MEMORANDUM OPINION
This civil-enforcement case brought by the Securities and Exchange Commission has at long last rounded the corner from the liability phase to the remedy phase. In 2011, the SEC accused Mary A. Grace, Tamio Saito, e-Smart Technologies, Inc., Intermarket Ventures Inc., and IVI Smart Technologies, Inc., along with several individual brokers, of violating multiple provisions of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 and the Securities Act of 1933 in connection with the unlawful sale of e-Smart securities. In three decisions spanning 2014 and 2015, the Court granted in substantial part the SEC’s Motions for Summary Judgment on the liability of Grace and Saito. Separately, the Clerk entered a default against the three corporate Defendants — e-Smart, Intermarket, *175 and IVI — on account of their failure to obtain counsel and defend against the SEC’s accusations, and the brokers have all settled.
The Commission now moves for specific remedies, seeking permanent injunctive relief — ie., bars on violating the securities laws, serving as officers or directors of publicly traded companies, and participating in penny-stock offerings — disgorgement of all ill-gotten gains (along with prejudgment interest), and civil penalties. It also asks for an opportunity to move for the establishment of a “Fair Fund” if the SEC manages to recoup sufficient assets to warrant distribution back to investors. The Court will grant the Commission’s Motion in part and deny it in part, with instructions to the SEC and Grace to provide supplemental submissions on several issues pertaining to disgorgement and civil remedies.
I. Background
The Court has already set forth detailed background facts in the four decisions leading up to this point.
See SEC v. e-Smart Technologies, Inc. (E-Smart I),
Mary A. Grace and Tamio Saito are the central players in this case. Grace was President, CEO, Chief Financial Officer, and a director of e-Smart Technologies, Inc., a publicly traded company that directed its business activities towards creating and selling “biometric identification verification systems.”
E-Smart II,
In their first misstep, from early 2005 to the end of 2007, Defendants Grace and e-Smart sought investor capital by selling free-trading e-Smart shares without first registering those . securities with the SEC — a violation of sections 5(a) and (c) of the Securities Act.
Id.,
at 324;
see
Mot., Declaration of Jeffrey R. Anderson, ¶ 7a-b; id. Exh. A-l (Stock Issuance Spreadsheet); id. Exh. A-2 (Bank Deposits, 2006-2007). The sale actually consisted of a convertible-loan scheme, in which investors would make short-term loans to two intermediary corporations controlled by Grace (Inter-market and IVI), which would then offer up their restricted e-Smart shares as collateral for the loans. When the loans inevitably went into default, the “lenders”—
ie.,
investors — would be given the option to convert their notes into e-Smart stock at $0.10 per share.
E-Smart II,
*176
. Separately, in a bid to make the company attractive to investors, Grace and Saito in 2007 and 2008 caused e-Smart to publish several claims about its business that subsequently proved false, in violation of section 10(b) of the Securities Exchange Act and SE.C Rule 10b-5. Specifically, in a public filing made to the SEC in October 2007 — the 2006. 10-KSB — Saito and e-Smart made numerous “detailed technological claims about the capabilities” of e-Smart’s'
1
smart-card - product, many of which proved false.
E-Smart IV,
Finally, while sitting at- its helm, Grace played a key role in e-Smart’s failure to keep its books in order, implement proper internal controls, and file certain mandatory reports with the SEC (violations of the Exchange Act sections 13(a), 13(b)(2)(A), and 13(b)(2)(B), as well as Rules 12b-20, lSa-1,13a-ll, and 13a-13).
Even though e-Smart proved rather skillful at fishing for capital from investors, it had' little to no revenue, notwithstanding its principals’ representations that substantial income would be forthcoming.
See E-Smart II,
The SEC filed this suit against Defendants in 2011. After, a lengthy period of discovery, the Commission moved serially for summary judgment against all Defendants, which the Court largely granted. . It held Grace.liable for selling unregistered securities, making false statements in a 2008 press release, and failing to manage her business in accordance with SEC regulations.
See E-Smart II,
II. Legal Standard
The substantive standards governing the SEC’s particular remedial requests as to the individual Defendants will be set forth in each subsection below. In resolving this Motion, the Court must also determine whether judgment against the three defaulting corporate Defendants is appropriate. It therefore now summarizes the legal standard governing entry of default judgment.
Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 55 establishes-a two-step process for entering a default'judgment against a party that fails to plead or otherwise defend. First, the Clerk enters the party’s default,
see
Fed. R. Civ. P. 55(a), and then, unless the claim is for a sum certain, the Court determines whether to enter a default'judgment, conducting hearings as necessary in order “to enter or effectuate judgment.” Fed.-R. Civ. P. 55(b)(2).- “The determination of whether default judgment is appropriate is committed to the discretion of the
*177
trial court.”
