New York Post

‘Class-action’ bigs exit Jefferies: sources

- By KEVIN DUGAN kdugan@nypost.com

New York investment firm Jefferies has lost the banker who led its controvers­ial litigation-financing unit, which looks to profit off class-action lawsuit settlement­s, The Post has learned.

Justin Brass, a managing director in the bank’s Special Situations Group, left the bank this week, ac- cording to two people familiar with the move. Sarah Lieber, a senior vice president who worked for Brass, departed earlier this month, one of the sources said.

Brass and Lieber have joined Stifel Nicolaus as managing directors and co-heads of the rival bank’s litigation-financing group, Neil Shapiro, a spokesman for the investment bank, confirmed to The Post.

Both of them came from Burford Capital, which specialize­s in the legal banking practice known as litigation financing, according to their LinkedIn profiles.

Brass and Lieber were with a group at Jefferies that explored profiting indirectly off the long-delayed settlement­s with NFL players who suffer from concussion­s, The Post reported in 2017.

The bank was looking to finance third-party companies, at interest rates of up to 22 percent, that would have bought up the claims, but didn’t go through with any deals, The Post reported. At the time, the bank denied it was exploring such deals.

Justice Department prosecutor­s have investigat­ed smaller firms for the practice, according to the New York Times. There’s no indication that either Jefferies or Stifel has done anything wrong.

Litigation finance is one of Jefferies “strongest businesses,” and there are no plans to curb the business, according to a person familiar with Jefferies’ plans.

Richard Khaleel, a Jefferies spokesman, declined to comment.

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