The insurance company for indicted financier R. Allen Stanford would like to be released from its responsibility to pay the massive legal fees mounting on Stanford’s behalf. Stanford and two of his former company executives stand accused of bilking investors out of $7 billion in a massive pyramid scheme. Insurer Lloyd’s of London argued to a federal judge the accused lied to investors and falsified financial statements and therefore should be disqualified from having their legal fess paid under the insurance policy.
U.S. District Judge Nancy Atlas heard the first day of arguments on Tuesday, August 24, according to the Associated Press. At this point, Stanford has received more than $15 million to pay his legal fees and those of his executives, Gilbert Lopez and Mark Kuhrt, in their criminal and civil cases. The policy will pay up to $100 million. Reportedly, Stanford has spent more than $6 million by hiring and firing attorneys from at least 10 different law firms.
As is so common with the many major financier fraud cases, allegations that investor money was actually used by Stanford to furnish the obligatory “lavish lifestyle” abound. According to the AP, Lloyd’s contends that Stanford secretly diverted more than $1.6 billion in investor funds for personal loans to himself.
The defense argues the men did nothing wrong. They placed much of the blame on James Davis, Stanford’s former CFO. Davis has pleaded guilty and is cooperating with authorities.
The AP reports prosecutors attended the hearing, looking for a preview of the defenses Stanford and the other executives might present at trial. In addition to the money laundering charge, Allen Stanford, Gilbert Lopez and Mark Kuhrt have also been indicted on charges of wire and mail fraud.
Related Resources:
- Legal bills at issue in Texas financier’s hearing (Huffington Post)
- Insurance Policy Ambiguous Under Virginia Law, and Criminal and Insurance Issues (FindLaw’s 2nd Circuit Blog)
You Don’t Have To Solve This on Your Own – Get a Lawyer’s Help
Civil Rights
Block on Trump’s Asylum Ban Upheld by Supreme Court
Criminal
Judges Can Release Secret Grand Jury Records
Politicians Can’t Block Voters on Facebook, Court Rules