Int’l Painters & Allied Trades Indus. Pension Fund v. Auxier Drywall, LLC,
Although default resolves the question of
liability
against the defaulting party, see,
e.g., Boland v. Elite Terrazzo Flooring, Inc.,
The Court, therefore, will consider the merits of the SEC’s particular requests for judgment against both the individual .and the defaulting corporate Defendants..
III. Analysis
The Commission here requests four remedies. First, a permanent injunction barring: all five Defendants from committing securities-fraud violations, Grace and Saito from serving as officers or directors of publicly traded companies, and Grace and Saito from participating in any offering of penny stock. Second, disgorgement of $19,639,344 in ill-gotten gains and $9,332,640 in prejudgment interest from e-Smart, ■ with the remaining Defendants jointly and severally liable for lesser portions of that total. Third, civil penalties against e-Smart ($1,950,000),. Grace ($17,-250,233.60), Saito' ($520,000), IVI ($650,-000),' and Intermarket ’ ($650,000). Last, the SEC requests that the final judgment include a provision allowing the SEC to move for establishment of a Fair Fund if it locates a sizeable-enough sum of Defendants’ assets to warrant distribution to investors. The Court examines each set of remedies in turn.
A. Injunctive Relief'
1. Securities-Violations Bar
The SEC first asks this Court to' permanently enjoin the five Defendants from future violations of the securities laws commensurate with the scope of each Defendant’s liability. Simply stated, Plaintiff seeks a broad injunction against future violations by e-Smart and Grace, and a narrower one for Saito, IVI, and Inter-market.
Section 21(d) of the Exchange Act, 15 U.S.C. § 78u(d), permits the SEC to seek, and district courts to grant, injunctions “commanding compliance with [federal securities] laws, and regulations promulgated thereunder.”
SEC v. Savoy Indus., Inc.,
*178
The essential question in deciding whether to issue a permanent injunction in light of past violations is whether there is a reasonable likelihood that the wrong will be repeated.
SEC v. Bilzerian,
As to all Defendants, the SEC has shown a' reasonable likelihood that the specific wrongs will be repeated. The securities violations they committed reveal a dogged pattern of using different tactics to obtain investor funds, regardless of whether the means for doing so violated federal law. Beginning at least with the convertible-loan scheme, masterminded by Grace and implemented with the help of IVT and Intermarket, e-Smart and its collaborators worked closely to ensure consistent streams of investor moneys. When the two-year period of unregistered security issuances ceased, Grace and Saito found ways of keeping investor money streaming in by misrepresenting e-Smart’s revenue prospects and income potential, keeping e-Smart tenuously afloat for another three years. In short, the violations between closely related actors were numerous and repeated, and cannot be said to comprise a single “isolated incident.”
See SEC v. Johnson,
The violations, moreover, were flagrant and deliberate. Defendants’ actions were carried out with
scienter
and resulted in the loss of millions of dollars in investor capital. Nor were the violations “merely technical.”
SEC v. Savoy Indus. Inc.,
Finally, the SEC has submitted undisputed evidence that Defendants’ business endeavors will, absent an injunction, present ample opportunity for them to violate the securities laws again.
See Wills,
*179 Most glaring is Grace’s insistence that, despite the SEC’s ongoing enforcement action and its success'on summary judgment, she will continue selling, marketing, and seeking investors to support some version of a smart-card product through a non-party company, IVI Holdings, Ltd. See Grace Opp. at-40 (“If Plaintiff will leave Defendant’s business alone now, 'the shareholders of Defendant’s companies and their investors, lenders and shareholders can finally benefit.”); id (“Defendant’s [sic] have never stopped [seeking future opportunities to market their product] — it is Defendant’s businesses. The survival and future of-Defendant’s companies, investors and shareholders depend on this. Andthe product is not an ‘alleged product.’ ”).
Although there is nothing wrong with seeking investor funds to sell a product
per se
— assuming no securities laws are violated in the process — Grace and Saito seem determined to repeat the same missteps that brought them before this Court. As an example, in Saito’s motion seeking reconsideration of this Court’s summary-judgment decision, he stated that the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office had issued five patents, filed between 2002 and 2007, covering some of the technologies e-Smart previously sought to develop.
