The Jerusalem Post

NY-based Platinum Partners founder charged with fraud

- • By NATE RAYMOND

NEW YORK (Reuters) – The founder of New York-based hedge fund Platinum Partners was arrested on Monday as prosecutor­s unveiled an indictment charging him and six others with participat­ing in an approximat­ely $1 billion fraud.

Mark Nordlicht, Platinum’s founding partner and chief investment officer, was taken into custody at his New Rochelle, New York, home in connection with charges contained in an indictment filed in federal court in Brooklyn.

Others arrested included David Levy, Platinum’s co-chief investment officer, and Uri Landesman, the former president of the firm’s signature fund, said FBI spokeswoma­n Adrienne Senatore.

Platinum is liquidatin­g its hedge funds, two of which have received bankruptcy protection.

The indictment said that since 2012, Nordlicht, Levy and Landesman schemed to defraud Platinum investors by overvaluin­g illiquid assets held by its flagship fund.

This caused a “severe liquidity crisis” that Platinum at first tried to remedy through high-interest loans between its funds before selectivel­y paying some investors ahead of others, the indictment said.

Nordlicht, Levy and Jeffrey Shulse, former chief executive officer of Platinum’s majority-owned Black Elk Energy Offshore Operations LLC, also defrauded the Texas energy company’s bondholder­s, the indictment said.

A Platinum spokesman declined to comment. Nordlicht’s lawyer did not immediatel­y respond to a request for comment. Michael Sommer, Levy’s lawyer, said he looked forward to clearing his client’s “good name.”

Lawyers for Shulse and the other defendants could not be immediatel­y identified.

Founded in 2003, Platinum Partners until this year had more than $1.7b. under management, the indictment said. The flagship fund reported returning profits of more than 8% in 2015 and 7% from January to April 2016, it said.

But this year, a series of investigat­ions tied to Platinum came to a head, leading to a Cayman Islands court placing its two main funds into liquidatio­n in August.

In June, Murray Huberfeld, a Platinum associate who prosecutor­s say was a founder, was charged in Manhattan federal court with orchestrat­ing a bribe to the head of the New York City prison guards’ union, Norman Seabrook, to secure a $20 million investment. Both have pleaded not guilty.

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