact with extra scrutiny in this case because of the judge’s near-wholesale adoption of the CFTC Division of Enforcement's proposed findings of fact. See
Gimbel v. CFTC,
. Arditti could not remember whether he told Monieson of his intention to keep an eye on Furlett and Greenspon's accounts. Tr. 444.
. Monieson disputes that Schlifke recommended firing Furlett and Greenspon in February 1986. He contends that Schlifke did not make the quoted remark until October 1986, immediately after a discussion with a CFTC investigator. That contention lacks support. Although the transcript is unclear on the exact date of the statement, it is plain that Schlifke was reacting to the results of Haun’s investigation, and that he remembered Monieson’s response to the data. Tr. 602 ("I didn't think it [Haun’s chart] was necessarily conclusive, but I thought it was strong enough to warrant their dismissal. [Monieson] did not.”). From these comments it appears that Schlifke told Monieson of his concerns sometime soon after Haun completed the chart in February, not in October.
. Monieson also contends that the CFTC's finding that Furlett and Greenspon misallocated trades is not supported by the record because all of the suspect trades were authorized. In essence this is a challenge to the sufficiency of the evidence. Two administrative bodies, both with intricate knowledge of the workings (and manipulations) of the futures industry, have already examined the evidence and found that trades were misallocated. Because the record supports that decision, we decline the invitation to reweigh the evidence.
. Under Section 13(b) Monieson is responsible for each of Furlett and Greenspon's violations. He does not argue that they violated the CEA fewer than five times.