See
ECF Nos. 663 (Saito Mot. for Reconsideration), 664 (same). Although his purpose in bringing up the patents is to show the legitimacy of his invention — which, presumably, would illustrate the illegitimacy of this Court’s conclusion that the claims in the 2006 Í0-KSB were fraudulent,
see E-Smart IV,
Grace, moreover, appears' an inextricable partner in that technology’s future marketing and commercialization. The patents are held by IVI Holdings, a company that she admits she formed “to own and hold the patents which were developed and patented and originally owned by IVI Smart Technologies, Inc.” Grace Opp. at 26. Indeed, Grace insists that, but for the existence of non-party IVI Holdings and its willingness to “revive and reactivate th[ose] patents,” they would have been lost, “saving defendant companies from utter ruin.” ■ Id. at 27 (emphasis added). The SEC provides additional evidence that, at least as of 2012, Grace was publicly repeating the same misrepresentations regarding the smart-card technology at the center of this, suit in a website for a Hong Kong-registered company named I Am Holdings. See Mot., Att. D (Nov. 8, 2012, Screen Grab of wwvdam-holdings.com); id., Att. E (Hong Kong Registration of I AM HOLDINGS). And Grace appears not to dispute that she intends to market and sell similar products in the future. See Grace Opp. at 27 (“The alleged wrongdoing ... has nothing to do with the patents revived by IVI Holdings or the I AM card.... Plaintiff is trying to ... prevent Defendants from continuing to do business, with products and companies that were never named or accused of any wrongdoing.”).
The SEC has thus established a “reasonable likelihood” that Grace and Saito would commit securities violations in the future. And the Court sees no reason to part ways with that conclusion as applied to the corporate Defendants.
See Chris-Craft Indus., Inc. v. Piper Aircraft Corp,,
2. Officer-and-Director Bar
The SEC also asks the Court to permanently bar Grace and Saito from serving as an officer or director of a publicly traded company on account of their violations of section 10(b) of the Exchange Act. That Act provides that, in a civil-enforcement action brought by the SEC:
[T]he court may prohibit, conditionally or unconditionally, and permanently or for such period of time as it shall determine, any person who violated [Section 10(b) ] or the rules or regulations thereunder from acting as an officer or director of any issuer ... if the person’s conduct demonstrates unfitness to serve as dn officer or director of any such issuer.
15 U.S.C. § 78u(d)(2) (emphasis added).
Although neither Congress nor this Circuit has elaborated on the meaning of “unfitness” in this context, most courts have zeroed in on a series of non-exhaustive factors — derived almost wholly from the scholarship of one law professor — that purport to identify predictors of future unlawful behavior from known facts about a defendant’s past conduct.
, The Second Circuit’s six-factor framework in
SEC v.
Patel,
Two decades later — and after Congress in 2002 modified § 78u(d)(2) to require only a showing of mere “unfitness” rather than
“substantial
unfitness” — a court in this district articulated a revised, nine-factor version of the
Patel
test, also derived from an article written by Professor Barnard.
See SEC v. Levine,
The aim of both tests, therefore, is to separate likely recidivists from the reformed to ensure injunctions are entered only against the former. As a result, the Court need not pick and choose among the dueling frameworks because under both, Grace’s and Saito’s conduct and recent representations to the Court make clear that they are likely recidivists who are “unfit[ ]” to serve as a director or officer— at least for the time being. Critical here is that, as discussed previously, both Defendants readily volunteered their intent to continue seeking investor capital in promoting and selling some version of-a smart-card product. More importantly, the Defendants not only fail to accept the illegality of their previous behavior, but appear incredulous that any court could conclude that their prior statements to investors were anything but truthful. See Grace Opp. at 5 (“No Evidence of Fraud or Extreme Recklessness regarding the Samsung Press Release”); Saito Opp. at 43-44 (insisting, as to misrepresentations in 2006 10-KSB, “I did not do [it] and it was not fraud.”). For this reason, future misrepresentations appear not only likely, but practically guaranteed.
That is not all, however. Defendants were also the chief architects of e-Smart’s fraudulent scheme, knowingly and deliberately misleading investors to obtain millions of dollars in investor capital. In addition, the two misrepresentations were not isolated mishaps but part and parcel of a multi-year pattern of skirting federal securities laws. And the SEC has demonstrated that Grace, at a minimum, had a substantial economic stake in her misrepresentations, spending millions of dollars of investor funds on extravagant purchases for herself and close relations, even when e-Smart was in arrears in paying employee salaries.
E-Smart II,
But how long should the bar last? The SEC says-their-lifetimes, but with no justification beyond the asserted egregiousness of Defendants’ conduct. Section 78u(d)(2),-however, is not an all-or-nothing standard] it gives courts the discretion to grant an officer-or-director bar “for such period of time as [the -court] shall determine;” And
Patel
suggests that lifetime bans may not be warranted. where a fixed-term bar might suffice.
