Los Angeles Times

Fund executives accused of fraud

Platinum Partners officials are charged in a $1-billion case linked to an oil rig explosion.

- associated press

Platinum Partners officials are charged in a $1-billion fraud case linked to a deadly oil rig explosion in the Gulf of Mexico.

Hedge fund executives were charged Monday in a $1billion fraud case linked to a deadly oil rig explosion in the Gulf of Mexico.

Officials with Platinum Partners face charges that they lied to investors about the performanc­e of a fund that ran into trouble when one of its assets, the Black Elk oil exploratio­n company, had a rig explode in 2012 near the Louisiana coast. Three people died in the blast.

Mark Nordlicht, Platinum Partners’ chief investment officer, pleaded not guilty to securities fraud conspiracy and other offenses in federal court in Brooklyn, N.Y. He and six other people, including the former chief financial officer at Black Elk, were named in an indictment that details an alleged scheme that cheated investors out of $1 billion.

Authoritie­s accused Platinum Partners of falsely reporting an average of 17% returns while collecting more than $100 million in fees during the conspiracy. When investors began to ask for their money back, the hedge fund paid them with new investment­s and internal loans, U.S. Atty. Robert Capers said at a news conference Monday.

“There is a Ponzi-esque portion to this scheme,” Capers said.

There was no immediate response to a message seeking comment from Nordlicht’s attorney. Platinum Partners representa­tives did not immediatel­y respond to a request for comment.

After the oil rig explosion, Black Elk “was under severe stress and lacked the necessary cash flow and profits to justify Platinum’s $282-million valuation,” the indictment says. It says the company struggled to “to find the liquidity to pay redemption­s, in large part due to the overvaluat­ion of Black Elk.”

The evidence includes emails between Nordlicht and others that “illustrate­d their knowledge and awareness of the fraudulent scheme perpetrate­d on Platinum’s investors and prospectiv­e investors,” the indictment says.

As the New York hedge fund began to go under in December 2015, Nordlicht wrote that he was thinking about using $7.5 million from a second mortgage on his home to try to keep it afloat, the papers say. They say he also was considerin­g fleeing the country.

“Am on my way to JFK with the kids for their 6 p.m. flight to Israel,” he wrote in one email, according to the indictment. “My wife is literally making me get on Israel f light if we don’t connect and agree what we are doing.”

One of his cohorts responded: “You should get on the flight if there is no bridge [loan], probably even if there is.”

Another Platinum Partners executive, Murray Huberfeld, was arrested in an unrelated case last spring and charged with paying kickbacks to the head of the union that represents New York City jail guards in exchange for investment­s.

Former Correction Officers’ Benevolent Assn. President Norman Seabrook pleaded not guilty last year to charges he steered $20 million in union pension money to Platinum Partners in 2014 in exchange for a $60,000 bribe.

The Black Elk platform was located about 17 miles from Grand Isle, La., in about 50 feet of water. It was shut down for maintenanc­e and was not producing oil at the time of the Nov. 16, 2012, explosion.

 ?? Gerald Herbert Associated Press ?? THREE PEOPLE died when a Black Elk oil rig exploded in 2012 near the Louisiana coast.
Gerald Herbert Associated Press THREE PEOPLE died when a Black Elk oil rig exploded in 2012 near the Louisiana coast.

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