Patel,
3. Penny-Stock Bar
In its final request for prospective relief, the SEC asks the Court to permanently bar Grace and Saito from “participating in an offering of penny stock,” which the Court may do if Defendants were, “at the time of the alleged misconduct” under either the Securities Act or the Exchange Act, “participating in ... an offering of penny stock.” 15 U.S.C. §§ 77t(g); 78u(d)(6). Defendants do not dispute that the securities in question were “penny stock” — ie., an equity security bearing a price of less than five dollars, with exceptions (not applicable here) provided in 17 C.F.R. § 240.3a51-l. Nor do they dispute that they participated in an “offering of penny stock,” which broadly encompasses “engaging in activities with a broker, dealer, or issuer for purposes of issuing, trading, or inducing or attempting to induce the purchase or sale of, any penny stock.” 15 U.S.C §§ 77t(g); 78u(d)(6).
The only question, then, is whether such a bar is warranted. The statutory language offers even less guidance than the officer-or-director bar in determining when a penny-stock bar is justified. The text permits injunctions “conditionally or unconditionally, and permanently or for such period of time as the court shall determine.”
Id.
Perhaps seeking a North Star to guide their discretion, district courts have concluded — albeit with no explanation — that the
Patel
factors for officer-or-director bars will similarly signal when a defendant is likely to commit securities violations involving penny stocks.
See, e.cg., SEC v. Cook,
No. 13-1312,
Given the Court’s disposition of the officer-or-director bar and its confidence that future securities violations involving penny stock are reasonably likely, it similarly concludes that a penny-stock bar of ten years for Grace and five years for Saito is warranted. In declining to impose a lifetime bar, the Court is mindful of the guidance offered by the Fifth Circuit in
Stead-man:
“[W]hen the [SEC] chooses to order the most drastic remedies at its disposal, it has a greater burden to show with particularity the facts and policies that support those sanctions and why less severe action would not serve to protect investors.”
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Steadman,
B. Disgorgement
The SEC also requests disgorgement and prejudgment interest against all five Defendants. “Once the district court has found federal securities law violations, it has broad equitable power to fashion appropriate remedies, including ordering that culpable defendants disgorge their profits.”
SEC v. First Jersey Sec., Inc.,
In determining such amounts, courts have employed a burden-shifting approach, requiring the SEC first to provide a “ ‘reasonable approximation of profits causally connected to the violation.’ ”
SEC v. Whittemore,
In addition to disgorgement, the SEC seeks prejudgment interest on the sums requested. Like disgorgement, such interest may be awarded in the district court’s discretion when fairness so dictates.
See Blau v. Lehman,
The Court will begin by- discussing the total disgorgement amount sought against e-Smart, followed by the " amounts for which the remaining Defendants may ’be held jointly and severally liable. It will also address interest within these analyses.
1. E-Smart
The SEC asks the Court to order e-Smart to disgorge $19,639,344. See Mot. at 21. The first question is whether the Commission has met its burden of providing a reasonable approximation of profits attributable to e-Smart’s wrongdoing.
In calculating profits, the SEC relies on the total amount of money gathered from investors — i.e., total investor proceeds— during the periods of time that it has accused e-Smart of selling unregistered securities (violation of sections 5(a) and (c) of the Securities Act) and misleading investors (violation of section 10(b) of the Exchange Act and Rule 10b-5). See Mot. at 17-19; Am. Compl., ¶¶ 113-119. The breakdown is as follows:
*184 [[Image here]]
See Mot. at 17-18. These amounts total $26,807,839. But because the three periods of liability partially overlap, and to avoid double-counting for such overlapping periods, the SEC seeks disgorgement only of total investor proceeds brought in between January 1, 2005, and December 31, 2011, yielding a total of $19,639,344.44. See Apderson D.ecl., ¶ 7d.
As a threshold matter, the Court concludes that the SEC may rely on investor
proceeds
to satisfy its initial burden of providing.-a “reasonable approximation of
profits
causally connected to the violation.”
Whittemore,
Translating
Platforms Wireless
into the context of
Whittemore,
in which a defendant was found liable for violating Section 10(b) and Rule 10b-5 of the Exchange Act in a “pump and dump” scheme, the D.C. Circuit similarly concluded that the SEC had met its initial burden by pointing to total proceeds of stock sales "made by the defendant, even though it had not teased out the “fair market value” of the stocks at the time of the sales.
Whittemore,
Given its default, e-Smart has offered nothing to rebut the SEG’s assertions. The Court is nevertheless obliged to make an “independent determination” regarding the SEC’s disgorgement figure.
One or More Unknown Traders,
*185 i. Sale of Unregistered Securities (Jan. 1, 2006 — Dec. 31, 2007)
The SEC argues that the clock for tabulating proceeds should begin on January 1, 2005, citing this Court’s opinion in
E-Smart II
for the proposition that the convertible-loan scheme ran from ■“2005-2007,”
See
Mot. at 17 & n.3. Although this Court did state in general terms that the scheme spanned that two-year period, it never explicitly concluded that the scheme began on New Year’s Day.
See E-Smart II,
The Court is. unpersuaded, however, that the SEC has shown facts sufficient to use December 31, 2007, as the cut-off date for when e-Smart stopped selling unregistered securities. Although the Court in E-Smart II found that the company continued its scheme through at least May 8,. 2007, id., at 327 (describing forged opinion letter Grace issued to transfer agent to issue new shares), it found no facts regarding when the scheme ended, nor did the SEC ask the Court to do so. See SEC Mot. for Sum. J. against Grace, ECF No. 324, Attach. 1 (Plaintiffs Statement of Undisputed Facts), ¶ 168 (defining period of violations as running “[f]rom approximately early 2005 through 2007” but without specifying an end date). As a result, the Court is unable to determine which sales occurring after May 2007 constituted sales of unregistered securities in violation of Securities Act sections 5(a) and (c).
Perhaps- recognizing that the dates bracketing e-Smart’s Securities Act liability were somewhat fuzzy, the SEC proposed that, instead of tabulating all sales made during 2005-2007 — which add up to $13,904,627.12, see Anderson Deck, ¶¶ 7a— the SEC would seek only disgorgement of the total investor proceeds reported by e-Smart in its 2007 10-K for the time period in question — ie., $11,310,255 (113,102,557 shares at a price of $0.10 per share). Id. ¶ 7b; see Mot. at 17. The SEC contends somewhat'cryptieally that this lower figure “providés a higher degree of certainty” than the $13.9 million figure and that it represents “an admission by e-Smart' regarding how much it raised during the relevant period.” Id. at 17 n.5. But this logic does not account for the SEC’s failure to show that proceeds raised ‘from mid-May 2007 through e-Smart’s second securities violation (the 2006 10-KSB) on October 24, 2007, also resulted from sales of unregistered securities. Such a deficiency would not matter if the proceeds raised during that period were nominal. But the spreadsheets provided by the SEC demonstrate that e-Smart raised a sizeable amount — roughly $3.2 million — between May 8, 2007, and the next-in-time violation on October 24, 2007. See Anderson Deck, Attach. A-2 (2006-2007 Bank Deposits) at 1,2.
Because any proceeds, lawfully obtained should not be included within the disgorgement figure, the Court will not grant the full sum requested by the SEC. Instead, the Commission will be given an opportunity to either file supplemental submissions that provide facts showing that the May-October 2007 sales were unlawful or to reduce the requested sum appropriate
*186
ly.
See SEC v. Constantin,
ii. 2006 10-KSB (Oct. 24, 2007 — May 27, 2009)
As to the second period of liability for misrepresentations made in e-Smart’s 2006 10-KSB, the Court agrees with the SEC’s start and cut-off dates. The parties do not dispute that the filing was issued on October 24, 2007. And the SEC has reasonably proposed May 27, 2009 — the date on which the misrepresentations were “modified” or in some way corrected in e-Smart’s 2007 10-K — as a cut-off date for e-Smart’s liability on this basis. The Court finds that this cutoff date is particularly reasonable, given that, as discussed infra, it overlaps with profits obtained after a second misrepresentation made by e-Smart in the 2008 Samsung Press release. It thus concludes that the SEC has met its burden of reasonably approximating e-Smart’s profits by showing it received $7,718,440 in proceeds during that period.
iii. Samsung Press Release (Feb. 26, 2008 — Dec. 31, 2011)
Finally, the Court concludes that the SEC has failed to carry its initial burden of showing that all proceeds obtained by e-Smart in the 46-month period spanning February 26, 2008, to the end of December 2011 were “causally connected to” the fraudulent press release. The starting date of February 26, 2008, poses no problem: the Samsung press release was indisputably issued on that date.
See E-Smart,
Most critical is that, a month after the February 2008 press release, an accurate copy of the Samsung contract became publicly available through one of e-Smart’s public filings.
See
Reply at 11; PSUF, ¶¶ 33-34;
E-Smart II,
Undoubtedly, with respect to thinly traded and undeveloped securities, courts have treaded cautiously in presuming that publicly available information will necessarily and efficiently make its way to investors.
See, e.g., In re Laser Arms Corp. Sec. Litig.,
Further weakening the link between the press release and more temporally distant investor proceeds, the release itself stated that the contractual performance period was limited to two years — a fact that likely would have tipped off investors that, by 2011, they could not reasonably put any stock, so to speak, in the press release’s claims. The correspondence collected by the SEC, moreover, suggest that the “but for” cause of much of the investment from 2008 to 2010 was not the press release, but rather personal assurances from Grace that funding was imminent. See id., ¶¶ 45-47, 50-51, 54, 56, 59, 62. Even if the release itself initially caused a “spike in the price and trading volume of e-Smart stock,” id., ¶37, the SEC has failed to carry its burden of proving that all proceeds gathered over the proposed time period are causally connected to the February 2008 press release.
The Court, accordingly, will not order disgorgement of any proceeds obtained by e-Smart after May 27, 2009 — the date that the Court accepted as the cut-off date for e-Smart’s liability for its 2006 10-KSB’s misrepresentations. In sum, the SEC may obtain disgorgement for most of the time-frame applicable to the first two violations, but not the third. And, as has been explained, the Commission shall recalculate the disgorgement sums as to the first and revise its prejudgment-interest request based on .that amount. The Court agrees that prejudgment interest shall be awarded on those revised sums, and it agrees with the SEC that IRS rates for calculating interest on underpaid taxes is the appropriate rate ■ to use in that calculation.
See One or More. Unknown Traders,
2. Grace
The SEC seeks to hold Grace jointly and severally liable with e-Smart for selling unregistered securities ($11,310,255) and misleading investors -with the Samsung press release ($7,279,144) for a total of $18,589,399.
The first question is whether Grace should be held jointly and severally liable at all. District courts enjoy “ ‘broad discretion in subjecting the offending parties on a joint-and-several basis to the disgorgement order.’”
Whittemore,
The' Court concludes that Grace should be held jointly and severally liable with e-Smart for both violations. She was a key player in both the convertible-loan scheme and the fraudulent Samsung press release.
See E-Smart II,
The second question is what sums are in play for Grace’s two violations. Because the Court has already instructed the SEC to either substantiate or reduce its disgorgement figure for e-Smart’s Securities Act section 5 violation — ie., the convertible-loan scheme — it need not rehash those points here. The SEC, moreover, cannot rely on the $7,279,144 figure for Grace’s Exchange Act violations — ie., the Samsung press release — as it has failed to carry its burden of showing that all proceeds obtained by e-Smart in the ensuing years were causally connected to that violation. Instead, the Court repeats that the May 27, 2009, cut-off date serves to more reasonably approximate e-Smart profits causally connected to Grace’s violation. Falling approximately 14 months after the release of the Samsung press release, the date comes towards the end of a period of time in which investors became -increasingly suspicious of e-Smart’s claims and either did or could have easily discovered the true nature of the Samsung contract, thereby breaking any causal connection between the • original misrepresentations and subsequent investor proceeds. Along with its revised calculations for e-Smart’s liability, the SEC shall therefore revise the disgorgement figure for which Grace should be held jointly and severally liable, along with the corresponding amount of prejudgment interest. .
A final note on Grace’s disgorgement figuré: she has failed to offer any concrete evidence to show that the sums are reasonably capable of apportionment. But because the SEC must revise the total disgorgement amount it will seek against both e-Smart and Grace, the Court will allow her one last chance to prove — with concrete • evidence — that the ill-gotten gains she benefited from may clearly and easily be segregated from e-Smart’s overall profits.
But see Hughes Capital,
3.. Saito
-The SEC also asks the Court to hold Saito' jointly and severally liable for disgorging. $7,718,440 — an amount corresponding to e-Smart’s disgorgement liability for misrepresentations made in its 2006 10-KSB in violation of Exchange Act section 10(b) and Rule 10b-5.
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Like Grace, the Court has little trouble concluding that Saito collaborated with and was closely connected to e-Smart in committing the specific violation at issue. But it is unwilling to hold'Saito jointly and severally liable for the full sum requested, largely because the SEC has not clearly identified what benefit, if any, Saito obtained
because of
his fraudulent acts. Although “a personal financial benefit” is not
necessarily
“a prerequisite for joint and several liability,”
Platforms Wireless,
A defendant may certainly be ordered to disgorge salary payments when such payments are tied to unlawful acts.
See SEC v. Merck. Capital, LLC,
The SEC’s- passing claim that Saito’s salary constitutes unlawful profit provides an insufficient basis on which to order its disgorgement — let alone the- $7.7 million figure that the Commission requests — as most of the salary appears, to have been earned
before
the violation at issue. The SEC also appears to claim that Saito benefited by receiving 12.5 million shares of e-Smart stock.- But e-Smart issued the shares to Saito months before the fraudulent communication,
see
2007 10-K at 42-43 & n.2 (indicating stock was issued on May 9, 2007), and even if the, “market value” of e-Smart shares increased after the 2006 10-KSB, the Commission has
*190
simply not shown that Saito received any benefit by virtue of holding that stock. On the contrary, the SEC appears not to dispute that Saito never realized any gains from those shares, as they remain unsold.
See
Reply at 4. Like his salary, his possession of shares does not offer a reasonable basis for holding Saito jointly and severally liable for disgorging e-Smart proceeds.
See SEC v. Wyly,
4. IVI and Intermarket
Finally, the SEC seeks disgorgement of $11,310,255 from both IVI and Intermark-et based on those entities’ involvement in the fraudulent sale of unregistered securities. Although the Court agrees that the companies may, on account of the critical role they played in carrying out the convertible-loan scheme, be held jointly and severally liable for the Securities Act section 5 violations, the $11.3 million figure must be revised in accordance with the Court’s directions regarding the calculation of that sum. The Court will issue a final order of disgorgement upon the SEC’s substantiation or revision of that figure along with its calculation of prejudgment interest.
C. Civil Penalties
Last, the SEC seeks third-tier civil penalties against all Defendants. Section 20(d) of the Securities Act, 15 U.S.C. § 77t(d)(l), and section 21(d) of the Exchange Act, 15 U.S.C. § 78u(d)(3)(A), authorize the SEC to seek, and district courts to award, monetary penalties in addition to disgorgement whenever an individual or entity has violated a provision of those statutes or rules promulgated thereunder. The penalties are divided into three tiers, with the third and most severe tier appropriate for violations that (1) “involved fraud, deceit, manipulation, or deliberate or reckless disregard of a regulatory requirement” and (2) “resulted in substantial losses or created a significant risk of substantial losses to other persons.” § 77t(d)(2)(C); § 78u(d)(3)(B)(iii). If the Court concludes that such penalties are warranted, it must then fix the amount “in light of the facts and circumstances” of the case. Id. § 77t(d) (2) (A); § 78u(d)(3)(B)(i). The statutes provides a ceiling on the amount recoverable, however, allowing the Court to award the greater of either a statutory sum — $130,000 per violation for an individual or $650,000 per violation for an entity — or “the gross amount of pecuniary gain to such defendant as a result of the violation.” Id.; 17 C.F.R. § 201.1003 & Pt. 201, Subpt. E, Tbl. Ill (adjusting civil monetary penalties for inflation).
Third-tier penalties are warranted against all Defendants. In granting summary judgment on liability for the SEC, the Court concluded that both individual Defendants acted with
scienter. See E-Smart II,
The Court now considers the penalty amounts to be awarded against each Defendant.
1.E-Smart, PVI, and Intermarket
The SEC seeks maximum statutory penalties for the three corporate Defendants: $1,950,000 against e-Smart ($650,000 per violation for the unregistered stock offering, the 2006 10-KSB, and the Samsung press reléase); and $650,000 each against IVI and Intermarket for their participation in the illegal stock offering. The Court agrees that the statutory penalties are appropriate for the corporate Defendants.
2.Grace
For Grace, the SEC seeks “the gross amount of pecuniary gain” obtained by the violation rather than fixed statutory penalties.
See
Mot.‘ at 22. The SEC calculates that sum as $17,250,233.60,
see id.
at 22 n.8. whieh is the Commission’s requested disgorgement figure less any proceeds obtained before May 13, 2006, which proceeds would not be recoverable because of a statutory five-year time ■ limitation on civil penalties.
See
28 U.S.C. § 2462;
SEC v. Amerindo Inv. Advisors Inc.,
No. 05-5231,
3.Saito
Finally, the SEC seeks statutory penalties against Saito totaling $520,000, which consists of the statutory amount of $130,000 per violation for natural persons, multiplied by the “four misrepresentations the Court found'Saito made in e-Smart’s 2006-10-K.” Mot. at 23. While the $130,-000-per-violation figure-is warranted due to Saito’s-scienter and the substantial losses suffered by investors, the SEC’s position assumes that each discrete falsehood, *192 even if contained in a single public-filing and made about a single product, may be used as a multiplier for quadrupling the penalty. The SEC cites no ease for this proposition, which is unsurprising since the law appears to hold to the contrary.
The civil-penalty provisions permit imposition of’a fixed penalty “for each violation,” 15 U.S.C. § 77t(d)(2);
id.
§ 78u(d)(3)(B), but dó not otherwise define what constitutes a “violation.” As it turns out, courts have- taken widely divergent approaches to this question, interpreting the phrase “for each violation” to mean: “(1) per
claim
brought' against the defendant,
SEC v. Shehyn,
04-2003,
On the surface,
Coates’
“per misrepresentation” approach would seem to support the SEC’s position here, but in that case, the defendant made four different misrepresentations to shareholders in numerous
discrete communications
taking place on
different dates. See Coates,
The Court thus concludes that Saito was responsible for a single violation of the Exchange Act, and it will award a penalty in the amount of $130,000.
See SEC v. Blackout Media Corp.,
No. 09-5454,
D. Fair Fund
The SEC’s last request is that the final judgment “include a provision that the SEC may seek to establish a Fair Fund if [it] finds assets subject to disgorgement sufficient to warrant a distribution to investors.” Mot. at 23. The securities laws permit the SEC to move for an order establishing such a fund if the SEC obtains a civil penalty in its enforcement action.
See
15 U.S.C. § 7246(a). Having determined that civil penalties will be awarded — albeit with the precise sum in flux as to Defendant Grace — the SEC -will be permitted to make such a motion in the fu
*193
ture. At that time, the Court will expect the Commission to provide a distribution plan that proposes a fair and reasonable allocation of recovered funds to investors.
See Official Comm, of Unsecured Creditors of WorldCom, Inc. v. SEC,
IV. Conclusion
For the foregoing reasons, the Court will issue a contemporaneous Order granting in part and denying in part the SEC’s Motion for Final Judgment. The Court will specifically:
(1)Grant the SEC’s request to permanently enjoin Defendants from violating the securities laws as follows:
a. E-Smart will be permanently enjoined from violating Securities Act sections 5(a) and (c) and Exchange Act sections 10(b), 13(a), 13(b)(2)(A) and (B) and Rules 10b-5, 12b-20, 13a-l, 13a-ll, and 13a — 13;
b. Grace will be permanently enjoined from violating Securities Act sections 5(a) and (c) and Exchange Act sections 10(b) and 16(a) along with Rules 10b-5 and 16a-3, and will be enjoined from aiding or abetting violations of Exchange Act sections 13(a), 13(b)(2)(A) and (B) and Rules 12b-20, 13a-l, 13a~ll, and 13a-13;
c. Saito will be permanently enjoined from violating Exchange Act sections 10(b) and 16(a) and Rules 10b-5 and 16a-3;
d. IVI will be permanently en- , joined from violating Securities Act sections 5(a) and (c); and
e. Intermarket will be permanently enjoined from violating Securities Act sections 5(a) and (c);
(2) Grant -in part and deny in part the SEC’s request to permanently bar ■. the individual Defendants from serving as officers and directors of securities issuers as follows:
a. Grace will be barred from serving as an officer or director for 10 years; and
b. Saito will be barred from serving as an officer or director for 5 years; .
(3) Grant in part and deny in part the SEC’s request to permanently bar the individual Defendants from participating in penny-stock offerings as follows:
a. Grace ’will be barred from participating in any penny-stock offering for 10 years; and
b. Saito will be barred from participating in any penny-stock offering for 5 years; ■ ■
'(4) Deny without prejudice the SEC’s ‘ request for disgorgement and prejudgment interest with instructions ■ as follows:'
a. The SEC shall, by October 27, 2015, substantiate or revise its disgorgement figure pertaining to e-Smart’s, Grace’s, TVI’s, and In-termarket’s violations of Securities Act sections 5(a) and (c) consistent with the guidance provided in this Opinion;
b. The SEC shall, in the same submission, revise its disgorgement figure pertaining to Grace’s violations of Exchange Act section 10(b) and Rule 10b — 5;
c. The SEC shall, in the same submission, revise its request for prejudgment interest against e-Smart, Grace, IVI, and Inter-market to account for any changes in its disgorgement figure;
*194 d. Defendant Grace shall, by November 17, 2015, respond to the SEC’s modified disgorgement request with any evidence showing that the sum against her is reasonably capable of apportionment; and
e. No disgorgement and interest shall apply to Saito;
(5) Grant in part and deny in part the SEC’s request for third-tier civil penalties as follows:
a. E-Smart will be ordered to pay $1,950,000;
b. IVI will be ordered to pay $650,000;
c. Intermarket will be ordered to pay $650,000;
d. Saito will be ordered to pay $130,000; and
e. The Court will determine civil penalties to be awarded against Grace after reviewing the parties’ supplemental submissions; and
(6) Grant the SEC’s request to permit it to move in the future for establishment of a Fair Fund.
Notes
. The Court notes that although Barnard purports to have "establish[ed]” the test, 70 N.C. L.Rev.- at 1489,
see also
Jayne W. Barnard,
Bule 10b-5 and the “Unfitness” Question,
47 Ariz. L.Rev. 9, 15 n.30 (2005), it appears nearly identical to one articulated by the Fifth Circuit in
SEC
v.
Blatt,
